What India's Elections Mean for the World
India's elections are the world's largest democratic exercise by number of voters — 968 million registered voters in 2024, of whom 642 million actually voted. This scale alone makes them globally consequential: when more people vote in India than in the United States, European Union, Japan, and Australia combined, the result is a significant data point about the health and practice of democratic governance globally. India's historical self-presentation as the world's largest democracy has been an important element of its soft power — the argument that a large, diverse, poor developing country could sustain electoral democracy without the economic preconditions that Western political science once considered necessary. The partial erosion of India's democracy quality scores since 2014 has therefore global significance not just for Indians but for the broader argument about democracy as a universal system of governance. Representational Image: What India's Electi...