How Coalition Politics Works in India
India has been governed by coalition governments for most of the period since 1989. Of the twelve coalition governments formed between 1977 and 2024, eight were "minority coalitions" — where the leading party or coalition depended on outside support to survive. Four were "oversized coalitions" — where more parties joined the government than were strictly needed for a majority. The current NDA government (2024–) represents a new technical category: the first "surplus majority coalition without a majority party" in Indian parliamentary history, as political scientist Eswaran Sridharan described it in his post-election analysis for CASI. The BJP has 240 seats — 32 short of a majority — but its NDA alliance totals 293. Representational Image: How Coalition Politics Works in India The surplus arithmetic means that no single coalition partner is "pivotal" — losing any one partner (TDP's 16 seats, or JD(U)'s 12 seats, or Shiv Sena's 7 seat...