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What India's Elections Mean for the World

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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...

How India's Northeast Shapes National Politics

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India's eight northeastern states — Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur, Mizoram, Nagaland, Tripura, Arunachal Pradesh, and Sikkim, connected to the rest of India by the narrow Siliguri Corridor ("Chicken's Neck") — constitute a distinctive political geography with relatively small but politically important electoral weight. Together they send 25 members to the Lok Sabha (Assam alone contributing 14) and have 8 state governments whose electoral outcomes matter for the Rajya Sabha composition and for India's geopolitical management of its most ethnically diverse and insurgency-affected region.  The northeast is unique within India's political landscape for its combination of: ethnic and tribal diversity far exceeding the mainland; a history of insurgency, armed groups, and peace agreements; special constitutional provisions for tribal areas under Schedule VI; the Citizenship Amendment Act's particular resonance (NRC was applied in Assam; CAA's exclusion of Muslim...

How Reservations Shape Indian Politics

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India's system of reservations — constitutionally mandated preferences in government employment, educational admissions, and electoral seats for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and (since 1992) Other Backward Classes — is simultaneously an anti-discrimination policy, a democratic representation mechanism, and the most politically charged policy domain in Indian governance.  Reservations exist because historical caste-based exclusion prevented SCs and STs from accumulating the human capital, social capital, and economic resources that upper-caste groups had accumulated over centuries; reservations are designed to accelerate convergence by guaranteeing access to state institutions independent of caste networks.  Representational Image: How Reservations Shape Indian Politics Their political salience is extraordinary: reservation policy has toppled governments, generated mass protest movements, and restructured party coalition arithmetic in ways that reshape every electio...

Why Congress Lost Its Dominance

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The Indian National Congress ruled India for 37 of its first 42 years of independence — an extraordinary record of single-party dominance in a large democracy. It governed without coalition partners for most of this period; its leaders served as Prime Ministers from Nehru (1947–1964) through Rajiv Gandhi (1984–1989).  This dominance was not electoral fraud or authoritarianism — Congress won genuine popular elections in a functioning democracy. It rested on a specific historical, sociological, and organisational foundation that progressively eroded from the late 1960s onward and collapsed definitively in 1989, after which Congress never again won a single-party parliamentary majority. Representational Image: Why Congress Lost Its Dominance The factors behind Congress's decline operate at multiple levels and are mutually reinforcing. At the structural level, Congress's "big tent" model — incorporating Brahmins and Dalits, landlords and peasants, industrialists and trade...

How Political Consultants Changed Indian Elections

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India's election campaigns were once managed by party workers, local leaders, and state-level party organisations; today they involve professional political consulting firms, opinion pollsters, social media management agencies, data analytics companies, and specialist communication consultants. This transformation — documented comprehensively in the Cambridge University Press volume "The Backstage of Democracy" (2022) — represents a professionalisation of political campaigns that has changed who wins and who loses. Prashant Kishor — who managed the Gujarat state elections for Modi in 2012, the NDA campaign in 2014, and subsequently worked for parties across the political spectrum including Congress in Bihar (2015), AP-TDP (2019), and Congress for the 2024 elections — is the most prominent individual representation of this professionalisation. His organisation I-PAC (Indian Political Action Committee) has managed campaigns that have consistently overturned predicted outcom...

How Indian Parties Work Internally

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Indian political parties are among the most important institutions in the country's governance — they recruit leaders, select candidates, set policy agendas, and constitute the primary mechanism through which citizens access the state. But they are also among India's most weakly institutionalised democratic organisations: party constitutions are rarely followed, internal elections are infrequently held and often manufactured, candidate selection is dominated by party leadership rather than member democratic processes, and financial accounts are opaque despite legal disclosure requirements.  The Election Commission of India's powers over political parties are limited to registration, symbol allocation, and anti-defection enforcement; it has no authority to mandate intra-party democracy, transparent finances, or candidate selection processes. Representational Image: How Indian Parties Work Internally The internal workings of India's major parties vary significantly. The B...

What Dynastic Politics Means in India

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Political dynasties — families in which political power passes from parent to child or sibling to sibling — are a persistent feature of Indian democratic politics at every level. At the national level, the Nehru-Gandhi family has dominated the Indian National Congress since independence: Jawaharlal Nehru (PM 1947–1964), Indira Gandhi (PM 1966–77, 1980–84), Rajiv Gandhi (PM 1984–89), Sonia Gandhi (Congress President 1998–2017, 2019-ongoing), and Rahul Gandhi (current Congress LOP in Lok Sabha) constitute five generations of Congress family leadership across 77 years of independence. At the state and regional level, the Yadav family dominates RJD (Lalu Prasad, his wife Rabri Devi as former Bihar CM, and son Tejashwi Yadav as current party heir), the Patnaik family dominated Odisha for 24 years (Biju Patnaik and Naveen Patnaik), the Karunanidhi-Stalin family has led DMK across two generations, and hundreds of similar family political inheritances operate at the MP, MLA, and local body lev...
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