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How Anti-Incumbency Works in Indian Politics

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Anti-incumbency — the tendency of voters to punish parties that have held power for extended periods — is one of the most consistently documented patterns in Indian electoral politics at the state level. India's state elections show a regular pattern of ruling party turnover: Rajasthan alternated between Congress and BJP governments for nearly three decades until BJP's 2023 win ended the pattern; Uttar Pradesh saw multiple turnovers (SP to BSP to SP to BJP); Himachal Pradesh has alternated Congress and BJP governments for 20 years consecutively, including Congress winning in 2022. The mechanism driving anti-incumbency is straightforward: governance has limitations; promises made in campaigns are rarely fully delivered; officials extract rents from citizens; local leaders become complacent or corrupt; and after five years, accumulation of grievances — unresolved land disputes, job rejections, denied welfare benefits, official corruption — produces voter discontent that is attrib...

Why Voters in India Vote the Way They Do

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Understanding Indian voter behaviour requires abandoning simple explanatory frameworks. Indian elections — particularly Lok Sabha elections — are not single-issue contests nor do they unfold uniformly across 543 constituencies. A voter in a Varanasi constituency is making a calculation about caste, religion, development, and Modi's personal leadership that is structurally different from a voter in a Chennai constituency where Dravidian cultural identity, state welfare delivery, and anti-BJP sentiment are the dominant axes. At the same time, certain patterns run across India's electoral geography consistently enough to characterise Indian voting behaviour at the aggregate level. Representational Image: Why Voters in India Vote the Way They Do Academic research, national election studies by CSDS/Lokniti, and post-election analysis from Carnegie Endowment converge on a picture in which Indian voters are neither purely rational economic actors voting on income and development outco...

What the Delimitation Debate Means for India

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On April 17, 2026, the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill was defeated in the Lok Sabha. Of 528 members present, 298 voted in favour and 230 against — leaving the government 54 votes short of the two-thirds supermajority that a constitutional amendment requires. The bill would have expanded the Lok Sabha's maximum size from 550 to 850 seats and enabled a delimitation exercise — redrawing constituency boundaries and reallocating seats between states — based on the 2011 Census rather than the 1971 Census currently in use. Its defeat did not end the delimitation question; it deferred it.  The 42nd Constitutional Amendment (1976) froze parliamentary seat allocation to the 1971 census, and the 84th Amendment (2001) extended that freeze until "the first census after 2026." That census is now underway. When it reports, the constitutional freeze ends automatically — and delimitation on population grounds becomes constitutionally mandated regardless of parliamentary legislation. ...

How Booth Management Wins Indian Elections

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India's 543 Lok Sabha constituencies and approximately 4,100 state assembly constituencies are each served by numerous individual polling booths — approximately one million polling stations nationwide. Each booth typically serves 1,000–1,500 voters. The election is won or lost at these booths: which voters showed up, which didn't, which supporters were mobilised, which opponents were strategically left unencouraged. India's political parties — particularly the BJP — have professionalised the science of booth-level management into a systematic operational discipline that has become as important to electoral outcomes as candidate selection, campaign rallies, and political messaging.  Representational Image: How Booth Management Wins Indian Elections The BJP's loss of West Bengal for over 30 years and its victory in May 2026 is evidence of how organisational ground-work changes electoral outcomes: Telangana Today's election analysis described TMC's defeat as occurr...

Is India's Democracy Backsliding?

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The question of India's democratic quality has become one of the most contested questions in global democratic analysis. International democracy indices — which measure electoral quality, civil liberties, rule of law, judicial independence, press freedom, civil society space, and minority rights — have produced consistent findings: India's democratic quality has declined significantly since 2014. V-Dem's Democracy Report 2025 classifies India as an "electoral autocracy" — a country that holds genuine elections but where civil liberties, judicial independence, and civil society freedom are sufficiently constrained to remove India from the "electoral democracy" category; the V-Dem dataset records a 20% decline in judicial autonomy indicators between 2014 and 2024. Freedom House downgraded India from "Free" to "Partly Free" in 2021 — a category it has remained in — with a score of 66/100 in 2024 against 77/100 in 2017. Reporters Sans Fro...

How Modi Governs: Decoding The Leadership Style and Power Concentration

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The Narendra Modi government represents a qualitative change in how India's executive power is organised, exercised, and communicated. While India's Constitution creates a collective Cabinet — the Council of Ministers collectively advising the President — and previous Prime Ministers governed through coalition management, factional balancing, and Cabinet consultation, the ruling PM Modi has established a governing style THAT IS characterised by concentration of decision-making in the Prime Minister's Office (PMO), minimal Cabinet deliberation on major decisions, heavy reliance on a circle of trusted officers, and direct-to-voter political communication that sometimes bypasses both Cabinet colleagues and mainstream media.  File Photo: PM Narendra Modi chairs a meeting of the CCS The India Forum's November 2025 analysis described power as having been "highly concentrated in India in the person of the Prime Minister Modi, and a handful of his acolytes, like Union Hom...

How Coalition Politics Works in India

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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...
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