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From The Hindu


“Are you happy with the election results?” A friend asked on WhatsApp. A fan of Modi, he was being facetious. The prelude to that question was proof of the flippancy. The BJP is happy, his message said, “because again we are the largest party.” Congress is happy since the result outdid their expectations and the claims of the exit polls. The message went on to give similar reasons why all parties and even the Election Commission were happy with the results. It concluded with Arvind Kejriwal’s happiness because his “sugars are now under control.”

“I am happy,” I responded, “because Modiji’s hubris has got the jolt it should….”

I didn’t vote this time though I took Maggie, my sister-in-law and niece to the polling station because they wanted to vote and I am a democrat who lets others follow their choices. I wrote earlier about why I wouldn’t vote this time. The results that came yesterday, however, are a great relief. Democracy is still alive in my country. It’s not because Modi wanted to keep democracy pulsating as some people want us to believe. Far from it. In his hubris, he had imagined that he was invincible. “Ek akela sab par bhaari (I alone am enough to vanquish all opposition),” he yelled.  He was cocksure that his party would get no less than 400 seats. He had even started making claims to divinity.

If Modi’s party had actually won the targeted 400+ seats, India wouldn’t have been a democracy anymore. Modi had already canonised himself as a High Priest (Ram Mandir consecration), crowned himself the King of India (sengol episode), and started claiming to be a divine incarnation. The signs were all ominous for a nation like India with so much diversity of all sorts: cultural, religious, linguistic… One man trying to pulverise all that diversity just because he thinks he is sent by the Almighty with that mission is a disaster for any country.

I thought that India would catapult this man to his claimed divinity by giving him a mammoth mandate. That is why I didn’t vote. In other words, I didn’t trust my country people. Modi as an individual is not the real problem with India. The people who lend their support to leaders like Modi are the problem. I didn’t wish to be with those people and hence decided not to join the queue at the polling station.

Now I understand that my compatriots are all not as blind as I had imagined. There is hope for India. The best proof is the defeat of the BJP in Faizabad, the constituency that houses the Ram Mandir of Ayodhya. BJP’s defeat there is a “symbolic rejection by voters of the constant use of religion for electoral purposes,” as Prashant Jha writes in today’s [5 June] Hindustan Times. In fact, BJP’s performance in Uttar Pradesh is dismal this time. In spite of Modi making that state his ‘home state’ by contesting the election from there. In spite of the heavy propaganda that was carried out there for a long time. In spite of a Yogi presiding over the politics of the state.

Uttar Pradesh has lit a new lamp of hope in my soul.

I hope Modi learns the vital lessons now at least. That he is not invincible. That he is not divine. That the people of India are not as stupid as he imagined them to be. There is always time to improve oneself. Even Modi can try. 


 

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Comments

  1. Tom, the election results reminded me of what Abraham Lincoln said, 'You can fool some people all the time, all the people for some time, but you can't fool all the people all the time'. I had almost begun to believe old Abe was wrong. But the UP voter and in fact voters in quite a few other states showed me the truth of the proverb. And today morning I heaved a sigh of relief realizing that democracy is still alive in the country.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have firm faith in what Lincoln said. But i was sceptical about the intelligence of certain Indians! Now i should rethink...

      I celebrated the results, not just heaved a sigh of relief 😊

      Delete
  2. Hari OM
    I too read of the results and let out a breath from deep that I hadn't quite realised I was holding! YAM xx

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  3. I voted and glad I did. Finally after a decade of elected autocracy we will have a true democratic coalition government.

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  4. This Indian election which concluded just recently fully proves that the toolkit warriors of various hues, who were engaged in vicious propaganda that democracy in India was in danger or the majority community, that is, the Hindus were hard-core communal are now feeling 'happy' and praising the verdict of the matured voters.
    Let the so-called 'liberals', 'democrats', 'leftists', pseudo 'secularists', and 'woke intellectual crowds' understand that Indian democracy is safe and there is no cause of concern for the minorities in India. Further, on the face of naked and insane vilification that freedom of speech and expression is in peril under the present government, it has been proved beyond doubt, before and after the elections that it was and is nothing but a concerted propaganda by some anti-national forces to denigrate the elected government of the so called majority community. This is so because, the vested interests had a free time to openly blame the majority community by name in the social media that they are conspiring en masse to turn India into 'Rama' Rajya and things like that.This election has disproved all these lies and brought to open the obvious truths and happiness everywhere. Suddenly, the propagandists now even admit that the (BJP/RSS) government and the Election Commission of India have conducted a free and fair election and that all the electronic voting machines also functioned properly.
    It is good that after the elections results are out everyone is now happy.
    Many Indians also believe and are happy that the sugar problem of New Delhi chief minister Sri Arvind Kejriwal has largely been abated.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Your comment makes me think of Modi as Julius Caesar and I am Brutus. You are Mark Antony orating for wreaking vengeance on the conspirators. All the best.

      As I have made it clear in the post, it's not because of Modi's magnanimity that democracy has returned to the electoral process in India. It's because people have seen through Modi's reality, his pretensions, his narcissism, his venality... Ask the common citizen of India, if you prefer, and you will get the real answer.

      All those labels that you have hurled around here - liberals, wokes, psuedos... - are fabrications of Modi's propaganda and the futility of such propaganda is clear now. Actually, Indians are not enlightened suddenly. It's just that the rising prices, spreading hatred and sheer absurdity of the political reality in which the lines between truth and falsehood, reality and illusion, sanity and insanity are all obfuscated, and the citizens are fed up of that situation. It's their helplessness that made them vote out Modi. If your Odisha was not beset with Patnaik's illnesss, BJP would have lost there too.

      Delete
  5. One of our satirical shows did a whole thing on the election this past Sunday. I learned a lot. I think you can actually see it if you're curious. (The show created two websites to fly under the radar. One is oppositesnakes.com. The other is howtoeatamango.com. I think I got those addresses right.)

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    Replies
    1. I think the websites are still under construction or may not be available in India.

      Delete
  6. In our country, the election is just as frustrating and disappointing. Especially with all the fake news going around.

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    1. Everything seems to have become fake now - the news, the speeches of leaders, religions, promises... Tough life.

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  7. Good one! yes, the results are a big relief though it could have been lot better in states like Karnataka where I live. UP, this time won the hearts of many right thinking Indians!

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    1. It was heartening to see the Hindi belt saying No to Modi sort of politics.

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  8. Yes, hopefully all politicians have learnt some lessons from this election results.

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  9. My sentiments exactly.. if people support a lunatic, they deserve the lunacy. Else, change the grid and.change the course

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