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Indira Gandhi to Modi — India’s secular democracy has been dying for a while now

Modi has amply clarified that while democracies may choose their rulers, they cannot dictate the sort of power their rulers wield.

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Narendra Modi’s emphatic re-election victory makes inevitable something that was long feared: the transformation of India from secular democracy to Hindu majoritarian state.

Far from helping to reverse the global tide of illiberal figures and movements, voters in the world’s largest democracy have advanced it. Modi won with a landslide despite having failed miserably in his central mission: to create jobs for India’s young population.

It also did not matter to his supporters that during his first five years in power India’s social fabric was systematically shredded and the credibility of virtually every major institution, from the Supreme Court to India’s statistical organizations and the media, was undermined. It seemed more important that Modi could claim to have punished Pakistan for its support of terrorism with air strikes deep into the country.


Also read: The BJP strategy that helped Narendra Modi march past 300


Much will be written about how Indians succumbed to a leader with a proven record of economic incompetence, social disunity and xenophobic nationalism. But those who express great shock over this moral and political calamity will be exposing their own intellectual naivete. The fact is that their understanding of democracy, especially its Indian variant, has not kept up with reality.

The great theorists of democracy, from Tom Paine to John Stuart Mill, insisted that democracy expresses the rational choices of its citizens. But India’s experience tells us otherwise.

Fake news, hate-speech and corporate money can easily compromise rational choices. The ostensibly benign rule of the majority can quickly degenerate into belligerent majoritarianism. And institutions, however unimpeachable, can be subverted by dedicated ideological cadres of the kind Modi commands.

Certainly, Modi has amply clarified that while democracies may choose their rulers, they cannot dictate the sort of power their rulers wield – which may be as despotic and arbitrary as in an authoritarian state.

Many detractors of Donald Trump, Modi, and other elected demagogues have set great store by democracy’s impersonal institutions, and their checks and balances. But such faith was always a form of complacency at best, and blindness at worst.

Many unexamined platitudes about democracy derive from the Cold War. The system obviously seemed ethically sound and politically efficient when compared to the authoritarian dictatorships, often communist, of Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America.

Surrounded by despotisms, India, in particular, drew much political and moral prestige from its status as a democratic nation-state. Photographs of destitute Indians lining up to vote symbolized their exceptional ability to change their rulers.

The rapid rise of authoritarian China in the 2000s made democratic India look even more virtuous in contrast. In actuality, however, if we regard democracy as a promise of equality and dignity, underpinned by rule of law and impartial institutions, rather than just periodic elections, then democracy in India has been under continuous pressure and periodic assault.

Devising India’s radically democratic constitution in the late 1940s, the Dalit leader B.R. Ambedkar was already pointing to a fatal contradiction — that though the principle of one man one vote seemed to confer political equality on Indian citizens, it left untouched the grotesque social and economies inequalities of Indian society.

Ambedkar’s warning resonates even more after Modi’s victory: “We must remove this contradiction at the earliest possible moment or else those who suffer from inequality will blow up the structure of political democracy.”

One clear sign of this innate precariousness of Indian democracy was the “Emergency” in the mid-1970s. Faced with mass agitation against her, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi suspended fundamental rights and detained opposition leaders and critics. The media surrendered to her as cravenly as it has to Modi.


Also read: This is what changed for voters from 2014 to 2019 Lok Sabha elections: Nothing


Conventional accounts of the Emergency have a happy ending: Mrs. Gandhi lost elections in 1977 and Indian democracy was vindicated. But her spell of authoritarian rule responded to a fundamental crisis resulting from the unfulfilled promises of Indian democracy. With India’s cruel inequalities intensifying, as they have in recent years, authoritarianism was always likely to become the rule rather than an exception.

It is also worth remembering today that Hindu majoritarianism, another expedient of a cynical ruling class, was originally forged by India’s avowedly secular rulers. Mrs. Gandhi and her son Rajiv, prime minister from 1984 to 1989, unleashed it in India long before anyone had heard of Modi.

Secular as well as Hindu nationalist governments presided from the late 1980s onwards over a brutal counter-insurgency in Kashmir, which helped corrode many Indian institutions – from the judiciary to the media and the military – while mainstreaming anti-Muslim sentiment in Indian politics and society.

Modi has undoubtedly accelerated the decay of India’s political and civil life. But any honest reckoning with India’s election results must begin with this admission: The country’s secular democracy was dying well before Modi gave it a terminal blow.

Pankaj Mishra is a renowned author. His books include “Age of Anger: A History of the Present,” “From the Ruins of Empire: The Intellectuals Who Remade Asia,” and “Temptations of the West: How to Be Modern in India, Pakistan, Tibet and Beyond.”

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6 COMMENTS

  1. Apt author’s ink could have reviewed his thought after visiting the gruesome incidents experienced by the history and calendar of great democracy (2002 Gujarat riots, followed by Samjhota blasts and all incidents of mob lynchings), pending compliance of forensic audit of non-performance of assets, the another economic fraud delivered at the instance of nexus phenomenon which siphoned off balance of ordinary citizens, an uncountable figure which modern calculator can not decipher without dividing the fraud-figure! The guilt of RSS and BJP by creating psychowarefare of identity politics reflect in fear of international minoritism. Presently, players of Indian political economy are shying of estimates of currents of fair politics and inclusive economy by pampering the communal agenda of Nagpur. Their advancement in divisive politics would furiate religious zealots and moderates overseas would be subsided. Present media houses never cared of paralysing all the constitutional forums, which include the Apex Temple of Justice! Lobbyists of auto sectors are unable to use its CSR 1% funds in training qualified drivers as well as safe road infrastructure to avert fatal accidents, every day. How can we avert next Hiroshima could be our sub-continent, as its capacity of nuclear proliferation, e.g. re-assess the button of Indian nukes are in the hands of Hindutva brigade, similarly, Taliban! Two nation theory if re-visited with political wisdom of peace, co-existance and dearmament with cultural, trade, sports and exchange of scholarship between to enemies could be a good idea to survive our poor nations! Best wishes to our politicians who opt for Chanakya who could be winner without fear and loss!

  2. People fear what they do not understand. Especially the ‘intellectuals ‘ settled in the West. This swift , decisive up throning of all that this ‘tribe’ holds dear by the ‘poor’ huddling Indian voters, has been a shock. What is even more shocking for them is their complete irrelevance. Indians voted keeping their best interests in mind. That’s all. Functioning democracy is a force of nature. Interpret as you will, nature doesn’t not recognise your existence nor your whispers in the wind.

  3. We should not draw the wrong conclusions from a single, impressive electoral victory. What if, after two terms, fatigue sets in, partly due to economic distress. Will India regain its secular character overnight. The other troubling that conclusion that some would draw from this verdict is that It doesn’t matter if there is no job creation, the economy is sluggish, so long as people are lighting joss sticks in the temple, morning and evening.

  4. It’s this type of journalism that proclaims self righteousness and treat Indian voters a villian. Such self defeating asserations increases the anger in Indian voters. English language and western values have so much blinded these journalists that have lost the ability to see Indian reality. They continue repeating the same senseless accusations on Indian voters. They are a nuisance.

  5. Thanks Pankaj Mishra for stating: “It is also worth remembering today that Hindu majoritarianism, another expedient of a cynical ruling class, was originally forged by India’s avowedly secular rulers. Mrs. Gandhi and her son Rajiv, prime minister from 1984 to 1989, unleashed it in India long before anyone had heard of Modi.”

  6. Love it when these illiberal pseuds like Pankaj Mishra, NYT, Economist, the mainstream media and the hordes of academics in the west pretend to stand for something — which none of them practice or really believe in.

    The so-called liberals in Europe and America and their disciples in India are the most illiberal and will not countenance any criticism.

    Glad the liberal disease is showing signs of being contained by valiant fight back the world over by truly democratic and popular govts who have been voted to power in recent years.

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