惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
博客园 - 司徒正美
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
W
WeLiveSecurity
Jina AI
Jina AI
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
V
V2EX
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
F
Full Disclosure
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
S
Security Affairs
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
P
Privacy International News Feed
IT之家
IT之家
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
D
DataBreaches.Net
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
C
Check Point Blog
美团技术团队
Security Latest
Security Latest
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
H
Help Net Security
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
The Cloudflare Blog
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
爱范儿
爱范儿
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
I
Intezer
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
AI
AI
I
InfoQ
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog

India’s National Fortnightly Magazine

SIR West Bengal Voter Exclusion Case 2026 TN Assembly Polls 2026: Senthil Balaji and SP Velumani Clash for Western Belt Supremacy Women’s Reservation Act Amendments Raise Delimitation Fears Healthcare’s Breaking Point India’s Elderly Boom: Care Gaps and Policy Failures AI chatbots fill mental health gaps in India, but risks grow Substandard Drugs in India: The Hidden Public Health Threat India Healthcare Costs Crisis: Who Pays the Price? ASHAs hold India’s fragile health system together but are woefully underpaid Partha Chatterjee’s For a Just Republic and the Limits of the People-Nation India’s Missing Middle: Trapped Between Health Insurance and Care Hungary Election 2026: Orbán Defeated, Magyar Wins Big Shailaja Paik on Dalit Women, Caste, and the Politics of Erasure in India Free Speech Crackdown in India: Is Dissent Under Threat? Ambedkar Jayanti and the New Publicness of Protest Politics Implementing Women’s Reservation: Why a Hybrid 651-Seat Lok Sabha Model Outperforms Mass Expansion Ambedkar and Free Speech: Who Controls Dissent in 2026? How a Maharashtra Village Turned Tea with Dalits into a Statewide Equality Mission Women’s Reservation, Delimitation Bills Spark Secrecy Row Reforming Tamil Nadu's Local Governance: Why MLAs Aren't Fixers in 2026 Sewage, Neglect, and Governance Failure Mark India's Water Crisis West Bengal voter list controversy explained | Why names are being deleted Pattukkottai Kalyanasundaram: Tamil Cinema and Left Politics Delhi’s PM-UDAY Reset: Regularising Unauthorised Colonies on an “as is” Basis Will Vijay’s TVK disrupt DMK and AIADMK? | Tamil Nadu election 2026 Constitutional Morality vs Social Morality in India 2026 Amit Shah’s Anti-Conversion Promise Opens a New Faultline in Punjab Politics Why Indian Shias Protest for Iran: History of Solidarity (2026) West Bengal Voter List Row 2026: “Votercide” Debate The Hidden Ecosystem Inside our Homes Asha Bhosle’s Death Marks the End of an Era in Indian Playback Music Women’s Health in India: Inequality by Design How Algorithms Turn Feminism into a Marketable Aesthetic An Unanswered People: Adivasi Poetry’s Fight for Language and Land Rereading Kari in the Age of Identity Debates Absolute Jafar: Nostalgia and restlessness in frames Anita Nair’s Why I Killed My Husband Review: Powerful Themes, Uneven Storytelling Why the FCRA Amendment Bill 2026 Has Triggered a Political Storm Iran’s Staying Power Redraws the US-Israel War Calculus Snake Metaphors in Indian Politics 2026: Venomous Rhetoric From Grief to Politics: Porkodi Armstrong and the Battle for Dalit Power in North Chennai West Bengal election 2026: Will Babri Masjid split the Muslim vote? West Bengal Communal Politics and the 2026 Election Battle Raghav Chadha-AAP Rift Explained: Rise to Fallout (2026) Why India Is Not Energy-Secure Amid Global Oil Shocks Mulla Shah Mosque: Jahanara Begum's forgotten legacy Strait of Hormuz Ceasefire: Pause, Not Peace Dharavi’s Kumbharwada Potters fear Adani-led Redevelopment will Destroy their Livelihoods How India’s Poor Lose Years Waiting in Queues (2026) India IT Rules 2026: Threat to Free Speech? Iran War Ceasefire Signals a Shift Toward Multipolar Deterrence US Foreign Policy: Empire, Coups, and Control (2026) CBFC Ban on Gaza Film Raises New Alarm Over Censorship Queer Dalit identity and the limits of visibility 2026 Assembly Polls: Congress vs BJP Power Test Israel's Relentless Bombing Creates Displacement Crisis in Lebanon Iran War Ceasefire Marks End of US Dominance Era Imported Inflation in India: Navigating Gulf Crisis Kerala Assembly Election 2026: LDF Anti-Incumbency vs UDF Momentum Petronet LNG: A Public Company Built to Escape Public Accountability Gujarat Local Polls: AAP Rise Deepens Congress Crisis Who Defines You? | The Frontline Newsletter SIR controversy deepens fear of Muslim disenfranchisement in Bengal Kerala Election 2026: LDF, UDF, and the BJP “B Team” Charge Delhi’s LPG Crisis Exposes How Migrants Are Locked Out At 100, Krishnammal Jagannathan’s Life Marks a Legacy of Dalit Land Rights and Resistance Who will win Kerala Assembly Election 2026? LDF or UDF? Assam Polls: Cash Transfers Mask Stagnant Incomes and Job Distress Jaishankar and India's Diplomacy Crisis West Bengal SIR 2026: Voters Treated as Suspects Sathankulam Verdict: How a Rare Death Penalty Challenges India’s Custodial Torture Crisis How three 2026 bills redefine identity, marriage, and freedom in India After Nitish Kumar, Bihar BJP faces its biggest test: caste coalition without a ‘Mr Clean’ Nuclear Deterrence in South Asia: Fragile Stability Actor Vijay and Politics: An Emerging Landscape Dharavi’s Idli-Vada Economy Faces Disruption Under Redevelopment Child Marriage Annulment in India: Khushbu’s Fight (2026) India’s Role in Palestine: Why West Asia Peace Needs Action 2026 Rethinking Iran beyond Western narratives N Rangasamy’s 2026 Puducherry Poll Strategy and Power Play Khalid Jawed on Urdu’s Future and Cultural Loss (2026) Kashmir Encounter Killing Sparks AFSPA Debate 2026 Birds and grief in Hamnet and H is for Hawk GST Federalism Crisis 2026: How States Lost Fiscal Power US-Iran War 2026: Petrodollar Stakes Behind Hormuz Clash White Savior Complex in Arab Regimes Drives Ukraine Deals Not Self Reliance UPA Corruption Narrative vs Court Verdicts 2026 Mathur Sathya Case Exposes Patriarchy in Progressive Politics Personality Cult in Indian Politics 2026: Why Leaders Remain Untouchable India Needs a New Economic Model Beyond Neoliberalism Why J&K MLAs Are Fighting the Lieutenant Governor Over Security Pawar Family Rivalries Stall NCP Factions Merger in Maharashtra DMK manifesto 2026: Key promises, alliances, & welfare politics State Assembly Elections 2026: How Voter Dynamics Are Shaping India Iran-Israel War: Hegel’s Recognition Theory Explains the Escalation Coal, Capital, and Compliance: Fairmine Under NGT Lens Hindu Rashtra Debate: 2026 State Elections Test Secular India Tamil Nadu Election 2026: How Gender and Gen Z Voters are Reshaping the Dravidian Power Struggle Gujarat's proposed marriage registration amendment 2026 polices choice Will NEET Break More Students Than It Makes Doctors?
West Bengal Election: Why the BJP Must Not Win in 2026
2026-05-03 · via India’s National Fortnightly Magazine

Who will win the election for the new West Bengal Legislative Assembly? Perhaps, instead of this, we ought to ask: Who should win in Bengal? Before we delve into this question, we must reflect on why the gaze of Delhi’s analytical circles is so disproportionately fixed upon Bengal. Elections were also held in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Assam, and Puducherry. Yet, the discourse remains obsessively centred on Bengal.

A primary reason for this is that in the southern States, the BJP does not appear to be a credible claimant to power. It participates in elections, and with full force certainly, still it remains a marginal player and has not developed into a serious challenger to the incumbent forces. Consequently, for the Delhi commentators, these States lack “importance”. Add to this the fact that the South continues to exist on the periphery of the North Indian imagination. As for Assam, a consensus seems to have already been reached regarding the outcome; the only curiosity remains whether the BJP will replace the Chief Minister or if Himanta Biswa Sarma will return to the helm.

Bengal is different. It is special because, this time, conquering it has become a matter of prestige for the BJP. The party has exhausted all possible resources to capture Bengal. The Election Commission of India (ECI) and the judiciary are facilitating the removal of every hurdle in its path. Even the administrative officials and security forces deployed from other States exhibit a visible tilt toward the BJP. The moneyed media of Delhi is equally desperate to see the saffron flag flutter over Bengal. In the 2022 election, this media had already declared a BJP victory; the actual results were a rebuke to their desires. This time, they hope the ECI and the entire state machinery will finally deliver what they crave for.

If these elections were being held in an atmosphere of normal parliamentary rivalry, and if there were a normal democratic alternative to the ruling Trinamool, the answer would perhaps not be so contentious. The Trinamool has been in power for fifteen years. Its freshness has gone. The high-handedness of local leaders is rampant; corruption and administrative lethargy are a matter of public discussion. The Trinamool has failed to fulfil the aspirations that brought it to power.

In 2011, the people of Bengal uprooted the Left Front at a time when it seemed invincible. The Left had captured every social institution, and violence had become the primary language of politics. Hubris had consumed the CPI(M). This combination created a desperate urge in the people to rid themselves of the Left at any cost.

Today, the situation feels hauntingly similar. Under normal circumstances, a change in government would be both natural and justified. But Bengal’s misfortune lies in the fact that neither the Congress nor the Left Front is in a position to stand against the Trinamool. Since losing power in 2011, the CPI(M) seems to have lost its will to fight, and the Congress party long ago washed its hands of Bengal. In this vacuum, only the BJP emerges as a viable alternative.

While a BJP victory might seem “natural” in these circumstances, why do people like us insist that it must not happen?

The danger that a BJP victory poses to Bengal has been made manifest by its own campaign. The blatant instrumentalisation of state institutions is a signal that the BJP holds no reverence for parliamentary or constitutional decencies. When such a party gains power, it treats the state’s resources not as public trusts, but as personal fiefdom—behaving much like the monarchs of old.

Furthermore, the BJP’s campaign has explicitly “othered” and demonised the Muslims of Bengal. There was no attempt to win their trust. On the contrary, its leaders repeatedly emphasised that their victory would signal the beginning of “dark days” for the community. Every campaigner employed violent rhetoric to humiliate Muslims, attempting to brand them as “non-Bengali” by tying them to the Urdu language or to Bangladesh. The Prime Minister and the Home Minister repeatedly threatened to expel “infiltrators” one by one. The implication of a BJP victory for the Muslims of Bengal requires no elaboration.

In every State where the BJP has ascended to power, the hate propaganda against Muslims and Christians has intensified, and daily violence against Muslims has become normalised. Odisha is the latest testament to this. Since the BJP formed its first independent government there, reports of daily violence against Muslims have begun to emerge from all corners of the State. Attacks on Muslims on the streets, in buses, trains, and inside homes are becoming routine. The violence against Christians, meanwhile, often fails to even register in the public consciousness.

Lives defined by uncertainty

It is an uncomfortable but undeniable truth: in BJP-ruled States, the lives of Muslims and Christians are defined by precariousness and uncertainty. They face systemic discrimination and violence, knowing full well that the state will never stand by them. This fact alone is reason enough that the BJP should not come to power in Bengal.

To many, this reason seems insufficient. Is the dignity and safety of Muslims so significant that it should preclude a change in government? Those who ask this also desire better education, health, and living standards. Yet, if we look at the data of the last decade, BJP-ruled States lag significantly behind states like Tamil Nadu or Kerala in health, nutrition, and infant mortality rates. Even in terms of ease of doing business, their record is far from stellar.

The quality of education in BJP-ruled States has seen a marked decline. Graduates from their institutions are often viewed with scepticism in the academic and professional world. This proves a vital point: social harmony cannot be sacrificed at the altar of economic prosperity, for the latter cannot survive without the former.

Beyond this, the BJP works with a monarchical mind. They view the people not as citizens with rights, but as subjects with duties towards the king. Thus, it is not merely about the humiliation of Muslims; the Hindu majority, too, loses its agency and sovereignty. The BJP systematically hollows out parliamentary processes, subordinating the police, the administration, and the judiciary to its ideology and not the Constitution of India. In this process, the people are rendered powerless and live on the mercy or pleasure of the monarch.

For these reasons, the BJP cannot be a “better alternative” to the Trinamool. But as these lines are written, the verdict of Bengal has already been cast. It only remains to be seen whether Bengal chooses to follow the path of Uttar Pradesh and Gujarat, or if it retains its own soul and tries to find its own path.

Apoorvanand teaches Hindi at Delhi University and writes literary and cultural criticism.

Also Read | What if BJP doesn’t get 100 seats in Bengal?

Also Read | The Bengal laboratory