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

Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
I
InfoQ
V
V2EX
博客园_首页
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
S
Secure Thoughts
Vercel News
Vercel News
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
D
DataBreaches.Net
H
Hacker News: Front Page
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
B
Blog RSS Feed
A
About on SuperTechFans
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
F
Full Disclosure
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
博客园 - 【当耐特】
The Cloudflare Blog
T
Threatpost
T
Tor Project blog
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
A
Arctic Wolf
C
Check Point Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
小众软件
小众软件
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
P
Proofpoint News Feed
Security Latest
Security Latest
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog

Latest Politics News | Frontline | Frontline

BJP turns Women’s Reservation Defeat into a New Campaign Plank in Uttar Pradesh Dantewada Cricket Event and India’s “Post-Maoist” Claim Maharashtra’s Sugar Mills Face a Deepening Economic Crisis Election Commission Bias in West Bengal Polls 2026? Tamil Nadu election 2026: Cash-For-Votes and Missing Voters One Year After Pahalgam: Violence, State Response, and Kashmir Narrative Tamil Nadu Assembly Election 2026: Why the Unattached Urban Voter Holds the Key in a Waveless Contest West Bengal Election 2026: Kudmi, Adivasi, Matua Identity Politics Explained When majoritarian march meets its first hard stop Will Didi prevail over Delhi? What Nithin Raj’s death says about caste in Kerala’s private colleges West Bengal election 2026: Identity politics, vote banks, and the BJP vs Trinamool battle Exclusive interview | Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin talks about Assembly election 2026, fiscal authoritarianism, and the fight for federalism Women’s Reservation Bill 2026: Modi’s Delimitation Trap Exposed What was wrong with BJP's so-called Women Reservation Bill J&K liquor controversy explained: Tourism, revenue, and politics | The Kashmir Notebook Ep 13 Delhi Pink Saheli Card 2026: Domicile Rule Hurts Women Manipur’s Rumour Economy: How Disinformation Fuels Mob Violence Punishing the South: Modi’s Delimitation Plan and the Politics of Control The Vijay Factor AIADMK Delta Strategy: Can Leema Rose Win? Maharashtra Shows Why Women’s Reservation May Aid Elites CBI Reply in Kejriwal Case Exposes Judicial Conflict Norms Tamil Nadu Election 2026: Social Media Narratives, War Rooms, and Players Modi’s Roadshow and BJP’s High-Stakes Push in South Tamil Nadu 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 Partha Chatterjee’s For a Just Republic and the Limits of the People-Nation Hungary Election 2026: Orbán Defeated, Magyar Wins Big 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? Reforming Tamil Nadu's Local Governance: Why MLAs Aren't Fixers in 2026 West Bengal voter list controversy explained | Why names are being deleted 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 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 India IT Rules 2026: Threat to Free Speech? Iran War Ceasefire Signals a Shift Toward Multipolar Deterrence 2026 Assembly Polls: Congress vs BJP Power Test Kerala Assembly Election 2026: LDF Anti-Incumbency vs UDF Momentum Gujarat Local Polls: AAP Rise Deepens Congress Crisis SIR controversy deepens fear of Muslim disenfranchisement in Bengal Kerala Election 2026: LDF, UDF, and the BJP “B Team” Charge 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 After Nitish Kumar, Bihar BJP faces its biggest test: caste coalition without a ‘Mr Clean’ Actor Vijay and Politics: An Emerging Landscape N Rangasamy’s 2026 Puducherry Poll Strategy and Power Play Kashmir Encounter Killing Sparks AFSPA Debate 2026 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 India Needs a New Economic Model Beyond Neoliberalism Why J&K MLAs Are Fighting the Lieutenant Governor Over Security Puducherry election 2026: Can Congress return to power? | V. Narayanasamy explains Pawar Family Rivalries Stall NCP Factions Merger in Maharashtra How Foreign Thinkers Shaped Hindutva’s Rise Naxalism’s Shift: Armed Struggle to Ideological Influence G. Haragopal on Tribal Resistance, Maoist Surrenders, and Politics DMK manifesto 2026: Key promises, alliances, & welfare politics Rajya Sabha Polls Expose India’s Open Secret: Cross-Voting and Poaching State Assembly Elections 2026: How Voter Dynamics Are Shaping India DMK Seat-Sharing Deal Reveals a Tougher M.K. Stalin What Iran Means to Kashmir | War, Identity, and 5000 Years of History Thirumavalavan Signals Shift in Tamil Nadu Politics Golgappa diplomacy and the fragile reset in India-Bangladesh ties Tamil Nadu election 2026: DMK vs AIADMK, alliances, and Vijay’s entry Is Indian Cinema Losing its Moral Voice? How the BJP’s strategic pivot on delimitation and women’s quota will reshape the 2029 electoral landscape Why INDIA Bloc Collapsed in Puducherry | DMK, Congress & VCK Rift Explained West Bengal 2026 Assembly Elections: Candidate Controversies Stir Party Rebellions Tamil Nadu Elections: CPI(M) on DMK Alliance & BJP Fight Ashok Kharat Scandal Exposes Maharashtra’s Godman–Power Nexus India Migration Crisis: Gulf Conflict Exposes Gaps 2011 Election Petition Against Stalin Returns Ahead of Tamil Nadu Election Delhi Budget 2026: Growth Claims and Welfare Gaps Tamil Nadu NDA Deal Reveals AIADMK’s Upper Hand Inside AIADMK Strategy: EPS Leadership, BJP Alliance, and TVK Challenge Vijay Politics: Can TVK Break Tamil Nadu's DMK AIADMK Duopoly? How Eid went under siege in Uttam Nagar Assam Elections 2026: BJP Faces Tribal Backlash Over Evictions in Karbi Anglong First Impeachment Notice Against India’s CEC Shakes Politics 2026 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 Maharashtra’s Anti-Conversion Bill and the Politics of 'Love Jihad' Post-Colonial Nationalism and the Western Far Right: Why the Comparison Fails Gujarat's proposed marriage registration amendment 2026 polices choice
Strong Leaders and the Crisis of Democracy in 2026
Tabish Khair · 2026-06-18 · via Latest Politics News | Frontline | Frontline
“Peace to the World”, a painting created by Russian artist Alexei Sergienko, depicting a combined portrait of Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump, is on display at the Sergienko Gallery in St Petersburg, Russia, on March 14, 2025.

“Peace to the World”, a painting created by Russian artist Alexei Sergienko, depicting a combined portrait of Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump, is on display at the Sergienko Gallery in St Petersburg, Russia, on March 14, 2025. | Photo Credit: DMITRI LOVETSKY/AP

Bourgeois democracy, which is a democracy of political parties and the only kind of “working democracy” we have known until now, entails active politics for a very small percentage of the population. Even when many people vote, say, 80 per cent of the electorate, the vast majority of these subside into non-political life the day after the election. Maybe 2 per cent of the population stays politically active in the running of parties and governments, with an active “party” cadre that is seldom over 20 per cent of the population in a working bourgeois democracy.

Hence, when persistent and serious problems, usually of an economic nature, afflict such nations, the vast “apolitical” majority grows sceptical of and finally hostile to the small political minority. With the rise of unemployment, inflation, etc., this “apolitical” majority has both time and cause to look for putative solutions. But it is not politically conscious, and it is actually scornful now of those who are or were politically conscious, the minority (leftist, centrist, liberal or conservative) that it now blames, with some validity, for the problems.

This is where the “strong leader” steps into a working democracy. The “apolitical” majority does not really care to involve itself in politics—it wants a “strong leader” who is in some way seen to be “above” politics. It does not connect to other voters in order to try and devise real working political solutions; instead, it connects to the “strong leader” who can unite everyone in the way that a puppeteer unites his puppets—with discreet lines of connection, not between the puppets but between each puppet and the puppeteer.

It has to be noted at the start that the “strong leader” who comes to power in any working democracy, no matter how flawed, is not the same as a strong monarch or conqueror of the past. Whether Chinggis Khan or Akbar or Ashoka, they were all “strong” in ways that do not carry much weight in a working democracy. At worst, they had the sheer physical strength of the leader and his supporters; at best, it was a slightly more sophisticated combination of physical strength rooted in material and social factors.

In that sense, Trump, Putin, or even Hitler or one of the many “strong leaders” of Asia, Europe, Africa or America—they came to power in a democracy, regardless of what they did to the democracy later on—belong to a breed different than that of a Nadir Shah or Ashoka. This latter breed can only be understood in the light of a failure of politics, not of cannons, matchlocks, horses, or armour. That failure of politics is the inability of bourgeois democracy to involve the masses in political action more than once in four or five years, when elections are held.

The main characteristic of the “apolitical” majority is, per definition, its inability to have a real political consciousness. This means, in effect, that even if they act as a mob, they remain a congregate of atomised individuals. Hannah Arendt claims that this is a characteristic of any mob: it is a collocation of atomised individuals. So, what is it that makes a mob surge in one direction and not in another, or dissolve in a hundred directions? No matter what the slogans, a mob’s surge is not an ideological motion; it follows an individual or group (led by an individual) who is at the head of it.

For the apolitical mass, this strong leader is the gathering point. The mass’ lack of politics and its corollary lack of connections with other individuals are both satiated by the strong leader. The strong leader directs, but the strong leader also connects. And then this apolitical majority is not just a mass, and, if the strong leader so wishes, it is a mob.

The individual’s loyalty in such a situation is not to another individual, but solely and totally to the strong leader, as Arendt has noted. The putative “politics” then, to the extent that it comes into verbal existence, depends entirely on the leader. It can change daily without effecting the loyalty of the follower, as this loyalty is to the leader and not to any real ideology. We have seen this in operation with Trump and the MAGA crowd, to give just one example.

As is clear, the strong leader who takes over any working democracy is not an anomaly of bourgeois democracy. He is the direct result of its failures. He is its consequence even. Therefore, castigating the “mob” that hails him, and fails to see his failures, does not work. The mob’s failure to register the strong leader’s growing list of failures is based on the institutional failures of bourgeois democracy; above all, its structural failure as essentially a parochial democracy, a once-in-a-few-years democracy.

Politicise

The only way to avoid this is to organise political power in such a way as to actively politicise the majority on a regular basis. This was achieved in limited ways in nations like Denmark, Finland and Sweden, with their careful gardening of communes and local self-decisions: even today, housing committees, neighbourhood organisations, cooperatives, unions, etc. play a large role in such places, and municipal elections are a serious enough matter. Consequently, strong leaders have not been evoked by the masses in such nations. Although this might change—I think it is already changing—as local North European democratic institutions are whittled away by capital and centrist bureaucratisation, a process that began in the 1990s.

It is important to remember that the mob is not separate from the masses, as Arendt, making a similar argument, erroneously implies; it is embedded in the masses, with its generalised apoliticality, which grows rather than diminishes in periods of prosperity. The greater the peace and prosperity in a bourgeois democracy, the more apolitical the masses get. When such periods end, the pressure of changed circumstances enables the mob to rise from the masses. The apolitical masses, unable to become political, disdainful of politics, look for a solution—as this cannot be politics, it is the strong leader, who fights, thinks, and does the politics on their behalf. A bourgeois democracy with “representative” politics gives rise in due course to the dictatorial strong leader—and the mob. The only way to avoid it is to find ways of making democracy more than just an occasional electoral exercise.

Tabish Khair is an Indian novelist and academic who teaches in Denmark.

Also Read | Fascism, Indian style

Also Read | FIFA’s own goal in America