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Frontline Magazine’s Deep Dive: 2024 Lok Sabha Election Coverage | Frontline

Interview | Siddhartha Deb, Author of Twilight Prisoners: ‘We must push back, otherwise we’ll live in a police state’ ‘People have said: we want our republic’: Dipankar The Dystopian Times by Appupen The Dystopian Times by Appupen May 15 Narendra Modi: The roar is now a low growl Mamata Banerjee’s Corruption Crackdown: Calculated move or Genuine Reform? Busting the Urban-Rural Myth: Where the BJP Lost their Majority in the 2024 Lok Sabha Election Profile | Chandrababu Naidu: Hard-Working Technocrat Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh Needs to Balance Welfare and Development 2024 India Election Shake-up: How Regional Parties Tipped the Scales Against BJP Dominance How the 2024 Lok Sabha Election Showed the Changing Face of Dalit Politics AIADMK’s Resilience Tested as BJP and NTK Gain Ground in Tamil Nadu How Rahul Gandhi Reinvented Himself From Pappu To Gen Z’s ‘Thirst Trap’ Sangh Parivar’s critique of ‘arrogance’ in BJP and its election strategy hints at realignment within Hindu nationalist camp. Kashmir Elections 2024: Engineer Rashid’s Surprising Win Signals Political Shift The Dystopian Times June 19, 2024 ‘Modi has Lost This Election’: Election Researcher Ashish Ranjan Tells Saba Naqvi The Dystopian Times by Appupen ‘Federalism should be back to what it was’: Christophe Jaffrelot Lok Sabha Election 2024 Results | BJP retains upper hand in Assam but Congress finds its feet in the North-East once again Punjab Elections 2024: Congress Revival, Radical Resurgence Lok Sabha Election 2024 Results | Congress scripts resounding comeback in Haryana on the back of the anger and dissatisfaction against the BJP Lok Sabha Election 2024 Results | Amid BRS’ downturn, BJP sees hope of expansion in Telangana Lok Sabha Election 2024 Results | BJP Breaches ‘Secular Bastion’, LDF Faces Anti-Incumbency Wave The defeat of Naveen Patnaik’s Biju Janata Dal (BJD) by the BJP in Odisha comes as a huge shock Rajasthan Lok Sabha Election 2024: BJP’s Polarising Tactics Fail, Congress Gains Ground EDITOR’S NOTE | India’s 2024 Election Results A Setback for BJP’s Divisive Tactics, Hope for Inclusive Democracy N. Chandrababu Naidu and Pawan Kalyan emerge as power players at the Centre and in Andhra Pradesh, routing Jagan Mohan Reddy Maharashtra Lok Sabha Elections 2024: BJP’s Divisive Tactics Fail, INDIA Bloc Emerges Victorious Caste Politics Dominates 2024 Lok Sabha Elections, Challenging BJP’s Hindutva Agenda Defying predictions of his political demise, Nitish Kumar’s JD(U) emerges as a major force in the caste-driven Bihar elections Karnataka Election Results 2024: Explaining How BJP-JD(S) Alliance Swept Polls, Winning 19 Lok Sabha Seats How Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress Secured Landslide Victory in West Bengal Lok Sabha Polls 2024 New horizons in Uttar Pradesh as Samajwadi Party-Congress alliance throws wrench into BJP’s ambitions BJP Loses All Tribal Reserved Seats in Jharkhand: Implications for Upcoming Assembly Election SUM AND SUBSTANCE | The road ahead for India's stock market following the formation of a new coalition government under Narendra Modi FROM THE SIDELINES | Results of the 2024 election is a seismic moment for Muslims that restores faith in democracy. 2024 Lok Sabha Election: The results have shown that Indian voters are too wise to be taken in by fakery Women’s Voting Patterns in India’s Lok Sabha Election 2024: Impact of Promises and Schemes Modi’s Neighborhood Challenge: Balancing Regional Interests in a Shifting Geopolitical Landscape 2024 Lok Sabha Election Results: India’s Democratic Resilience Wins over Divisive Politics 2024 Lok Sabha Results: Victroy for Dalit-Bahujan Politics and Constitutional Values ELECTION 2024 | Pressing the dissent button in Jammu and Kashmir’s first Lok Sabha as a Union Territory Tamil Nadu Election Results 2024: DMK Alliance Wins All 40 Seats, BJP’s Hindutva Push Fails ‘People have said: we want our republic’: Dipankar, CPI(M-L) Liberation leader Fiasco in Faizabad: Why the BJP lost Faizabad Lok Sabha seat in the same year the Ram Mandir was constructed How India’s exit polls got the 2024 Lok Sabha election horribly wrong Narendra Modi: How a billionaire-friendly Prime Minister was cut down to size by Indians who make Rs.300 a day ‘NDA has won, but BJP has lost’: Eedina.com’s H.V. Vasu on 2024 Lok Sabha election ‘NDA has won, but BJP has lost’: Eedina.com’s H.V. Vasu on 2024 Lok Sabha election ‘People have said, “We want our republic”’: Dipankar Why the BJP lost in Ladakh ‘No contest’ to NOTA: Indore scripts electoral history in 2024 Lok Sabha election A glance at celebrities’ impact on Lok Sabha Elections 2024 Lok Sabha Election Results: Hung Parliament likely as BJP falls short of a majority Maratha community’s demand for Kunbi Other Backward Class reservation has sharpened caste politics in Maharashtra The Dystopian Times by Appupen Supreme Court’s endorsement of EVMs as cornerstone of fair elections trigger debate on compatibility of digital voting systems with democratic principles How Modi’s BJP is failing the test of OBC politics The credibility of Election Commission has been compromised by its refusal to take action against BJP
The BJP’s Reduced Majority in the 2024 General Election Unlikely to Alter Its Core Ideology of Transforming India into a Hindu Rashtra
Vaishna RoyVaishna Roy is the Editor of Frontline. · 2024-06-25 · via Frontline Magazine’s Deep Dive: 2024 Lok Sabha Election Coverage | Frontline

A fundamental reset in the BJP’s functioning is unlikely. One will see more hypocritical posturing by Modi while his stormtroopers do the opposite.

Profiling Chandrababu Naidu in this issue, our writer Ayesha Minhaz speaks of how he was ousted after his second term largely because of the growing dissent among small and marginal farmers, whose unhappiness India’s original technocrat politician did not understand and did not prioritise. Minhaz quotes a Telugu Desam Party insider saying, “During that period, Naidu truly thought he was invincible.” Ironically, while this election saw Naidu claw his way back to a fourth term as Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, it is the leader of the party he allied with to craft his victory who must come to terms with the realisation that he is far from invincible.

Like Naidu and his party at one time, Narendra Modi and the BJP appeared infected with overconfidence in this election. They danced a premature victory lap with an arrogance that reeked of hubris, and it took the announcement of the actual numbers for the truth to sink in—both in the slavish TV studios and in the party offices. For a man and his cohorts to whom crushing dominance is the language of governance, the loss of 63 seats of their own and 60 seats of the NDA and being forced to rule at the head of a coalition is as good as defeat.

While the losses in places such as Ayodhya and its hinterland indicate an electorate tired of religious polarisation, this is unlikely to make the BJP or Modi or his successor, if any, alter the tangent of their ambition, which will always be to make India a Hindu Rashtra. Any post-mortem the party launches now will be about glib changes in vocabulary, and not anything substantive. Post-election analysts have written of the fear of the Constitution being altered that the opposition candidates invoked, but what they don’t mention is that it was no invoked fear but a fact. The BJP is ideologically committed to certain ideas and those cannot be achieved unless it amends or jettisons the Constitution in its present shape, for which it needs a two-thirds majority.

Saba Naqvi writes in her column this time that the BJP’s ideological father, the RSS, is irked with Modi. The annoyance stems from Modi’s losses, not from his actions. If the wild speeches spewing communal venom and the mandir campaigns in Mathura and Kashi had yielded a landslide, the RSS would have been embracing Modi without a mention of ahankaar or maryada. The RSS is critical of the “400 paar” slogan only because it would have preferred the party to cross the 400-seat mark quietly and then junk the Constitution, not announce it loudly (as some BJP leaders did) and scare away voters.

The election result of June 4 will yield no fundamental reset in the functioning of the BJP. On June 7, three Muslim men were assaulted in Chhattisgarh’s Raipur while transporting cattle. All three are dead. There has been no statement from the Prime Minister condemning cow vigilantism. Instead, he celebrated Yoga Day in Kashmir and announced that practitioners can use any incantation “whether Allah, Ishwar, or Waheguru”. The near future will only see more such hypocritical posturing by Modi while his stormtroopers do the opposite.

For now, we turn the spotlight back on further analysis of the election results. In this issue, Ashish Ranjan of Data Action Lab for Emerging Societies, Shamindra Nath Roy of Centre for Policy Research, and Frontline writers T.K. Rajalakshmi and Anand Mishra take up four angles: the performance of regional parties, the BJP’s urban vote, the farmers’ protests, and the rise of new Dalit leaders. Meanwhile, it is the upcoming Assembly elections that might more clearly confirm a rise or fall in the country’s democracy barometer.