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More Than EVMs, It Is 'the Hindu Mind' Which Has Been Effectively Rigged

The Guardian view on Narendra Modi’s landslide: bad for India’s soul
Editorial

The world does not need another national populist leader who pursues a pro-business agenda while trading in fake news and treating minorities as second-class citizens

The biggest election in history has just been won by one man: Narendra Modi. Mr Modi has become the first Indian prime minister since 1971 to secure a single-party majority twice in a row. In 2014 the Bharatiya Janata party won an absolute majority in the lower house of parliament for the first time in its history after the Congress party’s appeal vanished in a haze of corruption. Despite a spluttering economy five years later, Mr Modi seems certain to have expanded his parliamentary majority. This is bad news for India and the world.

The BJP is the political wing of Hindu nationalism, a movement that is changing India for the worse. Little wonder, as it stands for the flagrant social dominance of the upper castes of Hindu society, pro-corporate economic growth, cultural conservatism, intensified misogyny, and a firm grip on the instruments of state power. The landslide win for Mr Modi will see India’s soul lost to a dark politics – one that views almost all 195 million Indian Muslims as second-class citizens.

On the campaign trail Muslims were denigrated as “termites” by Mr Modi’s right-hand man. Off it, they were lynched with apparent impunity. Despite their number, Muslims are political orphans, shunned by a political class fearful of losing support from the majority Hindu population. Before the election Muslims held just 24 seats in parliament, about 4% of the total, and the fewest the community has held since 1952. This is likely to shrink further.

A divisive figure, Mr Modi is undoubtedly a charismatic campaigner. Rather than transcend the faultlines of Indian society – religion, caste, region and language – Mr Modi’s style is to throw them into sharp relief. He is a populist who speaks in the name of the people against the elite despite being a seasoned public figure. Mr Modi deployed with terrible effect false claims and partisan facts.

Perhaps we ought not to be surprised. Polling in 2017 revealed that support for autocratic rule by a “strong leader” was higher in India (55%) than in any other country, including Vladimir Putin’s Russia. The world does not need another national populist. Mr Modi has threatened independent India’s most precious facet: a functioning multi-party democracy. As the authors of a new book on Mr Modi’s politics – Majoritarian State – put it, “the BJP has made it clear that no other party should compete with it … reflect[ing] its views of competitors not as adversaries, but as enemies”. Mr Modi recklessly chose to raise the stakes with neighbouring Pakistan over Kashmir earlier this year. He took both countries close to war and pressed conflict into his service by ridiculously accusing the opposition of collusion with fundamentalist Islam.

The Congress party and the Nehru-Gandhi clan that leads it will have to seriously rethink how they can defeat Mr Modi. The BJP has been allowed to be funded anonymously to the tune of 10.3 bn rupees (£120m) by big business after Mr Modi legitimised opacity in political donations. The party pays lip service to reducing the yawning inequalities that disfigure India, but political cleavages in India’s party system have grown along the lines of caste and religious conflict. This suits the BJP, with its pro-business and anti-Muslim nationalism. The opposition will need to be able to run a distinctive campaign on an egalitarian platform. To be fair, Congress did peddle, but without much vim, a form of universal basic income. Fights over symbolic aspects of identity need to be replaced by political competition over how to benefit all Indians. That will require an opposition in India far savvier and more in touch with the country’s poor than exists today.

https://www.theguardian.com/comment...4ORmO3LlxDQzLVYu-qDrzMUqO5VqRQfzhJPGO9nXyxXrA
 
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The Guardian view on Narendra Modi’s landslide: bad for India’s soul
Editorial

The world does not need another national populist leader who pursues a pro-business agenda while trading in fake news and treating minorities as second-class citizens

The biggest election in history has just been won by one man: Narendra Modi. Mr Modi has become the first Indian prime minister since 1971 to secure a single-party majority twice in a row. In 2014 the Bharatiya Janata party won an absolute majority in the lower house of parliament for the first time in its history after the Congress party’s appeal vanished in a haze of corruption. Despite a spluttering economy five years later, Mr Modi seems certain to have expanded his parliamentary majority. This is bad news for India and the world.

The BJP is the political wing of Hindu nationalism, a movement that is changing India for the worse. Little wonder, as it stands for the flagrant social dominance of the upper castes of Hindu society, pro-corporate economic growth, cultural conservatism, intensified misogyny, and a firm grip on the instruments of state power. The landslide win for Mr Modi will see India’s soul lost to a dark politics – one that views almost all 195 million Indian Muslims as second-class citizens.

On the campaign trail Muslims were denigrated as “termites” by Mr Modi’s right-hand man. Off it, they were lynched with apparent impunity. Despite their number, Muslims are political orphans, shunned by a political class fearful of losing support from the majority Hindu population. Before the election Muslims held just 24 seats in parliament, about 4% of the total, and the fewest the community has held since 1952. This is likely to shrink further.

A divisive figure, Mr Modi is undoubtedly a charismatic campaigner. Rather than transcend the faultlines of Indian society – religion, caste, region and language – Mr Modi’s style is to throw them into sharp relief. He is a populist who speaks in the name of the people against the elite despite being a seasoned public figure. Mr Modi deployed with terrible effect false claims and partisan facts.

Perhaps we ought not to be surprised. Polling in 2017 revealed that support for autocratic rule by a “strong leader” was higher in India (55%) than in any other country, including Vladimir Putin’s Russia. The world does not need another national populist. Mr Modi has threatened independent India’s most precious facet: a functioning multi-party democracy. As the authors of a new book on Mr Modi’s politics – Majoritarian State – put it, “the BJP has made it clear that no other party should compete with it … reflect[ing] its views of competitors not as adversaries, but as enemies”. Mr Modi recklessly chose to raise the stakes with neighbouring Pakistan over Kashmir earlier this year. He took both countries close to war and pressed conflict into his service by ridiculously accusing the opposition of collusion with fundamentalist Islam.

The Congress party and the Nehru-Gandhi clan that leads it will have to seriously rethink how they can defeat Mr Modi. The BJP has been allowed to be funded anonymously to the tune of 10.3 bn rupees (£120m) by big business after Mr Modi legitimised opacity in political donations. The party pays lip service to reducing the yawning inequalities that disfigure India, but political cleavages in India’s party system have grown along the lines of caste and religious conflict. This suits the BJP, with its pro-business and anti-Muslim nationalism. The opposition will need to be able to run a distinctive campaign on an egalitarian platform. To be fair, Congress did peddle, but without much vim, a form of universal basic income. Fights over symbolic aspects of identity need to be replaced by political competition over how to benefit all Indians. That will require an opposition in India far savvier and more in touch with the country’s poor than exists today.

https://www.theguardian.com/comment...4ORmO3LlxDQzLVYu-qDrzMUqO5VqRQfzhJPGO9nXyxXrA
who wrote this ?
 
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who wrote this ?

Cowards who hide behind "Editorials". lol.

What has been effectively rigged is the opposition, and they have rigged themselves . Modi has won due the complete absence of a national alternative.

Had there been one Modi would not have won with such ease.

The only party with a Pan India presence was the congress. They have a hole by sticking to a hereditary model of succession.

The opposition is practicing the politics of the 20th century and BJP has moved ahead to practicing politics of the 21st century.

This is the simple reality that those opposing Hindutva cannot swallow.

This vote was PRO Incumbency. It would not have mattered who stood against Modi, the people would have still voted for Modi because he has shown himself worthy of our trust. It as simple as that.
 
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All stories.

He didn't bungle cash ban. More farmers have died under Congress rule than any other time post independence. Infrastructure projects aren't stalled, we are currently building highways at a faster rate than China is. Rafale is not a fiasco, both CAG and Supreme Court gave a clean chit.

Here's something much more interesting.

Explain this, buster.

BJP won 303 seats and not a single Muslim MP but Muslim vote share has increased from 8% to 14% this time.

Respect to these Muslims who voted for development, inclusive India and real secularism and didn't get sway by scare mongering by Librats.

New India that votes for progress and not for division and appeasement.
 
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link ?

I'd like to share this with some people.

It was already reflected in the Opinion polls, people just refused to believe it.

https://theprint.in/opinion/muslim-...cal-choice-for-muslim-voters-in-india/225041/

Voting-table-2.jpg
Voting-table-3.jpg
Voting-table-4.jpg


D7VCfuHUYAE4hw4.jpg
 
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These morons never learn, do they?

They are hell bent on making sure Yogi become PM after Modi.

If only that happens!!!:coffee::pakistan:

BJP won 303 seats and not a single Muslim MP but Muslim vote share has increased from 8% to 14% this time.

Respect to these Muslims who voted for development, inclusive India and real secularism and didn't get sway by scare mongering by Librats.

New India that votes for progress and not for division and appeasement.

Thats a little more then 1 out of 10 indian muslims

86% of muslims see hindutva india for what it is
 
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Thats a little more then 1 out of 10 indian muslims

86% of muslims see hindutva india for what it is

Lat time it was 9%, this time it is 14%, Next time it will be 25%.

Not bad for people who see Hindutva India for what it is.
 
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Lat time it was 9%, this time it is 14%, Next time it will be 25%.

Not bad for people who see Hindutva India for what it is.

Last time it was 8%
This time it was 14%
Next time it could be 2%

Do you have a crytal globe or something?

Either way 86% have seen india no longer representative of them and a open threat to their lives, culture and faith
 
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If only that happens!!!

Ah, the fake support to massage your own ego.

Look around you in your country.
You are highly educated, you know EXACTLY where you are heading.

What's the going rate of your rupee now a days?
 
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Ah, the fake support to massage your own ego.

Look around you in your country.
You are highly educated, you know EXACTLY where you are heading.

What's the going rate of your rupee now a days?

We are fine

You have periods of economic growth and slowdown

Such is life

A few months ago our enemy tried to attack us and Pakistan rose upto humiliate india

We are ready! Whether we have economic prosperity or slowdown, both times will come for all nations

And seriously we hate hindus
India is a diverse place
We are more tgen happy to have extremists hindus who cant control their mouths create division's in india and destroy secularism

We would hate you anyway
 
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