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The Indian election and the lessons the west can take from Narendra Modi's popularity

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Jason Burke

The Observer, Saturday 10 May 2014 17.05 BST

Today, for the first time for several weeks, the million and a half voters in the Indian parliamentary constituency of Varanasi, the holy city on the Ganges, will be left alone. For weeks, they have been canvassed, rallied, bombarded with texts, tweets and Facebook posts, subjected to front-page advertisements and giant billboards of politicians' grim or grinning portraits. Tomorrow they will vote in the final phase of this protracted, historic and inspiring Indian election.

The winner is likely to be Narendra Modi, who is happy to be described as a Hindu nationalist. The 63-year-old politician has called for a strongIndia which will not be pushed around on the international stage. He promises an end to the "false secularism" which has favoured "particular communities", ie India's 150 million Muslims. The BJP manifesto explicitly promises western growth without imperilling the nation's own rich culture. Modi offers a package: governance of the highest global standards by a man who is resolutely local in his identity.

A victory for Modi, or at least one for his Bharatiya Janata party, will add 1.25 billion people to the already sizable proportion of Asia, by far the world's most populous continent, ruled by conservative leaders, often populist and often, though far from always, committed to a powerful fusion of religion and patriotism which has mobilised huge numbers of people. Many are also authoritarian. This dominance has gone largely unnoticed.

There is, of course, huge variety. The differences between, for example, the Sinhala and Buddhist ethno-religious triumphalism of the Rajapaksa family in tiny Sri Lanka and the moderate Islamism and social conservatism of Nawaz Sharif in troubled Pakistan are patent. Comparisons between communist China, even if a new leader there favours a nationalist narrative, and India are never helpful. They are too different for comparisons to be useful. In Russia, nationalism is booming, the economy is not. But the broad picture is clear. How many progressive internationalists are in power? Not many.

Key to explaining this are the twin linked phenomena: rising prosperity and urbanisation. Recent decades have seen hundreds of millions of people across Asia become less poor – if not wealthy – and even more moving from the countryside to cities. Clear divisions between the aspirations and expectations of rural and urban communities have collapsed. The result is a huge number of people caught in a vortex of rapid change, and, more recently, stuttering social mobility and faltering growth. They are also more politically conscious and, as the number of volunteers in the streets of Varanasi last week showed, increasingly active.

Modi is an outsider. He comes from humble origins and grew up in a provincial town in the coastal state of Gujarat. He did not go to the best Indian schools and has never liked India's capital. He is abstemious and eats simple Gujarati food. In short, he is entirely unlike many members of the Delhi-based political and bureaucratic elite. This is one reason for the fear he inspires in the Indian capital.

Modi has many critics and when the final results are released on Friday we will probably learn that, even in the event of victory, under a third of voters in India will have actually voted for him. Though he has been cleared by judicial inquiries of having allowed, or even encouraged, sectarian violence in 2002 in the state he runs, suspicions of deep-rooted prejudice remain. Others fear authoritarianism. Concerns about his accession to high office may prove unfounded, but are legitimate.

His supporters, however, see someone else. For if this new urban-rural lower middle-class – also, incidentally, the key constituency for political Islamists and, historically, European revolutionary organisations of every type – are still optimistic, they are also very frustrated. In Modi, they see a strong leader with a proven record of administration who will bring jobs and security, internal and external. They see someone who will restore "Indian pride", a little battered in recent years. And above all, they see someone like them. It is their concerns, they believe, he articulates. "I understand you because I am from among you," Modi told a rally in Gujarat, with some justification.

If much of Modi's support is based in the hope that he can bring order to the chaos of modern India, some is also rooted in an inchoate resentment directed primarily at the local political elite. Unfortunately, this simmering anger results in outbursts that are often poorly aimed, with the west becoming collateral damage.

This is in part our fault. Our interaction with countries like India is complex. But our policymakers and official representatives are guilty of extraordinarily narrow vision which has helped open up space for people like Modi across much of a continent. This aids the sense among huge numbers of people that globalisation is a conversation from which, metaphorically and practically, they are excluded. That conversation takes place in English and it is worth noting that Modi will be the first leader of such prominence and power in India who, like the vast majority of his compatriots, is uncomfortable in what has become the world's language.

On the political track, our diplomats and politicians inevitably favour those who resemble them most closely. That usually means anglophone moderates or, as they are often termed locally, "liberals". There is also an inherent and inevitable journalistic bias towards those who share reporters', viewers' and readers' language and cultural references, however superficial. Due to the inequality of the growth seen since market-orientated reforms were introduced across much of Asia in the last four decades, the global economy, still dominated by the west, appears to many in small-town India, not as an opportunity for all but a means for a select few to become extremely rich. Out in provincial cities, western culture is increasingly represented more by luxury cars, internet pornography and shops selling international brands in the more exclusive malls than Shakespeare and liberal democracy.

This ignorance is certainly a fault of both sides. But it is the failure of western policymakers and analysts to grasp the importance of the emergence of the frustrated lower middle-class masses across much of a continent that is the more reprehensible. We are the ones who still, for good or ill, command most of the high ground of international affairs. But it is only through understanding what is happening at a lower, earthier level, that we will be able to grasp why men like Modi can win such support and so much power.
The Indian election and the lessons the west can take from Narendra Modi and the BJP's popularity | Jason Burke | Comment is free | The Observer

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With increased prosperity and the rise of the middle classes comes higher and greater aspirations and national ambitions. In India's case this poses particular dangers and not necessarily just for the West. India has for decades behaved like an imperial and hegemonic power lording it over all it's neighbors in quite exploitative relationships. India has never hesitated to interfere in the internal affairs of its neighbors where it sought to achieve certain strategic objectives but without any real concern for democratic values or human rights. A case in point is India's support for the Awami League in Bangladesh which has been accused of extra-judicial killings on a massive scale and also massacres of its own civilian population. India helped the Awami League to power in a staged and fraudulent election that were held on January 5 in the belief that extra concessions may be obtained from the party. However, the scenario under Modi under the BJP may become somewhat more dire with the Hindutva ideology guiding domestic and foreign policy. There are already indications that the BJP may seek to purify India of its Muslims and make the country a Hindu bastion and sanctuary. BJP leaders have repeatedly called for the expulsion of millions of Muslims they claim are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh. In fact, tens of millions of Hindus had fled to India in 1947 and 1971 and were accorded citizenship on their arrival. A similar right was never granted to the few thousand Muslim immigrants who came to the country after 1971 and who are now in fear of expulsion on clearly discriminatory grounds. Next the BJP may likely start a witch hunt against the remaining Muslims on the basis of their presumed loyalties to Pakistan or Bangladesh and alleged connections to Islamist terrorism. This will naturally cause friction with these neighbours and could ignite a war. For a preliminary idscussion of these issues please read my book The India Doctrine -

https://www.academia.edu/5690262/The_India_Doctrine_1947-2007_
 
Hitler too was a very Popular leader and was known for Good Governance and getting things done. Under Hitler German Economy boomed and he accumulated war machinery and prepared Germany for War. But sadly within a decade Germany self destructed under Hitler.

Modi has all the qualities of Hitler. Hitler victimized Jews and Modi wants to ethnically cleanse India of Bangladeshi and Indian Muslims. Just like Hitler Modi is a Nationalist who wants an India for his People only i.e. Hindus.
 
If you do that it will likely lead to the fall of the AL government. That is a start I guess.
If we can install a govt we will have enough power to ensure the govt does not fall.

And let us for a moment assume that for a moment the govt falls and BNP comes will they still go to war with India?

Next the BJP may likely start a witch hunt against the remaining Muslims on the basis of their presumed loyalties to Pakistan or Bangladesh and alleged connections to Islamist terrorism. This will naturally cause friction with these neighbours and could ignite a war.

Your words not mine.

My simple question remains. Is Bangladesh so suicidal that it will go to war with a country that surrounds it on 3 sides with 4th being Bay of Bengal dominated by Indian Navy.

When will a simple fact go into your mind that when you are surrounded on all sides it is better to be docile and surrender. You may get some benefits in form of trade. If you try to resist you are doomed. Nobody will come for your help. Gone are the pre 1971 days when you could expect help from West Pakistan to protect East Pakistan.

If we want to subjugate you we can do it without firing a shot. We can

1 Flood your country as all the rivers pass through our territory
2 Blockade the Bay of Bengal
3 Just point our missiles at Dhaka and Chittagong.
4 Start insurgency movements in your country

You my friend are in our grip. You know it and we know it. So all this chest thumping will lead you nowhere.

The simple reason we don't do anything is that we do not want an additional burden of the people and a land which may drown in the sea in a hundred years
 
Hitler too was a very Popular leader and was known for Good Governance and getting things done. Under Hitler German Economy boomed and he accumulated war machinery and prepared Germany for War. But sadly within a decade Germany self destructed under Hitler.

Modi has all the qualities of Hitler. Hitler victimized Jews and Modi wants to ethnically cleanse India of Bangladeshi and Indian Muslims. Just like Hitler Modi is a Nationalist who wants an India for his People only i.e. Hindus.

Same can be said about Mushy .... but you nearly worship him today also..
Time of Hitlers & Mussolinis are long gone in past history, in todays democracy there is no place for them .

Stop dreaming wake up.
 
Hitler too was a very Popular leader and was known for Good Governance and getting things done. Under Hitler German Economy boomed and he accumulated war machinery and prepared Germany for War. But sadly within a decade Germany self destructed under Hitler.

Modi has all the qualities of Hitler. Hitler victimized Jews and Modi wants to ethnically cleanse India of Bangladeshi and Indian Muslims. Just like Hitler Modi is a Nationalist who wants an India for his People only i.e. Hindus.
You have very little knowledge of Hitler and Nazism and Sense about about Germany Demographical Society.Keep your limited knowledge to yourself
 
Same can be said about Mushy .... but you nearly worship him today also..
Time of Hitlers & Mussolinis are long gone in past history, in todays democracy there is no place for them .

Stop dreaming wake up.


Who worships Musharraf ?

Are you crazy or delusional ?

That poor guy is living a most Pathetic life.

If Pakistanis worshipped him, he would not be in this sad state.

You need to wake up and smell the Coffee , Mate. you are delirious....

You have very little knowledge of Hitler and Nazism and Sense about about Germany Demographical Society.Keep your limited knowledge to yourself



There is hardly any difference between Modi and Hitler and the similarities are striking.

Both have build their Popularity by hating a minority.
 
Who worships Musharraf ?

Are you crazy or delusional ?

That poor guy is living a most Pathetic life.

If Pakistanis worshipped him, he would not be in this sad state.

You need to wake up and smell the Coffee , Mate. you are delirious....





There is hardly any difference between Modi and Hitler and the similarities are striking.

Both have build their Popularity by hating a minority.
List follows Tikka khan, yaya khan, a ayub khan etc.The fact is Pakistanis preaching India what democracy Is what a waste:D:D:D
 
Who worships Musharraf ?

Are you crazy or delusional ?

That poor guy is living a most Pathetic life.

If Pakistanis worshipped him, he would not be in this sad state.

You need to wake up and smell the Coffee , Mate. you are delirious....





There is hardly any difference between Modi and Hitler and the similarities are striking.

Both have build their Popularity by hating a minority.

Court & political parties made his life hell not people of Pakistan.

like of yours cry with open mouth in support of him in PDF all the day & curse all elected governments with full hate.
 
What the West can learn from this election? Is their anything to learn at all? Apart from the fact that people of India will choose their own candidate, business as usual..
 
Court & political parties made his life hell not people of Pakistan.

like of yours cry with open mouth in support of him in PDF all the day & curse all elected governments with full hate.
Bhai Let it be they are preaching Us about democracy.which they themselves never seen in their country since existence of their Nation.
 
List follows Tikka khan, yaya khan, a ayub khan etc.The fact is Pakistanis preaching India what democracy Is what a waste:D:D:D



Now you are sounding like a deranged lunatic ranting incoherently.

Anyway, this thread is about Modi so why don't you stick to the topic and answer the issues raised about Modi.

Talk about the similarity in the thinking and behavior of Modi and how much it resembles Hitler's behavior.:P
 

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