*LONG READ*

*>"*If the BJP achieves a third successive electoral victory in May, the
creeping majoritarianism under Modi could turn into galloping
majoritarianism, a trend that poses a fundamental challenge to Indian
nationhood. Democratic- and pluralistic-minded Indians warn of the dangers
of India becoming a country like Pakistan, defined by religious identity."
-------------------------------

By: Ramachandra Guha
Published in: *Foreign Affairs*
Date: February 20, 2024 (March/April 2024)


This spring, India is scheduled to hold its 18th general election. Surveys
suggest that the incumbent, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, is very likely to
win a third term in office. That triumph will further underline Modi’s
singular stature. He bestrides the country like a colossus, and he promises
Indians that they, too, are rising in the world. And yet the very nature of
Modi’s authority, the aggressive control sought by the prime minister and
his party over a staggeringly diverse and complicated country, threatens to
scupper India’s great-power ambitions.

A leader of enormous charisma from a modest background, Modi dominates the
Indian political landscape as only two of his 15 predecessors have done:
Jawaharlal Nehru, prime minister from Indian independence in 1947 until
1964, and Nehru’s daughter, Indira Gandhi, prime minister from 1966 to 1977
and then again from 1980 to 1984. In their pomp, both enjoyed wide
popularity throughout India <https://www.foreignaffairs.com/regions/india>,
cutting across barriers of class, gender, religion, and region, although—as
so often with leaders who stay on too long—their last years in office were
marked by political misjudgments that eroded their standing.

Nehru and Indira Gandhi both belonged to the Indian National Congress, the
party that led the country’s struggle for freedom from British colonial
rule and stayed in power for three decades following independence. Modi
<https://www.foreignaffairs.com/tags/narendra-modi>, on the other hand, is
a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party, which spent many years in
opposition before becoming what it now appears to be, the natural party of
governance. A major ideological difference between the Congress and the BJP
is in their attitudes toward the relationship between faith and state.
Particularly
under Nehru, the Congress was committed to religious pluralism, in keeping
with the Indian constitutional obligation to assure citizens “liberty of
thought, expression, belief, faith and worship.” The BJP, on the other
hand, wishes to make India a majoritarian state in which politics, public
policy, and even everyday life are cast in a Hindu idiom.

Modi is not the first BJP prime minister of India—that distinction belongs
to Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who was in office in 1996 and from 1998 to 2004.
But Modi can exercise a kind of power that was never available to Vajpayee,
whose coalition government of more than a dozen parties forced him to
accommodate diverse views and interests. By contrast, the BJP has enjoyed a
parliamentary majority on its own for the last decade, and Modi is far more
assertive than the understated Vajpayee ever was. Vajpayee delegated power
to his cabinet ministers, consulted opposition leaders, and welcomed debate
in Parliament. Modi, on the other hand, has centralized power in his office
to an astonishing degree, undermined the independence of public
institutions such as the judiciary and the media, built a cult of
personality around himself, and pursued his party’s ideological goals with
ruthless efficiency.

Despite his dismantling of democratic institutions, Modi remains extremely
popular. He is both incredibly hardworking and politically astute, able to
read the pulse of the electorate and adapt his rhetoric and tactics
accordingly. Left-wing intellectuals dismiss him as a mere demagogue. They
are grievously mistaken. In terms of commitment and intelligence, he is far
superior to his populist counterparts such as former U.S. President Donald
Trump <https://www.foreignaffairs.com/topics/trump-administration>, former
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, or former British Prime Minister Boris
Johnson. Although his economic record is mixed, he has still won the trust
of many poor people by supplying food and cooking gas at highly subsidized
rates via schemes branded as Modi’s personal gifts to them. He has taken
quickly to digital technologies, which have enabled the direct provision of
welfare and the reduction of intermediary corruption. He has also presided
over substantial progress in infrastructure development, with spanking new
highways and airports seen as evidence of a rising India on the march under
Modi’s leadership.

Modi’s many supporters view his tenure as prime minister as nothing short
of epochal. They claim that he has led India’s national resurgence. Under
Modi, they note, India has surpassed its former ruler, the United Kingdom,
to become the world’s fifth-largest economy; it will soon eclipse Japan and
Germany, as well. It became the fourth country to land a spaceship on the
moon. But Modi’s impact runs deeper than material achievements. His
supporters proudly boast that India has rediscovered and reaffirmed its
Hindu civilizational roots, leading to a successful decolonizing of the
mind—a truer independence than even the freedom movement led by Mahatma
Gandhi achieved. The prime minister’s speeches are peppered with claims
that India is on the cusp of leading the world. In pursuit of its global
ambitions, his government hosted the G-20 meeting in New Delhi last year,
the event carefully choreographed to show Modi in the best possible light,
standing splendidly alone at center stage as one by one, he welcomed world
leaders, including U.S. President Joe Biden
<https://www.foreignaffairs.com/topics/biden-administration>, and showed
them to their seats. (The party was spoiled, only slightly, by the
deliberate absence of the Chinese leader Xi Jinping, who may not have
wanted to indulge Modi in his pageant of prestige.)

Nonetheless, the future of the Indian republic looks considerably less rosy
than the vision promised by Modi and his acolytes. His government has not
assuaged—indeed, it has actively worked to intensify—conflicts along lines
of both religion and region, which will further fray the country’s social
fabric. The inability or unwillingness to check environmental abuse and
degradation threatens public health and economic growth. The hollowing out
of democratic institutions pushes India closer and closer to becoming a
democracy only in name and an electoral autocracy in practice. Far from
becoming the Vishwa Guru, or “teacher to the world”—as Modi’s boosters
claim—India is altogether more likely to remain what it is today: a
middling power with a vibrant entrepreneurial culture and mostly fair
elections alongside malfunctioning public institutions and persisting
cleavages of religion, gender, caste, and region. The façade of triumph and
power that Modi has erected obscures a more fundamental truth: that a
principal source of India’s survival as a democratic country, and of its
recent economic success, has been its political and cultural pluralism,
precisely those qualities that the prime minister and his party now seek to
extinguish.
PORTRAIT IN POWER

Between 2004 and 2014, India was run by Congress-led coalition governments.
The prime minister was the scholarly economist Manmohan Singh. By the end
of his second term, Singh was 80 and unwell, so the task of running
Congress’s campaign ahead of the 2014 general elections fell to the much
younger Rahul Gandhi. Gandhi is the son of Sonia Gandhi, a former president
of the Congress Party, and Rajiv Gandhi, who, like his mother, Indira
Gandhi, and grandfather Nehru, had served as prime minister. In a brilliant
political move, Modi, who had previously been chief minister of the
important state of Gujarat for a decade, presented himself as an
experienced, hard-working, and entirely self-made administrator, in stark
contrast to Rahul Gandhi, a dynastic scion who had never held political
office and whom Modi portrayed as entitled and effete.

Sixty years of electoral democracy and three decades of market-led economic
growth had made Indians increasingly distrustful of claims made on the
basis of family lineage or privilege. It also helped that Modi was a more
compelling orator than Rahul Gandhi and that the BJP made better use of the
new media and digital technologies to reach remote corners of India. In the
2014 elections, the BJP won 282 seats, up from 116 five years earlier,
while the Congress’s tally went down from 206 to a mere 44. The next
general election, in 2019, again pitted Modi against Gandhi; the BJP won
303 seats to the Congress’s 52. With these emphatic victories, the BJP not
only crushed and humiliated the Congress but also secured the legislative
dominance of the party. In prior decades, Indian governments had typically
been motley coalitions held together by compromise. The BJP’s healthy
majority under Modi has given the prime minister broad latitude to act—and
free rein to pursue his ambitions.

Modi presents himself as the very embodiment of the party, the government,
and the nation, as almost single-handedly fulfilling the hopes and
ambitions of Indians. In the past decade, his elevation has taken many
forms, including the construction of the world’s largest cricket stadium,
named for Modi; the portrait of Modi on the COVID-19
<https://www.foreignaffairs.com/tags/coronavirus> vaccination certificates
issued by the government of India (a practice followed by no other
democracy in the world); the photo of Modi on all government schemes and
welfare packages; a serving judge of the Supreme Court gushing that Modi is
a “visionary” and a “genius”; and Modi’s own proclamation that he had been
sent by god to emancipate India’s women.

Modi’s supporters view his tenure as prime minister as epochal.

In keeping with this gargantuan cult of personality, Modi has attempted,
largely successfully, to make governance and administration an instrument
of his personal will rather than a collaborative effort in which many
institutions and individuals work together. In the Indian system, based on
the British model, the prime minister is supposed to be merely first among
equals. Cabinet ministers are meant to have relative autonomy in their own
spheres of authority. Under Modi, however, most ministers and ministries
take instructions directly from the prime minister’s office and from
officials known to be personally loyal to him. Likewise, Parliament is no
longer an active theater of debate, in which the views of the opposition
are taken into account in forging legislation. Many bills are passed in
minutes, by voice vote, with the speakers in both houses acting in an
extremely partisan manner. Opposition members of Parliament have been
suspended in the dozens—and in one recent case, in the hundreds—for
demanding that the prime minister and home minister make statements about
such important matters as bloody ethnic conflicts in India’s borderlands
and security breaches in Parliament itself.

Sadly, the Indian Supreme Court has done little to stem attacks on
democratic freedoms. In past decades, the court had at least occasionally
stood up for personal freedoms, and for the rights of the provinces, acting
as a modest brake on the arbitrary exercise of state power. Since Modi took
office, however, the Supreme Court has often given its tacit approval to
the government’s misconduct, by, for example, failing to strike down
punitive laws that clearly violate the Indian constitution. One such law is
theUnlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, under which it is almost
impossible to get bail and which has been invoked to arrest and designate
as “terrorists” hundreds of students and human rights activists for
protesting peacefully on the streets against the majoritarian policies of
the regime.

The civil services and the diplomatic corps are also prone to obey the
prime minister and his party, even when the demands clash with
constitutional norms. So does the Election Commission, which organizes
elections and frames election rules to facilitate the preferences of Modi
and the BJP. Thus, elections in Jammu and Kashmir and to the municipal
council of Mumbai, India’s richest city, have been delayed for years
largely because the ruling party remains unsure of winning them.

The Modi government has also worked systematically to narrow the spaces
open for democratic dissent. Tax officials disproportionately target
opposition politicians. Large sections of the press act as the mouthpiece
of the ruling party for fear of losing government advertisements or facing
vindictive tax raids. India currently ranks 161 out of 180 countries
surveyed in the World Press Index, an analysis of levels of journalistic
freedom. Free debate in India’s once vibrant public universities is
discouraged; instead, the University Grants Commission has instructed vice
chancellors to install “selfie points” on campuses to encourage students to
take their photograph with an image of Modi.

This story of the systematic weakening of India’s democratic foundations is
increasingly well known outside the country, with watchdog groups bemoaning
the backsliding of the world’s largest democracy. But another fundamental
challenge to India has garnered less attention: the erosion of the
country’s federal structure. India is a union of states whose constituent
units have their own governments elected on the basis of universal adult
franchise. As laid down in India’s constitution, some subjects, including
defense, foreign affairs, and monetary policy, are the responsibility of
the government in New Delhi. Others, including agriculture, health, and law
and order, are the responsibility of the states. Still others, such as
forests and education, are the joint responsibility of the central
government and the states. This distribution of powers allows state
governments considerable latitude in designing and implementing policies
for their citizens. It explains the wide variation in policy outcomes
across the country—why, for example, the southern states of Kerala and
Tamil Nadu have a far better record with regard to health, education, and
gender equity compared with northern states such as Uttar Pradesh.

As a large, sprawling federation of states, India resembles the United
States. But India’s states are more varied in terms of culture, religion,
and particularly language. In that sense, India is more akin to the European
Union <https://www.foreignaffairs.com/topics/european-union> in the
continental scale of its diversity. The Bengalis, the Kannadigas, the
Keralites, the Odias, the Punjabis, and the Tamils, to name just a few
peoples, all have extraordinarily rich literary and cultural histories,
each distinct from one another and especially from that of the heartland
states of northern India where the BJP is dominant. Coalition governments
respected and nourished this heterogeneity, but under Modi, the BJP has
sought to compel uniformity in three ways: through imposing the main
language of the north, Hindi, in states where it is scarcely spoken and
where it is seen as an unwelcome competitor to the local language; through
promoting the cult of Modi as the only leader of any consequence in India;
and through the legal and financial powers that being in office in New
Delhi bestows on it.

Since coming to power, the Modi government has assiduously undermined the
autonomy of state governments run by parties other than the BJP. It has
achieved this in part through the ostensibly nonpartisan office of the
governor, who, in states not run by the BJP, has often acted as an agent of
the ruling party in New Delhi. Laws in domains such as agriculture,
nominally the realm of state governments, have been passed by the national
Parliament without the consultation of the states. Since several important
and populous states—including Kerala, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, and
West Bengal—are run by popularly elected parties other than the BJP, the
Modi government’s undisguised hostility toward their autonomous functioning
has created a great deal of bad blood.

In this manner, in his decade in office, Modi has worked diligently to
centralize and personalize political power. As chief minister of Gujarat,
he gave his cabinet colleagues little to do, running the administration
through bureaucrats loyal to him. He also worked persistently to tame civil
society and the press in Gujarat. Since Modi became prime minister in 2014,
this authoritarian approach to governance has been carried over to New
Delhi. His authoritarianism has a precedent, however: the middle period of
Indira Gandhi’s prime ministership, from 1971 to 1977, when she constructed
a cult of personality and turned the party and government into an
instrument of her will. But Modi’s subordination of institutions has gone
even further. In his style of administration, he is Indira Gandhi on
steroids.
A HINDU KINGDOM

For all their similarities in political style, Indira Gandhi and Modi
differ markedly in terms of political ideology. Forged in the crucible of
the Indian freedom struggle, inspired by the pluralistic ethos of its
leader Mahatma Gandhi (who was not related to her) and of her father,
Nehru, Indira Gandhi was deeply committed to the idea that India belonged
equally to citizens of all faiths. For her, as for Nehru, India was not to
be a Hindu version of Pakistan—a country designed to be a homeland for
South Asia’s Muslims. India would not define statecraft or governance in
accordance with the views of the majority religious community. India’s many
minority religious groups—including Buddhists, Christians, Jains, Muslims,
Parsis, and Sikhs—would all have the same status and material rights as
Hindus. Modi has taken a different view. Raised as he was in the hardline
milieu of the Hindu nationalist movement, he sees the cultural and
civilizational character of India as defined by the demographic
dominance—and long-suppressed destiny—of Hindus.

The attempt to impose Hindu hegemony on India’s present and future has two
complementary elements. The first is electoral, the creation of a
consolidated Hindu vote bank. Hinduism does not have the singular structure
of Abrahamic religions such as Christianity or Islam. It does not elevate
one religious text (such as the Bible or the Koran) or one holy city (such
as Rome or Mecca) to a particularly privileged status. In Hinduism, there
are many gods, many holy places, and many styles of worship. But while the
ritual universe of Hinduism is pluralistic, its social system is
historically highly unequal, marked by hierarchically organized status
groups known as castes, whose members rarely intermarry or even break bread
with one another.

The BJP under Modi has tried to overcome the pluralism of Hinduism by
seeking to override caste and doctrinal differences between different
groups of Hindus. It promises to construct a “Hindu Raj,” a state in which
Hindus will reign supreme. Modi claims that before his ascendance, Hindus
had suffered 1,200 years of slavery at the hands of Muslim rulers, such as
the Mughal dynasty, and Christian rulers, such as the British—and that he
will now restore Hindu pride and Hindu control over the land that is
rightfully theirs. To aid this consolidation, Hindu nationalists have
systematically demonized India’s large Muslim minority, painting Muslims as
insufficiently apologetic for the crimes of the Muslim rulers of the past
and as insufficiently loyal to the India of the present.

Modi has worked diligently to centralize and personalize political power.

Hindutva, or Hindu nationalism
<https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/india/2022-04-13/unstoppable-rise-hindu-nationalism>,
is a belief system characterized by what I call “paranoid triumphalism.” It
aims to make Hindus fearful so as to compel them to act together and
ultimately dominate those Indians who are not Hindus. At election time, the
BJP hopes to make Hindus vote as Hindus. Since Hindus constitute roughly 80
percent of the population, if 60 percent of them vote principally on the
basis of their religious affiliation in India’s multiparty,
first-past-the-post system, that amounts to 48 percent of the popular vote
for the BJP—enough to get Modi and his party elected by a comfortable
margin. Indeed, in the 2019 elections, the BJP won 56 percent of seats with
37 percent of the popular vote. So complete is the ruling party’s disregard
for the political rights of India’s 200 million or so Muslims that, except
when compelled to do so in the Muslim-majority region of Kashmir, it rarely
picks Muslim candidates to compete in elections. And yet it can still
comfortably win national contests. The BJP has 397 members in the two
houses of the Indian parliament. Not one is a Muslim.

Electoral victory has enabled the second element of Hindutva—the provision
of an explicitly Hindu veneer to the character of the Indian state. Modi
himself chose to contest the parliamentary elections from Varanasi, an
ancient city with countless temples that is generally recognized as the
most important center of Hindu identity. He has presented himself as a
custodian of Hindu traditions, claiming that in his youth, he wandered and
meditated in the forests of the Himalaya in the manner of the sages of the
past. He has, for the first time, made Hindu rituals central to important
secular occasions, such as the inauguration of a new Parliament building,
which was conducted by him alone, flanked by a phalanx of chanting priests,
but with the members of Parliament, the representatives of the people,
conspicuously absent. He also presided, in similar fashion, over religious
rituals in Varanasi, with the priests chanting, “Glory to the king.” In
January, Modi was once again the star of the show as he opened a large
temple in the city of Ayodhya on a site claimed to be the birthplace of the
god Rama. Whenever television channels obediently broadcast such
proceedings live across India, their cameras focus on the elegantly attired
figure of Modi. The self-proclaimed Hindu monk of the past has thus become,
in symbol if not in substance, the Hindu emperor of the present.
THE BURDENS OF THE FUTURE

The emperor benefits from having few plausible rivals. Modi’s enduring
political success is in part enabled by a fractured and nepotistic
opposition. In a belated bid to stall the BJP from winning a third term, as
many as 28 parties have come together to fight the forthcoming general
elections under a common umbrella. They have adopted the name the Indian
National Development Inclusive Alliance, an unwieldy moniker that can be
condensed to the crisp acronym INDIA.

Some parties in this alliance are very strong in their own states. Others
have a base among particular castes. But the only party in the alliance
with pretensions to being a national party is the Congress. Despite his
dismal political record, Rahul Gandhi remains the principal leader of the
Congress. In public appearances, he is often flanked by his sister, who is
the party’s general-secretary, or his mother, reinforcing his sense of
entitlement. The major regional parties, with influence in states such as
Bihar, Maharashtra, and Tamil Nadu, are also family firms, with leadership
often passing from father to son. Although their local roots make them
competitive in state elections, when it comes to a general election, the
dynastic baggage they carry puts them at a distinct disadvantage against a
party led by a self-made man such as Modi, who can present himself as
devoted entirely and utterly to the welfare of his fellow citizens rather
than as the bearer of family privilege. INDIA will struggle to unseat Modi
and the BJP and may hope, at best, to dent their commanding majority in
Parliament.

The prime minister also faces little external pressure. In other contexts,
one might expect a certain amount of critical scrutiny of Modi’s
authoritarian ways from the leaders of Western democracies. But this has
not happened, partly because of the ascendance of the Chinese leader Xi
Jinping <https://www.foreignaffairs.com/tags/xi-jinping>. Xi has mounted an
aggressive challenge to Western hegemony and positioned China as a
superpower deserving equal respect and an equal say in world affairs as the
United States—moves that have worked entirely to Modi’s advantage. The
Indian prime minister has played the U.S. establishment brilliantly, using
the large and wealthy Indian diaspora to make his (and India’s) importance
visible to the White House.

In April 2023, India officially overtook China as the most populous country
in the world. It has the fifth-largest economy. It has a large and
reasonably well-equipped military. All these factors make it ever more
appealing to the United States as a counterweight to China. Both the Trump
and the Biden administrations have shown an extraordinary indulgence toward
Modi, continuing to hail him as the leader of the “world’s largest
democracy” even as that appellation becomes less credible under his rule.
The attacks on minorities, the suppression of the press, and the arrest of
civil rights activists have attracted scarcely a murmur of disapproval from
the State Department or the White House. The recent allegations that the
Indian government tried to assassinate a U.S. citizen of Sikh descent are
likely to fade without any action or strong public criticism. Meanwhile,
the leaders of France <https://www.foreignaffairs.com/regions/france>,
Germany, and the United Kingdom, seeking a greater share of the Indian
market (not least in sales of sophisticated weaponry), have all been
unctuous in their flattery of Modi.

Currently, Modi is dominant at home and immune from criticism from abroad. It
is likely, however, that history and historians will judge his political
and personal legacy somewhat less favorably than his currently supreme
position might suggest. For one thing, he came into office in 2014 pledging
to deliver a strong economy, but his economic record is at best mixed. On
the positive side, the government has sped the impressive development of
infrastructure and the process of formalizing the economy through digital
technology. Yet economic inequalities have soared; while some business
families close to the BJP have become extremely wealthy, unemployment rates
are high, particularly among young Indians, and women’s labor participation
rates are low. Regional disparities are large and growing, with the
southern states having done far better than the northern ones in terms of
both economic and social development. Notably, none of the five southern
states are ruled by the BJP.

The rampant environmental degradation across the country further threatens
the sustainability of economic growth. Even in the absence of climate
change, India would be an environmental disaster zone. Its cities have the
highest rates of air pollution in the world. Many of its rivers are
ecologically dead, killed by untreated industrial effluents and domestic
sewage. Its underground aquifers are depleting rapidly. Much of its soil is
contaminated with chemicals. Its forests are despoiled and in the process
of becoming much less biodiverse, thanks to invasive nonnative weeds.

This degradation has been enabled by an antiquated economic ideology that
adheres to the mistaken belief that only rich countries need to behave
responsibly toward nature. India, it is said, is too poor to be green. In
fact, countries such as India, with their higher population densities and
more fragile tropical ecologies, need to care as much, or more, about how
to use natural resources wisely. But regimes led by both the Congress and
the BJP have granted a free license to coal and petroleum extraction and
other polluting industries. No government has so actively promoted
destructive practices as Modi’s. It has eased environmental clearances for
polluting industries and watered down various regulations. The
environmental scholar Rohan D’ Souza has written that by 2018, “the slash
and burn attitude of gutting and weakening existing environmental
institutions, laws, and norms was extended to forests, coasts, wildlife,
air, and even waste management.” When Modi came to power in 2014, India
ranked 155 out of 178 countries assessed by the Environmental Performance
Index, which estimates the sustainability of a country’s development in
terms of the state of its air, water, soils, natural habitats, and so on.
By 2022, India ranked last, 180 out of 180.

The effects of these varied forms of environmental deterioration exact a
horrific economic and social cost on hundreds of millions of people.
Degradation of pastures and forests imperils the livelihoods of farmers.
Unregulated mining for coal and bauxite displaces entire rural communities,
making their people ecological refugees. Air pollution in cities endangers
the health of children, who miss school, and of workers, whose productivity
declines. Unchecked, these forms of environmental abuse will impose
ever-greater burdens on Indians yet unborn.

Modi has played the U.S. establishment brilliantly.

These future generations of Indians will also have to bear the costs of the
dismantling of democratic institutions overseen by Modi and his party. A
free press, independent regulatory institutions, and an impartial and
fearless judiciary are vital for political freedoms, for acting as a check
on the abuse of state power, and for nurturing an atmosphere of trust among
citizens. To create, or perhaps more accurately, re-create, them after Modi
and the BJP finally relinquish power will be an arduous task.

The strains placed on Indian federalism may boil over in 2026, when
parliamentary seats are scheduled to be reallocated according to the next
census, to be conducted in that year. Then, what is now merely a divergence
between north and south might become an actual divide. In 2001, when a
reallocation of seats based on population was proposed, the southern states
argued that it would discriminate against them for following progressive
health and education policies in prior decades that had reduced birth rates
and enhanced women’s freedom. The BJP-led coalition government then in
power recognized the merits of the south’s case and, with the consent of
the opposition, proposed that the reallocation be delayed for a further 25
years.

In 2026, the matter will be reopened. One proposed solution is to emulate
the U.S. model, in which congressional districts reflect population size
while each state has two seats in the Senate, irrespective of population.
Perhaps having the Rajya Sabha, or upper house, of the Indian Parliament
restructured on similar principles may help restore faith in federalism. But
if Modi and the BJP are in power, they will almost certainly mandate the
process of reallocation based on population in both the Lok Sabha, the
lower house, and the Rajya Sabha, which will then substantially favor the
more populous if economically lagging states of the north. The southern
states are bound to protest. Indian federalism and unity will struggle to
cope with the fallout.

If the BJP achieves a third successive electoral victory in May, the
creeping majoritarianism under Modi could turn into galloping
majoritarianism, a trend that poses a fundamental challenge to Indian
nationhood. Democratic- and pluralistic-minded Indians warn of the dangers
of India becoming a country like Pakistan, defined by religious identity. A
more salient cautionary tale might be Sri Lanka’s. With its educated
population, good health care, relatively high position of women (compared
with India and all other countries in South Asia), its capable and numerous
professional class, and its attractiveness as a tourist destination, Sri
Lanka was poised in the 1970s to join Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan as
one of the so-called Asian Tigers. But then, a deadly mix of religious and
linguistic majoritarianism reared its head. The Sinhala-speaking Buddhist
majority chose to consolidate itself against the Tamil-speaking minority,
who were themselves largely Hindus. Through the imposition of Sinhalese as
the official language and Buddhism as the official religion, a deep
division was created, provoking protests by the Tamils, peaceful at first
but increasingly violent when crushed by the state. Three decades of bloody
civil war ensued. The conflict formally ended in 2009, but the country has
not remotely recovered, in social, economic, political, or psychological
terms.

India will probably not go the way of Sri Lanka
<https://www.foreignaffairs.com/regions/sri-lanka>. A full-fledged civil
war between Hindus and Muslims, or between north and south, is unlikely.
But the Modi government is jeopardizing a key source of Indian strength:
its varied forms of pluralism. One might usefully contrast Modi’s time in
office with the years between 1989 and 2014, when neither the Congress nor
the BJP had a majority in Parliament. In that period, prime ministers had
to bring other parties into government, allocating important ministries to
its leaders. This fostered a more inclusive and collaborative style of
governance, more suitable to the size and diversity of the country itself.
States run by parties other than the BJP or the Congress found
representation at the center, their voices heard and their concerns taken
into account. Federalism flourished, and so did the press and the courts,
which had more room to follow an independent path. It may be no coincidence
that it was in this period of coalition government that India experienced
three decades of steady economic growth.

When India became free from British rule in 1947, many skeptics thought it
was too large and too diverse to survive as a single nation and its
population too poor and illiterate to be trusted with a democratic system
of governance. Many predicted that the country would Balkanize, become a
military dictatorship, or experience mass famine. That those dire scenarios
did not come to pass was largely because of the sagacity of India’s
founding figures, who nurtured a pluralist ethos that respected the rights
of religious and linguistic minorities and who sought to balance the rights
of the individual and the state, as well as those of the central government
and the provinces. This delicate calculus enabled the country to stay
united and democratic and allowed its people to steadily overcome the
historic burdens of poverty and discrimination.

The last decade has witnessed the systematic erosion of those varied forms
of pluralism. One party, the BJP, and within it, one man, the prime
minister, are judged to represent India to itself and to the world. Modi’s
charisma and popular appeal have consolidated this dominance, electorally
speaking. Yet the costs are mounting. Hindus impose themselves on Muslims,
the central government imposes itself on the provinces, the state further
curtails the rights and freedoms of citizens. Meanwhile, the unthinking
imitation of Western models of energy-intensive and capital-intensive
industrialization is causing profound and, in many cases, irreversible
environmental damage.

Modi and the BJP seem poised to win their third general election in a row.
This victory would further magnify the prime minister’s aura, enhancing his
image as India’s redeemer. His supporters will boast that their man is
assuredly taking his country toward becoming the Vishwa Guru, the teacher
to the world. Yet such triumphalism cannot mask the deep fault lines
underneath, which—unless recognized and addressed—will only widen in the
years to come.

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