By: Zahid Hussain and Tom Felix Joehnk  [Zahid Hussain is a former lead
economist on Bangladesh for the World Bank. Tom Felix Joehnk is a political
economist and a former Bangladesh correspondent for The Economist.]
Published in: *The New York Times*
Date: February 11, 2026

A year and a half ago, Bangladesh looked as though it was on track to defy
the global pattern of democratic reversal.

Mass protests led by an economically frustrated younger generation toppled
the entrenched autocracy
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/05/world/asia/bangladesh-protests-hasina-resigns.html>
 of Sheikh Hasina on Aug. 5, 2024, ending more than a decade of shrinking
political space and rule by intimidation. The moment offered hope not only
in Bangladesh but also beyond — evidence that in an age when democracy is
under pressure, citizens can still dislodge authoritarian regimes and bring
about renewal.

A national vote on Thursday will be the first electoral test of
Bangladesh’s political transition, but high hopes for a democratic reset have
dimmed
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/14/world/asia/bangladesh-revolution-sheikh-hasina.html>
.

Instead of a period of healing, Ms. Hasina’s ouster has been followed by
persistent violence
<https://apnews.com/article/bangladesh-hasina-yunus-politics-violence-e97700ed1c8adbdf06c16ad734ea4b11>
, bureaucratic
<https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/protests-grip-bangladesh-pressure-mounts-yunus-led-government-2025-05-26/>
 and
industrial strikes
<https://www.thedailystar.net/business/news/ctg-port-grinds-halt-workers-strike-over-nct-lease-4097896>
, disruptive protests
<https://www.thedailystar.net/news/road-blockades-must-not-become-norm-4082066>
 and political uncertainty. The experience has revealed a harsh truth with
wide implications, from the developing world to President Trump’s America:
Democratic renewal is elusive when the state institutions that democracy
relies on have been hollowed out.

Bangladesh has become a case study of this.

>From the early 1990s, politics in the country revolved around the fierce
rivalry between Ms. Hasina, the leader of the Awami League, and Khaleda Zia
of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party. Despite only modest ideological and
policy differences, the two women and their parties fought bitterly in
elections for years.

Power was nevertheless transferred in a largely peaceful manner, thanks to
nonpartisan caretaker administrations
<https://www.thedailystar.net/news/bangladesh/news/interim-govts-bangladesh-brief-history-3672621>
 that stepped in temporarily to run elections and manage handovers of
government. That system was abolished in 2011 under the increasingly
autocratic Ms. Hasina, ushering in a period of electoral irregularities and
illegitimate polls. Cronyism and kleptocracy deepened
<https://financialcrime.lu/docufilms/2025/09/2025-09-11-Docu-Bangladesh%E2%80%99s-missing-billions/>,
and her government used the courts, the police and other state bodies to
intimidate opponents.

Millions of Bangladeshis had hoped the 2024 uprising would lead to a
restoration of stability and accountability. One source of early optimism
was the appointment of Muhammad Yunus, who was awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize in 2006 for pioneering microfinance, to lead an interim government.

But Mr. Yunus has struggled to restore calm and discipline in a deeply
politicized and fractured state. His administration has lacked a clear
mandate and broad support from key political players, and he has been
unable to assert effective control over state institutions like the police
and the criminal justice system. Such institutions were further degraded
after Ms. Hasina’s government fell and senior officials quit, fearing
reprisals for past abuses. The rising cost of living, weak wage growth and
other economic pressures have burdened many households since the revolution.

The credibility of Thursday’s vote has already been called into question by
political violence, accusations
<https://www.tbsnews.net/bangladesh-election-2026/ncp-accuses-bnp-violence-intimidation-vote-buying-ahead-polls-1351536>
 of vote buying and other irregularities, as well as a ban
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/03/exiled-awami-league-members-political-comeback-india>
 on the Awami League from taking part in the election.

The front-runner is the B.N.P., now led by Tarique Rahman, the son of Ms.
Zia, who died in December. But there has not been a genuinely competitive
general election since 2008, and the electoral outlook is difficult to
read. Bangladeshis from a new generation are voting — 43 percent of the
electorate is between 18 and 37
<https://www.thedailystar.net/news/young-voters-poised-shape-next-election-4077266>
 — and surveys indicate they are energized
<https://apnews.com/article/sheikh-hasina-bangladesh-students-gen-z-protests-2723012c6177c2feafd1e81c20c68309>
 more
<https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2026/1/20/bangladeshi-youth-toppled-hasina-now-they-could-decide-next-prime-minister>
 by practical concerns such as law and order, jobs, education, health care
and impartial governance than by party rivalries of the past.Islamist
forces are another wild card.

Long kept at the margins of politics in Bangladesh, which is a
Muslim-majority nation, they have capitalized on the current political and
institutional vacuum to become more assertive
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/01/world/asia/bangladesh-islam.html>, raising
questions about the commitment to secularism, one of the nation’s founding
principles. A recent survey indicated that 37 percent of first-time voters
<https://en.prothomalo.com/bangladesh/politics/utbro6587z> planned to vote
for candidates from Jamaat-e-Islami, Bangladesh’s largest religious
political party.

The party espouses a relatively moderate version of Islam and has gained
support through organizational discipline and as an alternative to the
discredited political duopoly. But other fringe Islamist groups have since
2024 called for enforcement of female modesty rules, imposing the death
penalty for blasphemy and even the establishment of an Islamic caliphate.

Bangladesh is trying to rebuild its democratic institutions.

In November the Supreme Court ruled
<https://apnews.com/article/bangladesh-caretaker-government-hasina-yunus-b567f5a48c2b7c678a7448fbee6b63ac>
 that the previous caretaker government system would be restored for future
elections, although not in time for this week’s polls. And Thursday’s
ballot will include a referendum on a new national charter that would
formally commit the state to enshrining fair elections, judicial
independence and limits on executive power.

Translating such ambitions into reality will be difficult. The B.N.P. opposes
some of
<https://www.thedailystar.net/opinion/views/news/yes-no-and-confused-closer-look-the-july-charter-the-referendum-nears-4093996>
 the charter’s core provisions, including limits on the power of the prime
minister and greater independence for oversight bodies. Several other
parties have also raised objections. If the referendum is approved,
implementing the charter will require legislation, constitutional
amendments and a level of sustained political cooperation that looks
unlikely now.

The stakes are high for Bangladesh.

In the past, rapid economic growth and trade cushioned the ill effects of
Bangladesh’s political dysfunction. The economy weakened after the
uprising, and although there have been signs of stabilization
<https://www.imf.org/en/news/articles/2026/01/30/pr-26029-bangladesh-imf-executive-board-concludes-2025-article-iv-consultation>
, new leaders will face a far less forgiving global environment marked by
rising global protectionism, fragmented supply chains and
climate stress
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/09/19/magazine/muhammad-yunus-bangladesh-climate-interview.html>
.

Strains have also appeared with India, Bangladesh’s most important regional
relationship. Ms. Hasina fled there after her ouster, angering Bangladesh’s
interim leaders and protesters who want her to face justice at home, and
India has accused Dhaka of failing to curb violence against Bangladesh’s
Hindu minority. The tensions have already spilled
<https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/11/world/asia/india-bangladesh-tensions.html>
 into visa suspensions and trade disruptions.

The lessons of Bangladesh’s uprising reach far beyond its borders. >From the
Arab Spring of the 2010s to more recent upheavals in Sri Lanka, Nepal
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/19/opinion/asia-protest-youth-nepal-bangladesh.html>
, South
<https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/one-dead-dozens-injured-perus-new-president-faces-widespread-protests-2025-10-16/>
 America
<https://www.americasquarterly.org/article/bolivia-enters-contentious-new-political-landscape/>
 and elsewhere, popular mobilization reopened political space, but the
gains were lost or remain fragile in the absence of impartial state
institutions capable of shepherding democratic transitions.

Even in the United States, the Trump administration’s actions threaten to
steadily erode the pillars of American democracy by dragging courts, legal
authorities and government agencies into partisan conflict and questioning
election results.

Tyrants can be overthrown. Repairing the damage they cause may be
democracy’s more enduring challenge.
Zahid Hussain is a former lead economist on Bangladesh for the World Bank.
Tom Felix Joehnk is a political economist and a former Bangladesh
correspondent for The Economist.

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