By: Satya Sagar
Published in: *Countercurrents.org*
Date: June 2, 2024
Source:
https://countercurrents.org/2024/06/fear-and-hope-post-the-fourth-of-june/


For weeks now, everyone and his uncle in India has been speculating about
the outcome of the country’s general elections, hunting for clues on media
outlets, studying past trends and crunching numbers from election databases.

Their conclusions have depended on which side of the grand ideological
divide they stand – for or against the Hindu majoritarian regime of
Narendra Modi. The polarization is such that it is impossible to believe
big media or exit pollsters, who have already declared the incumbent
government re-elected, much before the results are out.

The truth is that in this election, given the absence of any explicit
political wave, nobody can really tell which way the verdict will go. There
are too many factors that could prove decisive.

There is one thing that can be said with certainty though. India as we have
known for the last three decades will not be the same after the 4th of
June. Irrespective of the outcome –– there are clear signs the country is
entering a new, more turbulent era and also one shifting away from the
politics of the recent past.

There will be much pain and suffering ahead but also possibilities of great
hope for a better India. While not exhaustive, here is a list of trends
that are visible, some faint and others pronounced, in the 2024 season of
the Great Indian Elections:

*The Modi bubble is about to burst:*  Yes, this despicable charlatan, who
rose to the nation’s top job using everything from communal poison,
corporate cash and brazenly corrupt practices, is headed to the dustbin of
history.

In this election we saw clearly how vast sections of Indians have snapped
out of the spell cast on them for long by his devious manipulation of
religious/nationalist sentiments and harnessing of hatred against the
country’s Muslims and Christian populations.

This is especially true among the youth – who form the largest demographic
section in the country – and who are tired of fighting battles from the
imagined past or be used as pawns of power-hungry demagogues.  All they
want are decent, secure jobs and upward social and economic mobility. The
rest of the country, made up of other age groups, craves peace and harmony
in society to get on with their lives without worry.

Even if Modi worms his way to a third term the victory will be very short
lived and the growing swell of discontent against his regime’s failed
policies will only accelerate. We are entering a period of intense social
mobilization and agitations that will transform Indian politics and society.

However, we do know that Narendra ‘Bonaparte’ Modi will not leave the
throne so easily – as he has simply too much to lose or hide. Hence the
apprehension about social and political turbulence ahead. There will be
many Pulwamas post the Fourth of June for sure.

*The Hindutva phenomenon has peaked:*  The ideological and organizational
push for promoting Hindutva, the RSS idea that India should abandon
secularism and openly adopt Hindu majoritarian rule, has exhausted its
appeal.   What started in the early nineties with L.K. Advani’s rath yatra,
the demolition of the Babri Masjid and the capture of the Indian state
machinery through the BJP’s ascent to power in 2014 – has lost its
momentum.

Both the BJP and RSS are deeply corrupted by the same power they sought for
long and finally achieved. They are shedding dedicated or motivated cadre
(motivated by a dystopian vision of India) faster than fur off a sheep’s
back in summer.

No, Hindutva is not going to disappear anytime soon. Like Covid-19 it will
lose virulence but still hang around in the ecosystem, afflicting the very
aged or those with weak immune systems. However, its ability to infect new
followers or frighten people into submission is gone – in a few seasons it
will be just another virus in the seasonal flu mix.

Among other reasons, this decline is due to Narendra Modi himself. While he
played a key role in popularizing the appeal of Hindutva and establishing
its political and social hegemony  he is also the one responsible for
undermining its future
<https://countercurrents.org/2024/04/how-modi-is-destroying-the-bjp/>. In
his self-appointed role as the prophet receiving messages directly from the
*paramatma* he has become vastly larger than the *parivar *he came from.

Today, there are enough indications that the knives are out for Modi –
within the Bharatiya Janata Party and Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, both of
which are hurting due to his transition from being their mentee to becoming
their tormentor.

There is no doubt that the RSS will have to dump Modi at some point of time
for its own long-term survival. The only question is whether it will be a
golden handshake or the royal boot that will do the job.

*The Indian Left is in for a grand revival:* No, I am not talking about the
established Left parties] here. The biggest leftist thinker and leader to
emerge in many decades on the Indian landscape is none other than Rahul
Gandhi, the feisty leader of the Congress party.

In the past year or so Rahul has managed to turn the national discourse
firmly away from the theme of Hindu-Muslim divisions and brought issues of
wealth inequality, livelihood, better wages for workers, welfare of the
poor and improved farmers’ incomes to center stage.

Even more significantly, Rahul has brilliantly synthesized a convincing
framework of class, caste and constitutional values, that has eluded Indian
communist parties as well as purely caste-based parties in India all these
decades.  By calling for wealth redistribution, a national caste census to
expand reservations and staunchly defending the Indian Constitution – he
has skillfully fused the eclectic trinity of Marx, Periyar and Ambedkar
together like no mainstream political leader has even attempted in the past.

Of course, how far these ideas will be taken up by the Congress party,
given its mixed history, is a moot question. There is no doubt though,
these concepts have struck a deep chord within the broader Indian
population, in particular among the poor, Dalits, backward castes, women
and religious minorities.

The next decade is surely going to be dominated by anyone who can organize
the awakened masses effectively around this radical, social and democratic
vision.

*Indian Democracy is not going to die anytime soon:*  There have been
relentless attacks made on Indian democracy and grievous injuries inflicted
on its structures in the past decade all through Narendra Modi’s reign.

However, democracy in any society is not merely about symbolic set of
institutions to be worshipped like a deity, but a dynamic, living process
that involves constant, relentless efforts against dictatorship.  In that
sense democracy can never die anywhere because at the very core it is the
struggle against injustice, oppression and the establishment of monopolies
over power and resources.

The 2024 election campaign demonstrated how, despite all the odds stacked
against them, the Indian opposition not just fought back but even expects
to upend the Modi regime at the polls. This is a clear sign that democracy
is still alive and kicking and a great portent for the future.

At a more basic level, democracy will assert itself also in the form of the
fight for greater share of national resources by India’s armies of the
unemployed, workers, women and farmers. The farmers movements of Punjab and
Haryana are only a trailer of what is possible and what is likely to come
ahead.

There will also be growing resistance to Hindutva and the BJP’s insistence
on homogenizing India – One Nation, One Election, One Religion, One Party,
One Leader. Pushback will come from states around the country wary of Delhi
concentrating too much power – the battle for a truly federal India will
intensify.

It will come from various linguistic groups around the country against the
imposition of Hindi. An even bigger revolt waiting to happen is by diverse
spiritual and religious traditions against being clubbed as ‘Hindus’ and
denied recognition of their own unique religious or spiritual practices.

The 2024 electoral battle is only a short warm up session and the big fight
remains, to defend the values, principles and legacy of the Indian Republic
that were forged during the freedom movement against British colonialism.

What is heartening today is that, faced with the most evil and ruthless
dispensation in modern Indian history, there are sufficient number of
Indians rising to the challenge. They are showing the courage and capacity
needed to launch the second historic struggle for India’s freedom.

No matter what happens on the Fourth of June we must all join them.

*Satya Sagar is a journalist and public health worker who can be reached
at sagarn...@gmail.com <sagarn...@gmail.com>*

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