Demise of Absolute Dominance

Fr. Gaurav Nair Fr. Gaurav Nair
10 Jun 2024

On June 4, 2024, the day India chose to bring Mr Modi a few notches down, India Today grilled Axis My India's Pradeep Gupta on why there was a massive difference in the pollster's exit polls and the actual results. Mr Pradeep broke down on TV, but to be fair to the man, his exit polls were rather spot on bar some variance. Many chose to describe the Indian electorate as uniquely unpredictable because one never knows what they will do. However, is this true?

Many media outlets have stated that there is rejoicing across the country, though insignificant it may be, that Modi has lost his absolute dominance. India is now breathing in fresh air, freed from the decade-long stranglehold that it was in. Such opinions are enough to describe why the nation chose to divest the PM of his pride.

As he began his campaign, Mr Modi had confidently raised the slogan 400 paar, but it fizzled down to just 290. The BJP silenced, marked, threatened, blackmailed, jailed, and rode roughshod on the opposition. It even eliminated every other candidate except its own in Surat. Even with the support of the Godi Media, the business moguls and the state machinery, he failed to garner even a simple majority for the BJP.

The citizens have come to the stark realisation that Modi's Guarantees are just empty vessels which can be banged from the rooftops to chase away COVID but contain nothing. To quote what MK Gandhi thought of Cripps's promise of Dominion Status to India, in return for war support, the guarantees were "post-dated cheque(s) drawn on a failing bank". The promises could never be encashed because there was no truth behind them. The people have become cognizant of the truth that Modi's claim of a developed India is hogwash. Though there has been economic growth, every other indicator has been screaming that the country has been declining on all fronts.

The benefits of the country's development have, far from flowed, not even trickled down to the lower strata of the society. More and more people, especially the youth, are unemployed. The Hindutva brigade was burning the country's minorities as Mr Modi went on his safaris. There are innumerable instances of injustices perpetrated on the nation and its people.

While it is true that Modi still sits in the PM's seat, it won't be as comfortable this time. The coalition and the opposition will be potholes that keep him from enjoying a comfortable ride. If rumours are to be trusted, there is also some dissatisfaction against him within his party. The members will become vociferous as the halo surrounding him, which suppressed them, fades into darkness.

The results were not unpredictable; they were well within expectations. It was the will of the nation.

Recent Posts

In an era when faith is often kept carefully outside the public square, VD Satheesan, Leader of the Opposition in the Kerala Legislative Assembly, speaks of the Bible with an ease that is neither perf
apicture Dr Suresh Mathew
29 Dec 2025
For seventy years, Christmas felt benign. This year, people were wishing each other a "safe" Christmas. That single adjective reveals India's moral crisis. Mobs rule, and symbolism has replaced govern
apicture A. J. Philip
29 Dec 2025
Festivals once nurtured harmony; today, they are weaponised. Hate, boycotts, and violence have replaced pluralism, enabled by silence from power and an ideology hostile to India's constitutional promi
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
29 Dec 2025
As the new year dawns, India pauses to introspect—except its institutions. Data reveals a justice system dulled by delay, selective mercy, and unequal enforcement, where survivors wait, the powerful w
apicture Jaswant Kaur
29 Dec 2025
On December 15, 2025, in Kanker district, Chhattisgarh, a province in the central part of India, the father of Rajman Salam, an elected sarpanch (village headman), was buried according to Christian ri
apicture United Christian Forum
29 Dec 2025
Renaming the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) into the Viksit Bharat Guarantee for Employment and Livelihood Mission (Rural) Bill, dubbed "G RAM G" and pushed through P
apicture Oliver D'Souza
29 Dec 2025
In the land of Tagore, Vivekananda, and Gandhi—who preached universal faith and freedom—religion is now weaponised. Constitutional guarantees are undermined by vigilantes, anti-conversion laws, and si
apicture John S. Shilshi
29 Dec 2025
In the thundering storm of ignorance and fear, Rose a voice, fierce and clear-Periyar, the seer. A flame against the darkness, a sword against the lie, He challenged the shadows that veiled the sky
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
29 Dec 2025
Christmas celebrations in Arunachal grew into vibrant expressions of faith and culture. Today, they are celebrated widely across the state, but their roots trace back to that fragile, defiant begin
apicture CM Paul
29 Dec 2025
The Lord Jesus has promised that the stones will cry out. What remains to be decided—by me, by my Order, by the Church in India—is whether we will raise our voices with them, or whether our silence wi
apicture Fr. Anil Prakash D'Souza, OP
29 Dec 2025