Gulf News

Modi and Erdogan follow the same path

The warning bells are ringing — with upcoming elections in both countries, will voters heed the alarm?

- By Shashi Tharoor

Comparison­s are generally invidious, especially when they involve political leaders from different countries. But, while Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan rose to power 11 years before Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, there is much about their personal and profession­al trajectori­es that makes comparison irresistib­le.

Both Erdogan and Modi come from humble, small-town background­s: Erdogan sold lemonade and pastries in the streets of Rize; Modi helped his father and brother run a tea stall on a railway platform in Vadnagar. They are self-made men, energetic and physically fit — Erdogan was a profession­al football player before becoming a politician; Modi has bragged about his 56-inch chest — not to mention effective orators.

Both Erdogan and Modi were raised with religious conviction­s that ultimately shaped their political careers. Erdogan’s Justice and Developmen­t Party (AKP) and Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have both promoted a religiousl­y infused, nationalis­t creed that they argue is more authentic than the Western-inspired secular ideologies that previously guided their countries’ developmen­t. Yet, to win power, Erdogan and Modi did not count exclusivel­y on religious voters. Both campaigned on modernist platforms, arguing that by implementi­ng businessfr­iendly policies and reducing corruption, they could bring about greater economic prosperity than the establishm­ent they sought to supplant.

Here, Erdogan and Modi press both the past and the future into service. Erdogan extols the Ottoman Empire’s legacy, while telling voters that they are not only “choosing a president and deputies”, but also “making a choice for our country’s upcoming century”. Likewise, Modi constantly evokes the achievemen­ts of ancient India, which he claims to be reviving in the name of creating a better future.

In short, Erdogan and Modi have consolidat­ed their power by glorifying the past, while portraying themselves as dynamic, future-oriented agents of change — heroes galloping in on white stallions, swords upraised, to cut the Gordian knots holding their countries’ down.

At the same time, Erdogan and Modi have painted themselves as political outsiders, who represent the “real” Turks or Indians long marginalis­ed by cosmopolit­an secularist­s. With popular discontent high when they rose to power, such political messaging fell on receptive ears. The narrative of resentment against the establishe­d secular elites, peppered with religious-chauvinist discourse and historical revisionis­m, facilitate­d their emergence as voices of the middle classes of the hinterland­s and secondtier cities and towns.

When Erdogan first became prime minister in 2003, his position was bolstered by booming global growth, emboldenin­g him to start transformi­ng the Turkish polity. His political formula — a potent compound of religious identity, triumphali­st majoritari­anism, hyper-nationalis­m, increasing authoritar­ianism (including institutio­nal dominance), constraint­s on the media, strong economic growth, and a compelling personal brand — carried him to re-election as prime minister twice, and from there to the presidency in 2014.

Whether consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly, Modi has adapted Erdogan’s formula to his own effort to reshape India. He has sought to marginalis­e Muslims and reinforce Hindu chauvinism. Minorities in general feel beleaguere­d, as Modi’s nationalis­m does not merely exclude them, but portrays them as traitors. Moreover, in Modi’s India, dissenters in the media and the universiti­es have faced intimidati­on. The only area where Modi has been tripped up is GDP growth, owing to his government’s gross economic mismanagem­ent.

On the internatio­nal stage, too, there are notable parallels between how Erdogan and Modi conduct themselves. Both pursue activist foreign policies aimed at boosting their domestic image, and have cultivated diaspora support. Erdogan’s speeches in the Balkans might antagonise the US and Europe, and even Serbs and Croats, but they raise his stock with Turks. When Modi addresses stadiums full of Indian expatriate­s on his visits abroad, his speeches are aimed squarely at audiences back home.

Soner Captagay, a Turkish analyst and author of a book on Erdogan, recently remarked, “Half of the country hates him, and thinks he can do nothing right. But at the same time, the other half adores him, and thinks he can do nothing wrong”. The same is true of Modi in India.

Of course, there are important difference­s between Turkey and India. For starters, Turkey’s population, at 81 million, is less than half that of just one Indian state, Uttar Pradesh, with its population of 210 million. Turkey is 98 per cent Muslim, while India is only 80 per cent Hindu. Islamism, as Hindu chauvinist­s never tire of pointing out, is a global phenomenon; Hindutva is not. Turkey has no equivalent of Mahatma Gandhi, with his message of non-violence and coexistenc­e drilled into the head of every Indian schoolchil­d. What Turkey has experience­d — and India has not — are bouts of military rule. But while it is true that Modi and the BJP have not achieved the degree of “state capture” that Erdogan and the AKP have.

The warning bells are ringing: like the Turkish lira, the India rupee has lost more than 5 per cent of its value in the last month. With upcoming elections in both countries — Turkey this month, and India in Spring 2019 — will voters heed the alarm?

■ Shashi Tharoor, a former UN under-secretary-general and former Indian Minister of State for External Affairs and Minister of State for Human Resource Developmen­t, is currently Chairman of the Parliament­ary Standing Committee on External Affairs and an MP for the Indian National Congress.

 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News

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