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MODI’S POPULARITY WEATHERS VIRUS STORM

Record economic slump, farmer protests and border tensions with China make no difference to voters swayed by PM’s oratorical skills

- NEWDELHI BY BIBHUDATTA PRADHAN AND ARCHA NA CHAUDHARY

India is battling one of the world’s highest coronaviru­s caseloads, its worst economic slump, shuttered factories, farmer protests and the deadliest border fight with China in decades. Yet Prime Minister Narendra Modi appears to remain as popular as ever. Opinion polls in Bihar, where from October 28 to November 7 he faces his first major electoral test since the pandemic, show his coalition comfortabl­y retaining control of the state government. A separate India Today “Mood of the Nation” poll in August said 78 per cent rated his performanc­e as “good to outstandin­g” comparedwi­th 71 per cent last year.

One of those supporters is Sanjay Kumar, 22, a carpenter who was beaten by police in April for violating India’s strict lockdown while cycling from the capital New Delhi to his village in Bihar – a journey of more than 1,000km – after he lost his job. He’s still unable to find regular work.

I am increasing­ly convinced of the connection between creating of a powerful charismati­c leader and a media- controlled narrative.”

Neelanjan Sircar | Ashoka University

Modi was able to make this argument effectivel­y in 2019 but it will be harder in 2024 if he cannot make progress on the economy.”

Blame it on corruption

“Some people are not getting all the benefits because of corruption in the middle and that is not his fault,” Kumar said, noting that Modi can’t control the spread of the virus if people don’t wear masks. “No one can question his good intentions,” he said. “He is sincerely trying his best to give poor people food andwork.”

Many other Modi backers also blame others for India’s woes, and there is no shortage of targets: Federal bureaucrat­s, state government­s, village leaders, opposition parties and even their fellow citizens. Modi has helped endear himself to India’s poor by meeting their daily needs with programs to supply cooking gas, toilets and housing, all while taking measures to bolster the status of the Hindumajor­ity over religious minorities.

Milan Vaishnav | Carnegie Centre

Making India unabashedl­y Hindu

In the absence of significan­t national opposition, voters have been willing to give Modi a very long leash, according to Milan Vaishnav, director and senior fellowat the South Asia Programat the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace.

“This kind of politics, however, is not without its shortcomin­gs,” Vaishnav said. “Modi was able to make this argument effectivel­y in 2019 but it will be harder in 2024 if he cannot make more rapid progress on the economy, employment, and governance.”

As prime minister, Modi has been focused on making India both attractive to global investors and unabashedl­y Hindu. His Bharatiya Janata Party ( BJP) returned to power in May last year with a thumping majority following a campaign that highlighte­d his success in providing necessitie­s to the poor, combined with a Hindu nationalis­t agenda that played up his strongman persona – particular­ly against arch- rival Pakistan.

Popular due to ideologica­l clarity

Since winning re- election, Modi revoked Article 370 of the constituti­on that granted special autonomous status to India’s only Muslim- majority state, Jammu and Kashmir, and approved a citizenshi­p law that discrimina­tes based on religion. He has also pushed for a national citizens registry in the northeaste­rn state of Assam and laid the foundation stone for the constructi­on of a Hindu temple at a site where a 16th century mosque was razed.

Aspokesman for Modi’s office did not respond to several requests seeking comment.

“He is popular because he has ideologica­l clarity and he’s only implementi­ng what the BJP had promised in their manifesto, like the promise to repeal Article 370,” said Arun Anand, research director at Delhi- based think tank Vichar Vinimay Kendra and author of two books on the BJP’s parent organisati­on, the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh ( RSS). “Politician­s keeping their word is rare in India.”

Anxiety of minority groups

Modi has positioned himself along with other populist leaders across the globe who feed off anxieties that minority groups will one day supplant the majority even though Hindus make up 80 per cent of India’s population, according to Sudha Pai, New Delhi- based political scientist, author and former pro- vice chancellor of the Centre for Political Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University. He’s also been adept at leaving the details of policies to ministers and bureaucrat­s who take the blame if something fails, she said.

“Now we have a populist regime that has created a leader that can’t do wrong,” Pai said. “He has thisway of speaking like a godman.”

Modi has shown he can turn upheaval into political gains. In 2016, his move to abruptly withdraw 86 per cent of circulatin­g currency with a four- hour notice led to prolonged cash shortages and an economic slowdown that caused hardship across India. Still, his party won a key state in a landslide just months later as his party told voters it helped rein in corruption and tax evasion – even

though it ultimately failed to achieve its goal. Part of his success is an ability to control the narrative. Modi hasn’t held a single press conference as primeminis­ter, instead reaching out to the masses directly through a weekly radio programme as well as posts on socialmedi­a. The BJP’s socialmedi­a army has deflected blame for problems.

Stories that build credibilit­y

“Modi’s ability to reach his message directly to individual­s is unsurpassa­ble,” said Neelanjan Sircar, assistant professor at Ashoka University and senior visiting fellowat Center for Policy Research. “I am increasing­ly convinced of the connection between creating of a powerful charismati­c leader and a media- controlled narrative. How do you build trust in somebody? You keep telling stories that build his credibilit­y.”

As India’s Covid- 19 outbreak became one of the fastest growing in the world, Modi shared a carefully choreograp­hed video in August featuring him feeding peacocks in his official New Delhi residence during his morning exercise. That kind of imagery has helped cement an image of Modi as “a monk- like ascetic who can be trusted with one’s life,” said Nilanjan Mukhopadhy­ay, a political analyst who has written a biography on Modi.

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 ?? Reuters ?? ■ In his six years in power, Modi has reached out to the public directly through a weekly radio programme as well as special TV addresses.
Reuters ■ In his six years in power, Modi has reached out to the public directly through a weekly radio programme as well as special TV addresses.

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