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India
This Week in AsiaOpinion
Karim Raslan

Ceritalah | In India’s elections, if not Modi, who?

  • The question has been repeated so often by the incumbent prime minister’s supporters that it has become a catchphrase to rebuke the opposition
  • Thanks to the election campaign’s quasi-presidential nature, many wonder who could challenge his immense charisma and huge following

Reading Time:3 minutes
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Can anyone challenge Narendra Modi’s immense charisma and huge following? Photo: Business Today India
Veena Kumari is a typical Narendra Modi voter: a 52-year-old housewife. With her farmer husband, she lives in a village close to Pratapgarh, a dusty town with an “unfinished” vibe just 170km from Lucknow, the capital of Uttar Pradesh.

“Unemployment is the main issue in the country, but this has improved. If we give Modi another five years, there will be no more unemployment.”

The Dalit community’s main concerns are violence against minorities and the cost of living. Photo: Team Ceritalah
The Dalit community’s main concerns are violence against minorities and the cost of living. Photo: Team Ceritalah
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Her twenty-something son will finish college in two years. Veena is certain that if the incumbent prime minister is re-elected, her son will get a job: “Modi will solve our problems. If not Modi, who?”

To his supporters, the strongman is irreplaceable. The question has been repeated so often that it has become a catchphrase to rebuke the opposition.

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Still, the quasi-presidential nature of the campaign reinforces its importance: who could challenge Modi’s immense charisma and huge following?

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