Victory on a Platter

Dr Suresh Mathew Dr Suresh Mathew
21 Mar 2022
Editorial on Assembly Elections by Dr Suresh Mathew

The results of the recent Assembly elections to five States raise a valid question: Is the Opposition suffering from a death-wish? This question gets validated in at least two states where the ruling party was given victory on a platter. More than the ignominy of the defeats of the Opposition parties, what generates interest is that they gave a cake-walk to the BJP by pitting against one another, rather than fighting their main opponent. The BJP, arguably, would claim that it won the elections on the basis of its development agenda and it could convince the voters of its commitment to it. Simultaneously, it is finding success in sending the Opposition parties, at least the principal one at the national-level, to vanvas.

But the story from the ground seems to give a different version. The BJP’s path to success is made smoother by the Opposition parties themselves. A few examples from Uttar Pradesh and Goa would be suffice to prove this point. The Hyderabad-based AIMIM led by Asadudin Owaisi knew that it had little scope of winning any seat in UP, still it put up candidates in 95 seats. As expected, it did not win any seat; rather, it forfeited its security deposit in all but one seat. Election analysts say that the party damaged the winning chance of Samajwadi Party in several seats as the Owaisi party garnered more votes in these constituencies than the victory margin of the BJP. The Congress and the BSP too played spoilsport in the State. In Goa, Mamata Banerjee did the same by putting up her party’s candidates in 26 seats and it helped BJP romp home with slender margins in some places. Trinamool Congress could not win a single seat but it made the Congress bite the dust in the coastal State. AAP too helped BJP to win some seats. One is tempted to see truth in the charge that some of the regional parties acted like the B team of the BJP.  

The end result of the splintered Opposition, acting in cross-purposes, is that the ruling party gets emboldened to become authoritarian and despotic. Without a robust Opposition, democracy in India will be further weakened. A strong Opposition is indispensable to counter any attempt of the ruling party to act against the interest of the people. The ruling party will play its game of keeping the Opposition divided by hook or crook as it safeguards its interests. It is for the Opposition parties to make sure that they don’t fall into this trap. One may argue that every party has the right to expand its base, and fighting elections is the only way to achieve this objective. Simultaneously, every party has the responsibility to make sure that its actions do not go counter to the spirit of democracy.

However, some of the Opposition parties are committing the mistake of weakening democracy. The same mistake is done by the party-hopping leaders who have no commitment to any ideology, but only to their self-interest. If the parties continue to make the blunder by splitting votes to the extent of helping the ruling party to become arrogant, the fate of democracy in India will be in danger.

Assembly Elections BJP Opposition parties Uttar Pradesh AIMIM Samajwadi Party Mamata Banerjee AAP Democracy Goa Indian Currents Indian Currents Magazine Issue 13 2022

Recent Posts

The 2026 West Bengal elections exposed how democratic institutions can be weakened without a formal suspension of democracy. Through voter deletions, administrative filtering, heavy enforcement deploy
apicture Oliver D'Souza
11 May 2026
The proposed School Management Committees mark an unprecedented Union encroachment into school governance, threatening state powers and minority rights. The guidelines lack constitutional backing, und
apicture Joseph Maliakan
11 May 2026
I first heard your name when my friend, an IAS officer, now retired, served under you in the Petroleum Ministry. Recently, I had occasion to write an editorial on the reforms that you introduced in th
apicture A. J. Philip
11 May 2026
The Assembly election results underline a stark warning for India's opposition: disunity is strengthening the BJP's expanding dominance and weakening democratic pluralism. Critics argue that fragmente
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
11 May 2026
The 2026 Assembly elections showed that Christian voters remain influential in areas where communities are concentrated and institutionally organised, especially in Kerala and Tamil Nadu. Vijay's rise
apicture John Dayal
11 May 2026
When flames tore through the fragile shanties along the Narkeldanga canal one humid evening in February 2025, families lost everything in minutes. Bamboo poles, tin sheets, plastic and tarpaulin roofs
apicture CM Paul
11 May 2026
To split human beings into Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaishya, Shudra, Untouchable: To place some at the summit of heaven And bury untouchables below the floor of hell Is not just a mistake of history;
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
11 May 2026
Francis Fukuyama, quoting Hobbes, says, people usually fight over necessities, but often enough they contend over trifles. That is to say, many quarrels arise over non-issues. They are expressions
apicture Thomas Menamparampil
11 May 2026
Many of us grew up hearing a sentence repeated by parents, teachers, coaches and even old uncles sitting with cups of tea after a cricket match. "Learn to lose gracefully." We were told that being a g
apicture Robert Clements
11 May 2026
The defection of seven AAP Rajya Sabha MPs simultaneously crossed the anti-defection law's two-thirds merger threshold, exposing how constitutional safeguards themselves can be used to legitimise mass
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
04 May 2026