NEW DELHI :
WHEN Prime Minister Narendra
Modi took oath for a third term
on June 9, 2024, it was Rahul
Gandhi who sounded rather
upbeat on the back of the BJP’s
unexpected loss of majority in
the Lok Sabha polls amid its campaign claim of crossing 400 in the
543-member House.
“We have finished Modi psychologically. His Government will
be removed soon,” the Congress
leader was to assert as critics cited the BJP’s crucial dependence
on TDP’s N Chandrababu Naidu
and JD(U)’s Nitish Kumar, both
with a history of switching
alliances, and its weak show in
big states like Uttar Pradesh and
Maharashtra to forecast political turbulence ahead.
As the Modi Government
marks its first anniversary in the
third term and 11th overall on
Monday, the Prime Minister
looks as secure and sounds as
confident at the helm as ever,
while his two mercurial allies
have not turned out to be unreliable crutches, as the Opposition
hoped, but strong pillars of support outdoing each other in lauding his leadership.
While the BJP went back to the
drawing board to re-craft its political and governance outreach and
regained momentum by notching up surprisingly big wins in a
string of assembly polls, the burst
of fresh optimism in the main
Opposition Congress and other
INDIA bloc parties fizzled out.
If the BJP turned the tide in
Haryana and Maharashtra, two
States where it suffered reverses
in the Lok Sabha polls, on the
back of its welfare measures and
social engineering associated
with regional leadership, it finally wrested Delhi after 26 years,
eclipsing its plucky adversary Arvind Kejriwal of the Aam
Aadmi Party on his home turf.
The BJP now appears set to
make a fresh political charge
afterrecoupingthegroundlost
inthenationalpollsayearback
whiletheOppositionisbackto
its disjointed self, with the
Congress searching for an elusive and emphatic state poll
win in a state.
Other BJP rivals like West
BengalChiefMinisterMamata
Banerjee-ledTMCandKejriwal
have drifted away from the
Congress and the likes of Shiv
Sena(UBT)andNCP(SP) stare
at an uncertain future.
Manoj Kumar, an associate
professorinPoliticalScienceat
Delhi University, stresses
Modi’s virtually unchallenged
leadership status amid the
Opposition’s failure to take the
battle to him.
“Atanypointinpolitics,there
are always opportunities and
challenges.
But it seems there
is no serious alternative to PM
Modi as long as he is there,” he
says, adding that the military
action under Operation
Sindoor has again cemented
his image as the leader acting
in national interest.
He acknowledges that the
Opposition’s issues built
around caste census and
alleged threat to the
Constitution besides regional
factors and the BJP’s complacency delivered a setback to
the ruling party in 2024.
Kumar then goes on to add
thattheGovernment’sdecision
to roll out caste enumeration
in the census underscores the
BJP’sstrengthincooptingpolitically resonant issues.
It has always worked to
address caste concerns while
ensuring that caste-basedpoliticsisnotonitsagenda,hesaid.
He saysModi’swelfaremodel built around ‘Sabka Saath,
SabkaVikas’hashelpedtheBJP
and will continue to do so as
thepartyhas inPrimeMinister
a leader with popular charisma and trust who has no rival.