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From the Editor-in-Chief

The BJP and allies now rule 20 of India's 28 states, and with the Opposition in tatters, they seem Unstoppable

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India saw two major electoral upsets on May 4. Of these, actor Vijay’s victory as a wildcard debutant in Tamil Nadu was the more genuine surprise. But the imperious sweep of West Bengal by the Bharatiya Janata Party was the more truly historic outcome. True, the party had made a phenomenal leap from three seats in 2016 to 77 in 2021, becoming the main Opposition party and reducing the Left to insignificance. Yet this was a state long regarded as saffronism’s ideological frontier, a terrain too culturally self-assured and politically idiosyncratic to succumb to the BJP’s offerings. The verdict has demolished that assumption. In an astonishing turnout of 92.5 per cent, Bengal gave the BJP 207 seats in a 294-seat legislature. Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress, doughty fighters to the bitter end, were reduced to 80 seats. With that, an entire political epoch draws to a close and another begins. The result also reshapes India’s political map in significant ways ahead of the 2029 Lok Sabha election. The footprint of Narendra Modi’s BJP now covers all of eastern India, alongside much of the north, west and northeast.

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