Miami Herald

Modi surges to victory in India on Hindu-first platform

- BY EMILY SCHMALL Associated Press

Narendra Modi, India’s charismati­c but polarizing prime minister, was headed Thursday for a landslide election victory, propelling his Hindu nationalis­t party to back-to-back majorities in parliament for the first time in decades.

With most of the votes counted, Modi’s re-election mirrored a global trend of right-wing populists sweeping to victory, from the United States to Brazil to Italy, often on a platform promoting a tough stand on national security, protection­ist trade policies and putting up barriers to immigratio­n.

The victory in India was widely seen as a referendum on Modi’s Hindu-first politics that some observers say have bred intoleranc­e toward Muslims and other religious minorities, as well as his muscular stance on neighborin­g Pakistan, with whom India nearly went to war earlier this year.

“India wins yet again,” Modi exulted in a tweet.

Election Commission data showed Modi’s Bharatia Janata winning 158 seats and in the lead for 145 more, which would catapult the party well beyond the simple majority in the 545member lower house of Parliament required to govern. The results spelled another nail in the coffin of the main opposition Indian National Congress party, which picked up 31 seats and was leading in 21 other contests. Its president, and the scion of modern India’s most powerful political dynasty, personally conceded his seat to BJP, signaling the end of an era. The final tally was not expected until Friday.

Addressing thousands of party workers celebratin­g the outcome, Modi urged the world to “recognize India’s democratic power.” He attributed the party’s showing to his policies aimed at improving the lot of the nation’s poor, including free medical insurance, relief for distressed farmers and a highly popular program to build 100 million toilets in a nation where basic sanitation remains a major problem.

The election victory was a resounding endorsemen­t of the 68-year-old Modi, whose economic reforms have had mixed results but whose background as a social underdog from a lower-caste Hindu family clearly inspired some in India’s highly stratified society, appealing to tens of millions of Indians seeking upward mobility. Critics have said his Hindu-first platform risks exacerbati­ng social tensions in the country of 1.3 billion people.

Since Modi led the Bharatiya Janata Party to power in 2014, Hindu mobs have lynched dozens of Muslims and lower-caste Dalits — people in India’s strict social hierarchy once considered “untouchabl­e” — for consuming or slaughteri­ng cows, which Hindus consider sacred.

Congress party president Rahul Gandhi conceded defeat for his own parliament­ary seat to his BJP rival in Amethi, a constituen­cy in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh that had for decades been a Congress party bastion. But Indian election rules allow candidates to run in more than one constituen­cy, and Gandhi was ahead in the race for another seat he contested in the southern state of Kerala.

The biggest losers appear to be the Communists who ruled West Bengal state for 34 years until they were ousted by Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress Party in 2011. Coalition partners of the Congress-led government in New Delhi between 2004 and 2008, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) was leading in only three constituen­cies and the Communist Party of India in two constituen­cies.

 ?? ATUL LOKE Getty Images ?? Narendra Modi acknowledg­es supporters while getting a garland at BJP headquarte­rs in New Delhi, India, on Thursday after his party’s landslide victory in the marathon, seven-phase, six-week-long general elections.
ATUL LOKE Getty Images Narendra Modi acknowledg­es supporters while getting a garland at BJP headquarte­rs in New Delhi, India, on Thursday after his party’s landslide victory in the marathon, seven-phase, six-week-long general elections.

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