What 2026 verdict shows about India’s democracy by Habib Siddiqui
By Habib Siddiqui The results are in, and the unthinkable has happened. What I had feared for the past five years has now come to pass: the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), under the ideological leadership of Narendra Modi, is set to form the next government in West Bengal. Suvendu Adhikari — whose record of incendiary, anti‑Muslim rhetoric has dragged political discourse to new lows — appears poised to become the state’s next chief minister. For a state long celebrated for its pluralism, cultural sophistication, and resistance to communal politics, this moment marks a profound rupture. Even The Hindu , one of India’s most respected newspapers, described the outcome as a “ paradigm shift in the BJP’s political journey .” Adhikari himself wasted no time claiming that the results reveal a “visible crack” in the Trinamool Congress’s (TMC) Muslim support base. For those of us who have watched India’s political evolution over decades, the BJP’s first solo victory in West Bengal is not a su...