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Excerpt from 2014 Economist article on Narendra Modi's election victory

The passage merely summarizes election results and political commentary without providing any specific allegations, financial transactions, or actionable leads involving powerful actors. It mentions N Narendra Modi's BJP won 282 seats in May 2014 election. Congress reduced to 44 seats, a historic defeat. General political analysis of anti‑incumbency and voter dissatisfaction.

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #031575
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage merely summarizes election results and political commentary without providing any specific allegations, financial transactions, or actionable leads involving powerful actors. It mentions N Narendra Modi's BJP won 282 seats in May 2014 election. Congress reduced to 44 seats, a historic defeat. General political analysis of anti‑incumbency and voter dissatisfaction.

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modiindiapoliticsbjpcongresshouse-oversightelection

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Alex Rowell joined NOW in Beirut as a reporter and blogger in February 2012. A British citizen, he was raised in Dubai and studied economics in London. Article 3. The Economist India's next prime minister: The Modi era begins May 18th 2014 -- IN THE days since May 16th when Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) stormed to victory in India’s general election much commentary has wrestled with the idea of history. Most commentators seem to agree that May 2014 marks an historic moment. One reason is the scale of Mr Modi’s landslide victory, which scooped up 282 seats for the BJP and thus an absolute majority in parliament. That is first time since 1984 that any party has won a majority for itself. It is also the first time ever that a party other than Congress has done so. Conversely, the defeat for Congress is far worse than anything in its long history of dominating Indian politics: it won fewer than a sixth the seats of its rival, getting just 44. In much of north India, the political heartland, Congress was wiped out. Some correctly ask if its eventual recovery (assuming that will happen one day) would require being rid of the Nehru- Gandhi dynasty that has been at its heart for so long. Yet the size of Mr Modi’s victory, and Congress’s defeat, tells only part of the dramatic story. The immense dissatisfaction with Congress was undeniable. Voters were unhappy with high inflation, slowing growth, weak leadership, corruption and much more. Such voter grumpiness, usually summed up as “anti-incumbency’”, is all but inevitable for a party that had been in power for a decade. Yet more has happened here. Take, for example, the utter defeat of the Bahujan Samaj Party of Mayawati, the Dalit leader in Uttar Pradesh. She was not an incumbent and her party

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