Is Modi A Good Leader or Bad ????
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Hoal
He is a good leader ..........
He ranks 1 in world leaders rank ...........
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Modi is authoritarian but a dictator he is not. He has become one within the BJP but not to the country.
He did not become Prime Minister through subterfuge. He is PM because he and his party scored a resounding victory at the polls.
Dictators don't usually come to power through popular mandate. The notable exception in India's history is Indira Gandhi, daughter of the man who introduced India to democracy.
Emergency dictatorship. Mrs Gandhi gave India a first hand experience of what dictatorship could be like. She jailed thousands who protested the Emergency, muzzled the media and subverted public institutions like the bureaucracy, judiciary and even the Presidency.
Mrs G made her experiment with dictatorship look easy. She may have proved at least to herself how vulnerable Indian democracy can be under a leader with few scruples and vast powers. But everything came unstuck in the snap poll of 1977. The result, a humiliating defeat for G, was a warning to all aspiring dictators.
Modi and Mrs G fought their own battles to reach the top. The challenges they faced were different.
She was born into a privileged, politically powerful family. He came from a family of modest means. Modi doesn't suffer from a sense of entitlement. He is a lot more careful in how he is seen wielding power and is more guarded than G in showing his disdain for the democratic process.
He won't tell visiting historians that his regime has “made State ministers quake in their shoes" and that it was "long overdue." Modi and G may hold similar views on devolution but he will be much more circumspect while expressing his views.
Leadership qualities: His record so far has been far from reassuring. But polls are where his leadership will be judged and in the run-up Modi will do what he does best: Tell 'em what they want to hear and trade new dreams for old. But more than Modi's leadership BJP's politics of polarization will be on trial. Polarization will determine the outcome of the 2019 elections. If the Hindi belt decides not to get polarized everything will be up for grabs.
Next year's general elections will not solely be about Modi. We will find out whether Rahul Gandhi, once dismissed as a failed dynast, has made the cut.
He did not become Prime Minister through subterfuge. He is PM because he and his party scored a resounding victory at the polls.
Dictators don't usually come to power through popular mandate. The notable exception in India's history is Indira Gandhi, daughter of the man who introduced India to democracy.
Emergency dictatorship. Mrs Gandhi gave India a first hand experience of what dictatorship could be like. She jailed thousands who protested the Emergency, muzzled the media and subverted public institutions like the bureaucracy, judiciary and even the Presidency.
Mrs G made her experiment with dictatorship look easy. She may have proved at least to herself how vulnerable Indian democracy can be under a leader with few scruples and vast powers. But everything came unstuck in the snap poll of 1977. The result, a humiliating defeat for G, was a warning to all aspiring dictators.
Modi and Mrs G fought their own battles to reach the top. The challenges they faced were different.
She was born into a privileged, politically powerful family. He came from a family of modest means. Modi doesn't suffer from a sense of entitlement. He is a lot more careful in how he is seen wielding power and is more guarded than G in showing his disdain for the democratic process.
He won't tell visiting historians that his regime has “made State ministers quake in their shoes" and that it was "long overdue." Modi and G may hold similar views on devolution but he will be much more circumspect while expressing his views.
Leadership qualities: His record so far has been far from reassuring. But polls are where his leadership will be judged and in the run-up Modi will do what he does best: Tell 'em what they want to hear and trade new dreams for old. But more than Modi's leadership BJP's politics of polarization will be on trial. Polarization will determine the outcome of the 2019 elections. If the Hindi belt decides not to get polarized everything will be up for grabs.
Next year's general elections will not solely be about Modi. We will find out whether Rahul Gandhi, once dismissed as a failed dynast, has made the cut.
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