Twelve Years of Modi’s Rule that Inflicted Irreversible Damage to India

 



Twelve Years of Modi’s Rule that Inflicted Irreversible Damage to India

 

On May 26,2026, Narendra Modi completed 12 years as the Head of the Government of India.  History will record his rule as the most vicious regressive period in the post independent India, marked by the divisive communal politics and misgovernance. He downgraded the office of the Prime Minister so much, by his various acts of omission and commission, basing his narrative and rhetoric on lies and half-truths, and downright denigrating the Nehru-Gandhi Family crossing all the limits of civility, with the sole objective of misleading the people and winning elections by hook or crook, that it is difficult to assess. He inflicted an irreversible damage to India since he assumed the Office.  Some major reasons:

 

The Demonetisation

 

Addressing the nation on 8 November 2016, Modi announced the demonetisation of all Rs.500 and Rs.1,000 banknotes, that is invalidating the currency valued at Rs 15.44 trillion. The demonetisation came into effective from the midnight of that day. The main objectives were to curb black money, terror funding, and counterfeit currency. It was an ill-conceived disruptive exercise.

 

It caused severe economic disruption, wiping out an estimated 2% of GDP. Invalidating 87% of the currency under circulation overnight triggered massive cash shortage, around 1.5 million job losses, affecting severely the informal and small-business sector. The sudden demonetisation crippled the informal economy, which relied heavily on cash. Small businesses, mom-and-pop shops, and wholesale traders experienced steep drops in sales, with many being forced to shut down. The All-India Manufacturers' Organization estimated severe job losses, particularly in macro- and small-scale industries. The daily-wage labourers and those in cash-dependent sectors suffered the most.

 

The government estimated that a large portion of illicit wealth would not return to the banking system. However, the Reserve Bank of India reported that 99.3% of the demonetised banknotes were deposited, indicating that most illicit cash was successfully laundered. And counterfeit notes detected during the process were far below alarmist estimates, rendering the impact on terror financing and fake currency negligible. The severe cash crunch led to massive queues outside banks and ATMs, with over 100 fatalities caused by exhaustion.

 

The nation-wide lockdown

 

On March 24,2020, Modi, yet again, through a broadcast, ordered a draconian 21-day lockout effective from the midnight on March 25. It was the first devasting nation-wide lockdown by any nation to curb the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, confining 1.4 billion people of the most populous country in the world to their homes. It sent shock waves to the people. With factories and workplaces shut down, millions of migrant workers had to deal with the loss of income, food shortage and uncertainty about their future. Many of them and their families went hungry. With no work and no money, thousands of migrant workers were seen walking hundreds of kilometres to go back to their native villages, many died of exhaustion and in accidents on the roads.

 

The people were prohibited from stepping out of their homes, and the forms of public transport -railways, metros, and domestic and international flights- were suspended. All educational institutions, places of worship, and non-essential commercial and industrial establishments were shut down. The sudden shutdown left daily-wage workers and migrant labourers stranded without income or food, triggering one of the largest mass migrations across the country since the 1947 Partition. The nationwide shutdown was extended multiple times, causing untold misery and suffering of the people. According to WHO estimate, nearly 4.7 million people died in India. Many dead bodies were seen floating in the river Ganga. 

 

The lockdown was more a panic reaction rather than a reasoned decision. It could have been handled in a more humane manner. Incidentally, this writer never had any vaccines or booster doses during the Covid pandemic, as he didn’t believe that the treatment given was based on any scientific study or necessitated, with doctors and hospitals making huge money with wrong diagnosis and medication. The dos ad don’ts prescribed made no sense in countryside and slums in urban areas.   

 

Controlling the Media

 

During the past 12 years as the Prime Minister of the largest democracy in the world, Modi didn’t hold a single press conference. He doesn’t face the press for the fear of being exposed of his false narratives and unsubstantiated public statements. He calls India ’mother of democracy’ in public utterances, but what he does is anti-democratic.

 

Modi was on a two-day official visit to Oslo (Norway) from May 18 to May 19 2026. And when he was asked, during a joint press appearance with Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store, by a journalist Helle Lyng why he does not take questions from the Press, he walked out, showing India in a poor light and lowering her image, and losing his credibility in the process. In contrast, the leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi held nearly 130 press conferences, fielding question and giving answers extempore.

 

At home, the Modi government controls the Media Houses owned by his billionaire industrial friends, with the media becoming a mouthpiece of the ruling establishment, avoiding any criticism of the government policies and actions. In fact, the electronic media, is used as an instrument of propaganda.  India is ranked 157 out of 180 countries in the 2026 World Press Freedom Index released by Reporters Without Bordersdropping 6 places from its rank of 151 in 2025, even below the ranking of her neighbours- Bangladesh, Nepal and Pakistan. India continues to fall under the “Very Serious” category for press freedom. This is so disgraceful. The Media is not realising the damage it is inflicting on the Indian democracy, side stepping the larger national cause of making the government accountable for its misdeeds. It surrendered its role of the Fourth-Estate in a free and open society.

 

Capturing the Public Institutions

 

The Modi government has successfully captured every public institution. The Central agencies, which are expected to be independent and function impartially, have been captured to toe the line of the establishment. The investigative agencies such as CBI, ED, NIA have been misused to subserve the interest of the ruling party, and demonise the opposition.

 

The Constitutionally independent organisation, the Election Commission of India (ECI), whose prime duty is to safeguard the democracy, is unable to function as a neutral umpire to ensure free and fair elections. In the name of Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, the ECI is violating the very electoral process based on the universal adult franchise, resulting in not only millions of eligible voters getting disfranchised, but the vote chori (vote theft) determining the outcome of elections. The ECI has failed to check the electoral malpractices. By amending the law relating to the CEC and Other ECs (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) in 2023, the government has provided them immunity from any penal action, a protection not provided to any other constitutional authority, including High Courts and Supreme Court judges, not even to the President of India.

 

This explains why the current CEC Gyanesh Kumar has become a law unto himself, accountable to none, except to his political masters, acting in a most authoritarian and partisan manner, unheard in a democracy.  Some 193 MPs from both the Houses of Indian Parliament submitting a notice to the Presiding Officers demanding his removal, has made no difference to his arbitrary exercise of power. The Speaker of Lok Sabha Om Birla and the Chairman of Rajya Sabha CP Radhakrishnan have rejected the notice outrightly.  

 

And while holding the view that the ECI has the power to conduct the SIR, the Supreme Court has failed to address the nitty-gritty of the SIR exercise that arbitrarily disfranchised millions of citizens, particularly the poor and vulnerable sections. The Court has not addressed the issue of shifting the burden of proving citizenship to the people.

 

Even the independence of the Supreme Court of India is not beyond doubt. The sound judgments come in piecemeal, depending on the individual judges.  Prashant Bhuahan says the judges are under pressure not to pass judgments that go against the government, making a mockery of judicial review.

 

During the hearing on May 15 of petition by an advocate, denied designation as senior advocate by the Delhi High Court, the CJI Surya Kant, used a very offensive language in the open court. This is what he said, as reported in leading newspapers on May 16:

 

“Jobless youngsters like cockroaches attack the system, working as parasites to weaken institutions. There are youngsters like cockroaches who don’t get any employment…some of them become media, some become social media, some RTI activists, some become other activists, and they start attacking everyone… expressing doubts about the genuineness of law degrees of many advocates, CJI wants the CBI to verify their law degrees. And thousands of them are fraudulent people, wearing the black robes.”    

 

What a diatribe! Is the CJI not aware of the fact how the Government of India moved heaven and earth to prevent the disclosure of any information relating to fraudulent degrees allegedly acquired by Narendra Modi, and that the Judiciary is a party to that?  Earlier the CJI expressed outrage for including a chapter on corruption in judiciary in a NCERT school text book forcing the CBSE to withdraw it. This selective outrage couched in such an abusive tone by the CJI is unacceptable. It is an indication of how intolerant even the judiciary is of criticism, something we thought is the prerogative of only the ruling class.

 

It is interesting to recall what transpired in the meeting on May 12 to select the next Director of CBI, as the current Director Praveen Sood is due for retirement in July. The LOP Rahul Gandhi while dissenting on the process of selecting, in the presence of the CJI Surya Kant, a member of the selection panel, spoke strongly against the process and left the meeting. Then he wrote a letter the same day to Narendra Modi reiterating what he said in the meeting:

 

 “I write to record my dissent. Your government has repeatedly misused the CBI, intended to be India’s premier investigative agency, to target political opponents, journalists, and critics. It is to prevent such institutional capture that the Leader of Opposition is included in the Selection Committee. Regrettably, you have continued to deny me any meaningful role in the process. Despite repeated written requests, I was not provided with the self-appraisal reports of the eligible candidates. The 360-degree reports were denied to me outright. A detailed review of these records is crucial to assess each candidate’s history and performance. This deliberate denial of information, without any legal basis, makes a mockery of the selection process and ensures that only your predecided candidate is selected. By denying the Selection Committee crucial information, the Government has reduced it to a mere formality. The Leder of the Opposition is not a rubber stamp. I cannot abdicate my constitutional duty by participating in this biased exercise. I therefore dissent in the strongest terms.”

 

Surprising, the CJI did not say a word about this development. The CJI has not acted as an independent member, from outside the political system.  He should have concurred with the dissenting note of the LOP to set the record straight. Consequently, the term of the current Director is extended by a year, for the third time.

 

These are some signs of the irreversible damage that the Modi government has inflicted on the nation. Some other factors equally damaging are: (a) saffronisation of education to influence  the thought process of the young tender minds- appointing the persons subscribing to the Sangh ideology to positions of leadership in institutions of higher learning and their regulating bodies;(b) Corporatisation of India and concentration of wealth in the hands of few to the detriment of common good;(c) divisive communal agenda and the rise of majoritarian authoritarianism;(d) reducing the parliament to a ‘Rubber Stamp; (e) engineering defections and toppling elected opposition governments: (f) using the draconian laws UAPA , PMLA and NSA to silence and intimidate the critics: and(g) surrendering the sovereign foreign policy to Trump’s America.

 

Many governments have come and gone with their own baggage of failures. But the current regime is totally different. It is bent on subverting the constitutional democracy, with a political agenda of establishing a ‘Hindu Rashtra’ that is dangerous and suicidal.   

 

 

 


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