Sunday, May 10, 2026

Beyond the Illusion of a Single Challenger: Opposition Politics, Regional Forces and the Crisis of Democratic Resistance in India

 From Congress Dominance to Coalition Federalism and the Rise of Majoritarian Power

-Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

The contemporary political discourse in India has once again been stirred by the assertion that only the Indian National Congress possesses the capacity to defeat the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Such declarations, particularly in the aftermath of emerging fractures within opposition formations and changing regional equations, raise deeper questions about the historical trajectory of Indian democracy, the evolution of opposition politics, and the nature of political resistance in a federal and socially diverse republic. This essay critically examines the historical role of the Congress, the emergence of non-Congress politics, the rise of regional parties, the evolution of coalition governments, and the ideological and organisational rise of the BJP from the margins to dominance.

The essay argues that the present political landscape cannot be understood through the narrow prism of a binary contest between the Congress and the BJP. Rather, Indian politics since the late 1960s has been shaped by multiple social movements, caste assertions, regional aspirations, peasant struggles, linguistic identities, socialist mobilisations, and secular-democratic coalitions that challenged the Congress long before the BJP emerged as a hegemonic force. It further examines how the decline of the Congress itself created the political and ideological space later occupied by the BJP.

The study also analyses the role played by regional parties and ideological formations in preserving federalism and democratic plurality. Particular emphasis is placed on leaders who consistently worked to forge broad anti-authoritarian coalitions and who recognised that democratic resistance in India could only survive through accommodation, dialogue, and respect for regional aspirations.

At a time when opposition unity remains fragile, this essay critically interrogates the implications of centralising political claims within a single party framework and reflects on whether such political approaches strengthen or weaken the larger struggle against majoritarian dominance.

Keywords

Congress decline, BJP rise, opposition unity, coalition politics, regional parties, federalism, parliamentary democracy, non-Congressism, Indian politics, ideological struggle, communalism, democratic opposition, electoral politics, coalition era, Indian federal structure.

“No single party today embodies the entire democratic impulse of India. The resistance to authoritarianism survives through multiplicity, contradiction and federal diversity.”

“The vacuum created by the weakening of the Congress was not merely electoral; it was ideological, organisational and social. The BJP entered that vacuum with discipline, clarity and relentless expansion.”

“Opposition unity in India has historically succeeded not when one party attempted dominance, but when diverse political forces accepted coexistence.”

Introduction: A Statement and the Anxiety Beneath It

When Rahul Gandhi declared in Gurugram in May 2026 that only the Congress could defeat the BJP, the statement was not merely an assertion of political confidence. It reflected a deeper anxiety within Indian opposition politics. It emerged at a time when the opposition bloc itself was under stress, when regional parties were increasingly protective of their political spaces, and when the Congress continued to oscillate between partnership and supremacy within anti-BJP politics.

The statement was politically loaded because it implicitly reduced the role of regional forces and ideological movements that have historically confronted both the Congress and the BJP. It ignored the long history of anti-Congress mobilisation that shaped Indian politics after independence and underplayed the role played by state-level parties in resisting majoritarian consolidation in recent decades.

The issue is not whether the Congress remains relevant. It undoubtedly remains one of the few parties with a national footprint. The issue is whether Indian democracy, with its enormous diversity and federal complexity, can realistically be reduced to a bipolar struggle between two national parties.

India’s political evolution demonstrates the opposite. The history of Indian democracy is fundamentally the history of fragmentation, accommodation, coalition-building and regional assertion. It is also the history of resistance to centralised political dominance.

To understand the significance and limitations of Rahul Gandhi’s statement, one must revisit the long trajectory of opposition politics in India—from Congress dominance after independence to the rise of regional parties, from socialist movements to coalition governments, and from the emergence of Hindutva politics to the present crisis of democratic opposition.

The Congress System: Dominance and Contradictions

The Indian National Congress emerged from the anti-colonial struggle as the natural inheritor of state power after independence. Under Jawaharlal Nehru, it became not merely a political party but an umbrella formation containing conservatives, socialists, liberals, caste elites, regional notables and sections of progressive forces.

Political scientist Rajni Kothari famously described this phenomenon as the “Congress system.” The Congress was not simply ruling India; it embodied the political centre itself. Opposition existed largely within the Congress rather than outside it.

Yet this dominance contained deep contradictions.

The Congress inherited enormous moral legitimacy from the freedom movement, but after independence it gradually transformed into an electoral machine increasingly dependent on patronage networks, landed elites and bureaucratic control. The promises of social transformation remained partial. Land reforms were incomplete. Caste hierarchies persisted. Economic inequality remained entrenched.

While the Congress adopted secularism constitutionally, it often practised opportunistic balancing in electoral politics. Similarly, while it spoke the language of socialism, it retained strong alliances with dominant social classes.

Importantly, the Congress also developed a deeply centralised organisational culture. Regional leaders were often subordinated to the “high command.” This tendency intensified under Indira Gandhi after the Congress split in 1969.

The centralisation of authority weakened internal democracy. Political loyalty became more important than ideological clarity or mass organisational work. Over time, this culture hollowed out the party’s regional structures.

Ironically, the seeds of Congress decline were planted during the very period of its maximum dominance.

The First Challenges: Socialist, Communist and Regional Resistance

Long before the BJP emerged as a major force, the Congress was being challenged by socialist, communist and regional movements.

The first major breakthrough came in Kerala in 1957 when the Communist Party formed the world’s first democratically elected communist government under E.M.S. Namboodiripad.

This victory carried immense symbolic significance. It proved that the Congress was not invincible.

The dismissal of the Kerala government under Article 356 exposed another tendency of the Congress system: intolerance toward opposition-led state governments.

Over the following decades, Article 356 became a political weapon. Non-Congress governments were repeatedly dismissed by the Centre. This practice deeply damaged the federal spirit of the Constitution.

Simultaneously, socialist leaders such as Ram Manohar Lohia developed the doctrine of “non-Congressism.” Lohia argued that opposition parties, despite ideological differences, must unite electorally to defeat the Congress.

This strategy transformed Indian politics.

The 1967 elections marked a turning point. Congress lost power in several states including Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Punjab, Haryana and West Bengal. Coalition governments emerged.

For the first time, Indian politics entered a genuinely competitive phase.

The significance of 1967 was not merely electoral. It represented the assertion of regional identities, backward caste politics, peasant movements and ideological opposition to centralised Congress dominance.

This period also revealed an enduring truth of Indian politics: opposition unity succeeds when diverse forces cooperate rather than seek unilateral dominance.

The Emergency and the Birth of Anti-Authoritarian Unity

The Emergency imposed by Indira Gandhi in 1975 fundamentally altered Indian democracy.

Civil liberties were suspended. Opposition leaders were jailed. Press freedom was curbed. Political dissent was criminalised.

Ironically, the Emergency accomplished what decades of electoral competition could not: it united disparate opposition forces into a broad anti-authoritarian front.

Socialists, communists, Bharatiya Jana Sangh leaders, Gandhians, regional parties and civil society movements came together under the moral leadership of Jayaprakash Narayan.

The 1977 election became a referendum on authoritarianism.

The Congress was defeated at the Centre for the first time.

The Janata Party government represented an extraordinary democratic moment. It demonstrated that Indian voters were willing to remove even the most powerful ruling party when democratic norms were threatened.

Yet the Janata experiment also revealed the fragility of coalitions lacking ideological coherence.

Internal contradictions soon surfaced.

Still, the political consequences were permanent. The Congress monopoly had been broken forever.

The Emergency also produced another long-term effect. It legitimised the Jana Sangh and its ideological network within broader anti-Congress politics. The future BJP would eventually benefit enormously from this legitimisation.

The Rise of Regional Parties and Federal Assertion

From the 1980s onward, regional parties became decisive actors in Indian politics.

This transformation reflected deeper social changes.

The Congress could no longer contain India’s linguistic, caste, regional and cultural diversities within a single umbrella framework.

In Tamil Nadu, Dravidian parties permanently displaced the Congress. In Andhra Pradesh, the Telugu Desam Party emerged as a powerful regional force. In Punjab, Akali politics shaped state dynamics. In Assam, regional assertion emerged through the Assam movement.

Later, caste-based mobilisations transformed North India.

The Mandal era reconfigured politics fundamentally.

Parties such as the Samajwadi Party, Rashtriya Janata Dal and Bahujan Samaj Party emerged from social justice movements challenging upper-caste domination.

These parties were not merely electoral entities. They represented historically marginalised social groups entering political power structures.

The Congress failed to adequately respond to these transformations.

Instead of democratising its own organisation and accommodating new social leaderships, it often relied on elite mediation and symbolic representation.

As a result, large sections of backward castes, Dalits and regional communities drifted away.

The decline of the Congress was therefore not only organisational. It was sociological.

The BJP later capitalised on these shifts by constructing broader social coalitions.

The BJP’s Long March from Margins to Dominance

The rise of the BJP is among the most consequential political developments in post-independence India.

The Bharatiya Jana Sangh, founded in 1951, remained marginal for decades. Its ideological framework centred around Hindu nationalism, cultural homogenisation and opposition to Nehruvian secularism.

For much of early Indian history, this ideology remained outside the mainstream.

The transformation began gradually.

The post-Emergency period gave the Sangh Parivar greater legitimacy and organisational reach. But the real breakthrough came during the crises of the 1980s.

Several developments converged:

The Congress weakened organisationally.

Corruption allegations under Rajiv Gandhi damaged its moral legitimacy.

The Shah Bano controversy and the unlocking of the Babri Masjid site intensified communal polarisation.

Simultaneously, Mandal politics generated anxieties among sections of upper castes.

The BJP strategically combined religious mobilisation with organisational discipline.

The Ram Janmabhoomi movement became its defining mass mobilisation campaign.

Unlike the Congress, the BJP invested deeply in cadre-building, ideological training and grassroots expansion through affiliated organisations.

It understood political communication more effectively.

It cultivated a sense of victimhood among majority communities while projecting itself as the defender of national pride.

The demolition of the Babri Masjid in 1992 transformed Indian politics irreversibly.

Communal polarisation intensified.

Yet the BJP simultaneously moderated its image strategically through coalition politics under Atal Bihari Vajpayee.

The National Democratic Alliance allowed the BJP to enter power without appearing excessively ideological.

This was a crucial tactical phase.

The BJP learned coalition management while expanding its organisational machinery.

The Congress, meanwhile, continued weakening.

The Coalition Era and the Role of Secular Consensus

Between 1989 and 2014, Indian politics entered the coalition era.

This period is often misunderstood as instability. In reality, it represented the democratisation of Indian politics.

No single party could dominate India entirely.

Regional aspirations gained representation.

Federalism deepened.

Coalition governments forced negotiation and accommodation.

During this phase, several leaders played crucial roles in constructing anti-authoritarian and secular alliances.

Among the most significant was Harkishen Singh Surjeet.

Surjeet possessed an extraordinary understanding of coalition politics. He recognised that the struggle against communal polarisation required broad alliances, patience and ideological flexibility.

He played a central role in bringing together diverse parties during the United Front era.

The governments led by V.P. Singh, H.D. Deve Gowda and I.K. Gujral reflected this politics of accommodation.

These governments were imperfect and unstable, yet they demonstrated that India could be governed through plural coalitions rather than centralised dominance.

The role of ideological parties during this period was particularly significant.

They often acted as mediators between competing regional forces.

Importantly, they recognised that democratic resistance required humility and collective leadership.

This political culture contrasts sharply with contemporary tendencies toward centralisation within opposition politics.

The Congress and the Contradiction of Coalition Politics

The Congress entered the coalition era reluctantly.

Historically accustomed to dominance, it often struggled psychologically with being one among many parties.

Even when weakened electorally, it frequently behaved as though it retained natural entitlement to leadership.

This contradiction became increasingly visible in state-level politics.

Regional parties often accused the Congress of demanding excessive seats, undermining local equations and prioritising organisational expansion over strategic cooperation.

Examples repeatedly emerged where opposition unity fractured due to unresolved tensions involving the Congress.

The Bihar experience became particularly illustrative.

In several elections, opposition arithmetic appeared strong against the BJP, yet seat-sharing disagreements and Congress overreach complicated the coalition.

Regional parties argued that the Congress frequently contested beyond its realistic organisational strength.

The criticism was not entirely unfounded.

The Congress’s decline had left it dependent on alliances in many states. Yet its negotiating posture often reflected past grandeur rather than present realities.

This tension remains unresolved even today.

The Congress simultaneously needs regional parties and fears being overshadowed by them.

This creates strategic ambiguity.

The UPA Years: Recovery without Reconstruction

The Congress unexpectedly returned to power in 2004 leading the United Progressive Alliance.

This victory was significant because it halted the BJP’s early momentum.

The UPA years produced important welfare legislation including the Right to Information Act, MGNREGA and the Forest Rights Act.

These measures emerged partly due to pressure from progressive and social movements.

However, the Congress failed to use its decade in power to rebuild its organisation structurally.

The party increasingly relied on welfare delivery and coalition arithmetic rather than ideological and organisational renewal.

Corruption scandals during the second UPA term damaged its credibility severely.

More importantly, the Congress underestimated the BJP’s transformation under Narendra Modi.

The BJP combined aggressive nationalism, charismatic leadership, digital communication, corporate support and sophisticated election machinery.

The Congress remained organisationally sluggish.

Its leadership structure appeared indecisive.

Its communication strategy often seemed reactive rather than proactive.

By 2014, the Congress suffered a historic collapse.

The BJP no longer needed coalition compulsions.

A new phase had begun.

Why the Congress Declined

The decline of the Congress cannot be explained through a single factor.

It represents the cumulative result of ideological confusion, organisational decay, social fragmentation and strategic failures.

The first major reason was excessive centralisation.

The “high command” culture weakened state leaderships across decades. Regional leaders were often undermined if they appeared too independent.

As politics regionalised, this became disastrous.

While regional parties cultivated strong local leaderships rooted in caste, linguistic and social realities, the Congress increasingly depended on centrally approved figures.

Second, the Congress failed to nurture cadre-based politics.

The BJP and ideological parties invested in long-term organisational work. The Congress increasingly functioned through electoral management and patronage networks.

Third, ideological ambiguity weakened the party.

The Congress attempted to balance liberalisation, welfare politics, soft majoritarianism and secularism simultaneously.

This produced confusion.

The BJP, in contrast, projected ideological clarity.

Fourth, social coalitions shifted.

Backward caste politics, Dalit assertion and regional identities reduced the Congress’s traditional umbrella appeal.

Fifth, the Congress underestimated media transformation.

The BJP mastered political communication, narrative-building and digital mobilisation.

The Congress often appeared disconnected from new communication ecosystems.

Sixth, dynastic dependence became increasingly controversial.

While dynastic politics exists across parties, the Congress’s over-reliance on one family weakened internal democracy and leadership diversification.

Finally, defections hollowed out the organisation.

As the BJP expanded, numerous Congress leaders crossed over seeking political survival.

The Congress became trapped in a cycle of decline.

Weak organisation produced electoral losses; electoral losses triggered defections; defections further weakened organisation.

The BJP’s Expansion through Absorption and Vacuum

The BJP did not rise solely because of ideological mobilisation.

It also rose because opposition spaces fragmented.

In several states, regional parties weakened due to internal contradictions, leadership crises or strategic errors.

The BJP displayed remarkable adaptability.

It absorbed local leaders aggressively.

It built caste coalitions state by state.

It entered regions once considered inaccessible.

The party also benefited from the collapse of the Congress in many states.

Where the Congress weakened without strong regional alternatives, the BJP directly occupied the vacuum.

Even where regional parties remained strong, the BJP often positioned itself as the principal challenger.

Importantly, the BJP learned from earlier political failures.

Unlike the Congress, it invested continuously in organisational expansion even in electorally weak states.

The RSS network provided long-term ideological and social infrastructure.

This combination of ideological discipline, electoral pragmatism and organisational persistence proved extraordinarily effective.

Regional Parties: Contradictions and Democratic Necessity

Regional parties are often criticised for opportunism.

Many criticisms are valid.

Several regional formations have shifted alliances repeatedly. Some have aligned with the BJP at different historical moments. Others have weakened democratic norms within their own states.

Yet reducing regional parties merely to opportunistic actors misses their historical significance.

Regional parties emerged because national parties failed to adequately represent regional aspirations.

They deepened federalism.

They enabled representation for caste groups, linguistic communities and local political cultures previously marginalised within national frameworks.

In many states, regional parties acted as barriers against excessive centralisation.

Tamil Nadu remains perhaps the strongest example.

The Dravidian movement fundamentally altered Indian federal politics.

It resisted Hindi imposition.

It expanded social justice policies.

It demonstrated that regional identity politics could coexist with democratic participation.

Similarly, parties in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh represented the political assertion of backward castes.

In West Bengal, Left politics created a distinct political culture for decades.

In Kashmir, regional parties mediated between local aspirations and national politics.

The weakening or absorption of regional parties therefore has implications beyond elections. It affects the federal structure itself.

The Role of Ideological Parties in Opposition Unity

One of the least appreciated dimensions of Indian politics is the role played by ideological parties in sustaining opposition unity.

Despite limited electoral strength in recent years, such parties often acted as bridges between larger forces.

Harkishen Singh Surjeet exemplified this politics.

He understood that defeating authoritarian tendencies required broad coalitions rather than ideological purity.

Surjeet’s political skill lay not in electoral charisma but in coalition construction.

He helped bring together incompatible parties through negotiation and mutual respect.

Similarly, Sitaram Yechury played a major role in opposition coordination during later years.

He consistently emphasised dialogue among secular and democratic forces.

These leaders recognised a crucial political truth: India’s diversity makes coalition-building unavoidable.

No single opposition party can represent the entirety of Indian social realities.

This understanding shaped coalition experiments from the National Front to the United Front and later broader anti-BJP alliances.

The weakening of such mediating politics has intensified fragmentation within the opposition today.

The Dilemma of Contemporary Opposition Politics

The opposition today faces a structural dilemma.

The BJP possesses unprecedented electoral machinery, financial resources, media influence and organisational reach.

No single opposition party currently matches this scale nationally.

Yet opposition unity remains unstable because contradictions among opposition parties themselves remain unresolved.

The Congress seeks leadership due to its national presence.

Regional parties resist subordination due to their state-level strength.

This tension repeatedly surfaces during seat-sharing negotiations, alliance decisions and leadership questions.

The statement that “only Congress can defeat BJP” intensifies these anxieties.

Regional parties hear within such statements an attempt to erase their role.

This becomes politically counterproductive.

The BJP’s strength partly lies in portraying the opposition as fragmented and self-interested.

Statements implying unilateral leadership reinforce mistrust.

The irony is profound.

The Congress itself has survived politically in recent years largely because of regional alliances.

Its improved parliamentary performance in 2024 depended significantly on state-level partnerships.

In states such as Tamil Nadu, Bihar and Jharkhand, alliance arithmetic mattered enormously.

This does not diminish Congress relevance.

But it does challenge the notion that the Congress alone constitutes the anti-BJP struggle.

Tamil Nadu and the Lessons of Federal Politics

The developments in Tamil Nadu illustrate broader tensions within opposition politics.

The emergence of new political forces complicated existing alliance structures.

Such situations require consultation, patience and collective decision-making.

When major alliance partners act unilaterally, distrust deepens.

Tamil Nadu historically represents one of the clearest examples of regional assertion against central dominance.

The Congress lost political centrality there decades ago.

Dravidian politics fundamentally reshaped the state.

Any opposition strategy ignoring these historical realities risks destabilising broader alliances.

The politics of accommodation becomes essential in such contexts.

Opposition unity cannot survive merely through arithmetic.

It requires political sensitivity.

Electoral Arithmetic versus Political Chemistry

Indian politics repeatedly demonstrates that electoral arithmetic alone is insufficient.

Political chemistry matters equally.

Voters observe whether alliances appear organic or opportunistic.

They assess whether parties respect each other.

The Congress often struggles with this dimension.

Its historical legacy sometimes produces perceptions of entitlement.

Regional parties fear marginalisation.

This mistrust weakens opposition cohesion.

Meanwhile, the BJP projects clarity, discipline and confidence.

Even when internally centralised, it publicly maintains organisational coherence.

Opposition fragmentation therefore becomes a strategic advantage for the BJP.

The challenge before opposition politics today is not simply defeating the BJP electorally.

It is constructing a credible democratic alternative capable of sustaining federalism, constitutionalism and social pluralism.

That requires collective leadership rather than hegemonic ambition.

Street Politics and the Crisis of Organisational Culture

Another recurring criticism concerns the Congress’s organisational culture.

Many critics argue that the Congress increasingly relies on symbolic campaigns rather than sustained grassroots mobilisation.

The BJP and ideological parties built long-term cadre networks.

Regional parties cultivated local social structures.

The Congress often depended on elite leadership and media visibility.

This criticism is not universally applicable. Congress workers continue struggles in several states.

Yet the broader perception persists.

The party’s organisational decline reflects decades of neglect.

Mass movements require local structures, ideological training and social embeddedness.

Without these, electoral politics becomes personality-driven.

The BJP’s rise cannot be understood without acknowledging its relentless grassroots work through affiliated organisations.

Similarly, regional parties often maintain stronger local connections than the Congress in their respective states.

The absence of durable grassroots structures weakens opposition resilience.

The Transformation of Indian Democracy

Indian democracy itself has transformed profoundly since independence.

The early decades were shaped by developmental nationalism and Congress dominance.

The post-1967 period witnessed fragmentation and regional assertion.

The post-Emergency era intensified democratic competition.

The Mandal and Mandir decades reconfigured caste and religious politics.

The coalition era deepened federalism.

The post-2014 period introduced a new form of centralised majoritarian politics.

The BJP succeeded in combining nationalism, welfare delivery, charismatic leadership and cultural mobilisation.

Opposition parties often struggled to formulate an equally compelling narrative.

At the same time, institutional questions became increasingly significant.

Concerns regarding media concentration, investigative agencies, electoral finance and federal autonomy intensified public debate.

Within this context, opposition unity acquired renewed importance.

But unity built upon hierarchy rather than partnership remains fragile.

The Limits of Bipolar Imagination in India

The idea that India can evolve into a stable two-party system misunderstands Indian social realities.

India is not a culturally homogeneous society.

Its federal structure reflects enormous linguistic, caste, ethnic and regional diversities.

Regional parties therefore are not temporary distortions.

They are structural expressions of Indian pluralism.

Attempts to reduce Indian politics into a purely Congress-versus-BJP framework overlook this complexity.

Even when national parties dominate parliamentary narratives, state politics remains highly differentiated.

Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Punjab, Telangana, West Bengal and several northeastern states demonstrate this diversity.

Regional forces remain indispensable.

Any opposition strategy that implicitly delegitimises them risks political isolation.

Opposition Unity: Historical Lessons

History provides several lessons regarding opposition unity in India.

First, successful opposition coalitions emerged when dominant ambitions were moderated.

Second, respect for regional leadership proved essential.

Third, ideological clarity mattered.

Fourth, coalition-building required patience and compromise.

The Janata experiment, National Front, United Front and even the UPA reflected these principles in varying degrees.

Failures also offer lessons.

Coalitions collapsed when mistrust intensified.

Parties prioritised expansion over cooperation.

Leadership conflicts overshadowed common agendas.

The contemporary opposition risks repeating similar mistakes.

Can the Congress Still Play a Central Role?

Despite its decline, the Congress cannot simply be dismissed.

It remains one of the few parties with nationwide presence.

Its historical legacy, institutional memory and residual social networks still matter.

In several states, it remains the principal opposition force.

The Bharat Jodo Yatra and related campaigns helped revive sections of democratic discourse.

Rahul Gandhi himself has evolved politically compared to earlier years.

He has increasingly foregrounded issues of inequality, institutional autonomy and constitutional values.

Yet the Congress faces a fundamental choice.

It can either act as the nucleus of a cooperative democratic coalition or attempt to reclaim unilateral centrality.

The first approach strengthens opposition unity.

The second risks fragmentation.

The reality of contemporary India demands humility from all opposition forces.

No single party currently possesses sufficient strength to challenge the BJP alone across the country.

This includes the Congress.

The Future of Democratic Resistance

The future of opposition politics in India depends upon whether democratic forces can reconcile ambition with cooperation.

The BJP’s dominance is not invincible.

Indian voters have historically demonstrated political unpredictability.

Yet defeating a highly organised political formation requires strategic maturity.

Regional parties, ideological formations, social movements and national parties all remain necessary components of democratic resistance.

Attempts to erase or subordinate one another weaken the collective struggle.

The deeper issue extends beyond elections.

The question concerns the future character of Indian democracy itself.

Will India remain a genuinely federal, plural and coalition-oriented republic?

Or will politics increasingly centralise around singular narratives and concentrated power?

The answer depends partly on whether opposition politics can rediscover the ethics of coexistence.

Conclusion: Beyond Hegemony, Toward Democratic Pluralism

Rahul Gandhi’s assertion that only the Congress can defeat the BJP reflects both political aspiration and historical amnesia.

The history of Indian democracy demonstrates that resistance to dominant power has always emerged through coalitions, regional assertions, ideological movements and social struggles.

The Congress itself was challenged for decades by socialist, communist and regional forces long before the BJP became dominant.

The BJP’s rise was enabled not only by its own organisational strength but also by the Congress’s structural decline.

Regional parties remain indispensable to India’s federal democracy.

Ideological formations and coalition-builders played crucial historical roles in preserving pluralism.

The lesson of Indian politics is clear.

Whenever opposition forces attempted coexistence and mutual respect, democratic resistance strengthened.

Whenever hegemonic ambitions overshadowed collective struggle, fragmentation followed.

The contemporary opposition therefore faces a historic responsibility.

It must move beyond entitlement politics.

It must recognise the legitimacy of regional aspirations.

It must rebuild grassroots democratic culture.

And above all, it must understand that India’s democratic strength lies not in political uniformity but in negotiated plurality.

No single party today can claim exclusive ownership over the democratic idea of India.

The struggle against authoritarianism, communal polarisation and excessive centralisation can succeed only through broad-based democratic solidarity.

That solidarity requires partnership—not political erasure.

References

1. Rajni Kothari, Politics in India.

2. Ramachandra Guha, India After Gandhi.

3. Paul R. Brass, The Politics of India Since Independence.

4. Christophe Jaffrelot, The Hindu Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics.

5. Zoya Hasan, Politics and the State in India.

6. Bipan Chandra, In the Name of Democracy: JP Movement and the Emergency.

7. Granville Austin, Working a Democratic Constitution.

8. E.M.S. Namboodiripad, writings on Indian federalism and democracy.

9. Harkishen Singh Surjeet, speeches and parliamentary interventions.

10. Sitaram Yechury, essays and speeches on secularism and coalition politics.

11. Ram Manohar Lohia, writings on non-Congressism.

12. Yogendra Yadav and Suhas Palshikar, studies on party systems in India.

13. Reports and archival material on the Emergency period (1975–77).

14. Parliamentary election data from Election Commission of India.

15. Academic studies on coalition politics and federalism in India.

16. CSDS studies on the decline of the Congress party.

17. Writings on Mandal politics and social justice movements.

18. Scholarly works on the rise of the BJP and Hindutva politics.

19. Analyses of regional party systems in Tamil Nadu, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal.

20. Constitutional debates on Article 356 and federalism.

21. Historical studies on the Janata Party and United Front governments.

22. Studies on media transformation and electoral politics in contemporary India.

23. Research on caste mobilisation and democratic participation in India.

24. Contemporary political commentary and electoral analyses on opposition unity in India.