HomeNewsOpinionFrom G20 to Chandrayaan-3, Article 370 to Ram Mandir, BJP well set for the 2024 grand finale

From G20 to Chandrayaan-3, Article 370 to Ram Mandir, BJP well set for the 2024 grand finale

Much before it sent Congress reeling earlier this month with three wins in the Hindi heartland, BJP and PM Modi were hard at work packaging a platter for serving out to voters with ingredients ranging from India’s global standing to Hindutva signalling why the Modi government deserves another chance in 2024. The INDIA alliance looks woefully ill-prepared to convince voters that they have a better alternative to offer

December 28, 2023 / 10:19 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
politics
The prelude that was this year unpacked enough issues – which BJP counts as the government’s stellar achievements – to fill a good portion of the platter it will offer voters.

2023, the year gone by, in a sense belonged to the BJP-led government and Prime Minister Narendra Modi despite a few lows. As the country braces to face the Lok Sabha polls in April-May 2024, the prelude that was this year unpacked enough issues – which BJP counts as the government’s stellar achievements – to fill a good portion of the platter it will offer voters.

Modi All The Way

Story continues below Advertisement

The year-long presidency of the G20 countries unleashed a blitzkrieg of publicity and propaganda to talk up India’s growing global status; the country’s ascendancy to being the world’s fifth largest economic power after the US, China, Japan and Germany—that left India with the vicarious pleasure of outpacing a former coloniser, the UK; the refusal to yield to Western pressure while condemning Russia’s war on Ukraine which President Vladimir Putin used to cock a snook at the US and its allies; the increased oil imports from Russia at a reduced price and India’s pitch to listen to the unheard voices of the Global South to ensure inclusive growth amid economic worries, all these factors enhanced BJP’s exercise to project Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a “vishwa guru”.

The stand-out in this spectrum of global outreach was soaring into galactic space with the moon landing via the Chandrayaan-3 Mission on August 23. India was only the fourth country after the US, erstwhile Soviet Union and China to achieve a soft landing in the lunar south pole. There was more.