Prøve GULL - Gratis
Politics of Slogans
Outlook
|September 11, 2025
From high-profile slogans to structural reforms, India's Opposition finds it difficult to sustain outrage over corruption
THE Bihar Special Intensive Revision (SIR) has propelled India's electoral machinery into the spotlight all over again. Officially, the exercise is meant to clean up the voter rolls, ensuring that every vote is verified. In practice, it has sparked anxiety—nearly 65 lakh voters might end up excluded for lack of documentation. The exercise is being painted by the Opposition, led in Bihar by the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) and its ally, the Congress, as a form of corruption—vote chori. It cannot but remind one of the “chowkidar chor hai” campaign launched by Congress leader Rahul Gandhi in his 2019 election campaign. But that had fizzled out—or at least not granted Gandhi's party the victory he had hoped for by riding on an issue as emotive as corruption in defence deals.
Even in earlier high-profile campaigns—such as the Aam Aadmi Party’s rise in Delhi thanks to the India Against Corruption (IAC) movement in 2013—slogans captured attention but struggled to translate outrage into lasting change. So, will the vote chori slogan stick? After all, anti-corruption slogans in India have a longer history of sputtering out than enduring.
One difference between then and now is that vote chori is not about the familiar “note for vote” politics, where money and liquor are known to purchase voter loyalty for a day—or five years. The SIR itself is a more existential exercise, for it redefines who belongs. Further, if buying votes is a transaction, excluding voters amounts to erasure.
Denne historien er fra September 11, 2025-utgaven av Outlook.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Outlook
Outlook
Watch the Ball
I remember playing cricket as a seven-year-old in the cricket grounds across the road from our apartment building in north London.
4 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
History of Sound
From villages to the national squad, India's blind women cricketers battled disability, patriarchy and caste to win the inaugural World Cup. Beyond sport, their journeys reveal their fight for dignity
6 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
One Battle After Another
Women's cricket in Jharkhand is not built on infrastructure, funding or institutional care. It has survived on endurance and sacrifice
5 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
“Fix the Pipeline, Not the Pay Cheque”
When Doorva Bahuguna played cricket in the late 1980s and ’90s, there was no money, little recognition, and no illusion that the sport could become a career. You played, she says, because something inside you demanded it. Today, women’s cricket in India has a league, salaries, sponsors, and visibility—but also new constraints, new narratives, and familiar battles over agency, safety and femininity. In conversation with Lalita Iyer, Bahuguna—who captained Andhra Pradesh’s sub-junior, junior and senior cricket teams and later built a corporate career—speaks candidly about why grassroots matter more than pay parity, how sport reshapes women's sense of self; and why the real revolution in women’s cricket is still unfinished.
5 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
Where Roses Bloom
If the oligarchs return to Venezuela, the social housing will go, the public schools will go, the healthcare clinics will go, the food parcels will go, and the forests will be cut down
6 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
Baramati's Dada
Ajit Pawar's sudden death leaves a power vacuum, but for people, especially from rural pockets in and around Baramati, who considered him a grassroots strongman, the loss is more profound
5 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
The Foreigner India Came to Trust
The Indian media fraternity appears unable to live up to Mark Tully's standards of balance, honesty, trustworthiness and credibility
3 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
'Mother of all Trade Deals'
The EU-India trade agreement is an economic bonanza as it will merge two of the world's largest economic blocs into a single trade zone
3 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
Fiery Kolhapuri
Pratiksha Pawar's cricketing journey is a reminder that dreams know no boundaries
6 mins
February 11, 2026
Outlook
Spice Girls
In the once nondescript villages of Wayanad, cricket is no longer just a sport. It has become a way to dream and to rise above the limits of geography, poverty and custom
6 mins
February 11, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
