On Saturday, voters overwhelmingly backed India's main opposition party in a crucial Assembly election in the southern state of Karnataka, in a blow to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) that has been ruling the country since 2014.
The Congress won a nearly two-thirds majority, winning 136 of the 224 Assembly seats, securing a vote share of 42.95% — far higher than the BJP's 35.95% — and ousting the BJP from the only southern state it governed.
The BJP's loss in Karnataka shows India's secular fabric will always reign supreme. It also indicates the failure of Modi's popularity, his muscular brand of politics, and the BJP's attempts to polarise the voters between majority Hindus and minority Muslims. Moreover, the Congress' win reflects the success of Rahul Gandhi's 3.5K km cross-country Unity March to rejuvenate its cadre, expose BJP's divisive and communal politics, and win people's hearts. A victory in Karnataka will give Congress a much-needed morale boost ahead of next year's national election.
The election results in Karnataka are neither an indicator of voter sentiment nor necessarily indicate an advantage to the Congress in the general elections next year, as Narendra Modi is too big a challenge for the Congress party to handle. The BJP has consistently delivered its promise of development and social welfare measures, and under Modi's leadership, the party will woo voters and dominate politics all over again. One election victory would not improve the Congress's fortunes as the context and narratives will differ significantly in 2024.