Communal Polarisation and the Future of Indian Politics: Assessing the Impact of BJP’s Electoral Strategy
SR Darapuri I.P.S.(Retd)
The growing communal polarisation associated with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is likely to have deep and long-term consequences for the future of Indian politics. However, its impact will not be one-dimensional. It may simultaneously strengthen majoritarian politics in some regions while also provoking counter-mobilisations, coalition-building, and democratic resistance in others.
Several recent elections suggest that religion has become an increasingly central axis of political mobilisation. Analysts have noted sharper Hindu-Muslim voting divides, especially in states such as Assam and West Bengal.
The likely future impacts can be understood under several broad themes:
1. Consolidation of Majoritarian Nationalism
The BJP’s electoral strategy has increasingly combined welfare politics, nationalism, and Hindutva identity mobilisation. This may further normalize the idea of India primarily as a Hindu political civilization rather than a secular constitutional republic.
If this trend continues:
This could strengthen the BJP’s long-term ideological project even beyond immediate electoral cycles.
2. Weakening of Constitutional Secularism
India’s constitutional framework is formally secular and pluralistic. Persistent communal polarisation may gradually weaken:
Scholars and observers increasingly argue that Indian politics is shifting from “consensus secularism” toward “competitive communalism,” where even opposition parties adapt themselves to majoritarian sentiment.)
This may produce:
3. Counter-Mobilisation by Opposition Forces
Communal polarisation can also generate resistance. The 2024 Lok Sabha elections showed that aggressive Hindutva mobilisation has electoral limits in some regions, especially where caste, unemployment, agrarian distress, or regional identity become stronger concerns.
Possible future developments include:
In states like Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Tamil Nadu, and Kerala, social coalitions may increasingly challenge pure religious polarisation.
4. Transformation of Electoral Competition
Indian politics may move toward a more sharply bipolar structure:
This would reduce ideological diversity and intensify emotional campaigning. Elections could become:
Issues like unemployment, inflation, education, healthcare, and inequality may receive less sustained attention compared to identity conflicts.
5. Social Fragmentation and Democratic Stress
One of the most serious long-term consequences is the possibility of social mistrust becoming institutionalised.
Research on religious polarisation suggests that repeated communal mobilisation can harden group identities and reduce inter-community trust.
Potential consequences include:
Such developments can weaken democratic culture even if formal elections continue regularly.
6. Rise of “Reverse Polarisation”
Recent elections also show what analysts call “reverse polarisation”:
That would represent a major transformation of post-independence Indian politics.
7. Limits to Polarisation
At the same time, communal polarisation is not omnipotent.
Even critics of the BJP acknowledge that many voters continue to support it for:
Moreover:
Thus, India’s future politics may not become uniformly communalised across all regions.
Conclusion
The future impact of communal polarisation in India will likely be profound. It may:
At the same time, it may also provoke new democratic coalitions and revive alternative political mobilisations based on caste justice, federalism, constitutionalism, and economic concerns.
The central question for India’s future is whether electoral competition will continue to revolve primarily around religious identity, or whether constitutional democracy can reassert politics based on citizenship, socio-economic justice, and pluralism.