23 Aug 2021

Pandemic and sluggish growth take a hit on Indian PM ratings

5:44 pm on 23 August 2021

A nationwide poll found only 24 percent of respondents see the Indian leader as 'best suited' to be India's next PM

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses the nation from the ramparts of the Red Fort during the celebrations to mark India’s 75th Independence Day in New Delhi on August 15, 2021.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses the nation India's 75th Independence Day celebrations. Photo: AFP

Narendra Modi has enjoyed a long honeymoon with India's voters.

Backed by a prodigiously funded and well-oiled Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Modi has pulled off two consecutive election wins. He has forged a vigourous Hindu nationalist base and displayed abundant charisma and guile to woo voters and outfox his opponents.

Luck has also been on his side. His supporters have forgiven him for rash missteps such as the scrapping of high-value currency notes - or demonetisation - in 2016. An under-performing economy - more severely so, after the pandemic - doesn't appear to have eroded support. The absence of a strong opposition has also helped.

Yet, is Modi's indisputable popularity beginning to fray?

A new poll by the India Today magazine involving 14,600 people and conducted in July found that only 24 percent of respondents considered the 70-year-old leader "best-suited" to be India's next prime minister. The next general elections are due in 2024.

This is a steep drop of 42 points since a similar poll last year. "In my 20-plus years of opinion polling, I cannot recall such an instance of nosedive in any prime minister's popularity," noted Yogendra Yadav, a pollster-turned-politician and a critic of Modi.

Modi has had a rough year so far. His carefully crafted image took a global battering after his government mishandled the catastrophic second Covid wave where tens of thousands of people died. The economy is struggling: inflation is high, fuel prices have surged and there's a squeeze on jobs and consumption.

Some of the distress and distrust are reflected in the poll. Around 70 percent of the respondents said their incomes had fallen during the pandemic; and an equal number believed the real death toll was higher than the official 430,000.

But 36 percent of the poll's respondents rated Modi's handling of the pandemic as "good". Only 13 percent felt that his government alone should shoulder the blame for the suffering of the people; and 44 percent felt both the federal and states governments had bungled their Covid response.

Pandemic aside, the poll provides other clues as to why Modi's popularity might be dropping. Inflation and lack of jobs emerged as the two most worrying concerns - nearly a third of respondents said failure to rein in prices was his government's biggest failure.

"Mr Modi's decline in popularity is not surprising," said Rahul Verma, a fellow with the Delhi-based Centre for Policy Research.

Modi has been a polarising leader. During his rule, critics say, media freedom has diminished considerably - the prime minister hasn't held a press conference since he came to power in 2014 - and dissent is being muzzled. Modi himself and his party have been accused of using dog-whistle politics - coded, divisive messages - to stoke sectarian tensions.

Fierce protests over a controversial citizenship law and proposed farm reforms appear to have dented the prime minister's image as an invincible leader. His party's crushing defeat in West Bengal in May has also emboldened his opponents.

Many believe that for a leader whose face is everywhere - billboards, vaccine certificates, newspaper and TV adverts - a sharp drop in ratings could signal the beginning of a decline of the cult of personality.

But do such polls - which employ different ways to sample voters - faithfully mirror the mood of a nation?

According to Morning Consult, which tracks national ratings of the elected leaders of 13 countries, Modi's approval rating has suffered a 25-point slide since May last year. Yet, at 47 percent in mid-August, Modi is way ahead of others.

In June, another survey by Indian polling agency Prashnam, found Modi enjoyed a rating of nearly 33 percent as the preferred prime ministerial candidate in 2024.

Delhi-based polling agency CVoter, which conducts 10,000 interviews in 543 parliamentary constituencies all over India every week, found that Modi's approval ratings had dropped to 37 percent in May - a drop of 20 points from early April. That was the time when his party lost the West Bengal election and the second wave was ripping through the country.

Since then, Modi's ratings have recovered and now stand at 44 percent, CVoter's Yashwant Deshmukh said. "I believe the worst is over. His ratings have never dipped below 37 percent because of a committed voter base."

Regular polling, Deshmukh believes, is the key to capturing the public mood on leaders and their performance accurately. Interestingly, even as chief ministers belonging to Modi's party continue to fare badly in the polls - nine out of the 10 most popular chief ministers belonged to non-BJP parties in the latest CVoter poll - Modi manages to hold his ground.

"Many people still trust him and think his intent is good," Deshmukh said.

A dip in the ratings will not be enough to unseat Modi. And even at their lowest, Modi's ratings are usually double that of Rahul Gandhi, leader of the main opposition Congress. So the prime minister could be picking up extra approval points because of a lack of credible opposition.

"Mr Modi still leads the race. But the drop in ratings should worry him a bit," Verma said.

- BBC

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