The reform of the same fever by Thanos Kalamidas

The local election results spreading across England feel less like a democratic correction than a national relapse. Reform’s surge in the north-east, the prospect of Labour being pushed into opposition in Hartlepool again and the bruising losses in places like Wigan, Chorley, Redditch and Tamworth are not merely setbacks for Keir Starmer. They are warnings about the emotional condition of modern Britain. The country has returned, with alarming ease, to the politics of resentment, theatrical grievance and easy deceit. The ghosts of the Brexit years, supposedly buried beneath economic exhaustion and institutional embarrassment, are suddenly rattling their chains again.

What makes this moment so dispiriting is not simply that Reform has won votes. Populist parties rise during periods of economic stagnation everywhere. What makes Britain uniquely vulnerable is the peculiar national appetite for nostalgia disguised as rebellion. Reform sells a fantasy in which decline is always somebody else’s fault, migrants, metropolitan elites, environmental regulations, lawyers, academics, Europe, human rights legislation or invisible conspiracies in Whitehall. The details barely matter. The narrative matters. The permanent state of outrage matters. Politics becomes less about governing than about identifying enemies to blame for a country that no longer resembles its own sentimental memories.

Labour’s mistake was believing exhaustion alone would save it. Starmer built his project on the assumption that voters, after the chaos of Boris Johnson and Liz Truss, would eventually crave competence with enough desperation to embrace managerial moderation. But competence without inspiration is politically fragile. In towns battered by shrinking high streets, collapsing public services and decades of economic drift, cautious technocratic language often sounds less like stability than indifference. Labour has spent years speaking as though the public were an anxious boardroom needing reassurance from accountants. Reform speaks to voters as though they are participants in a cultural war. One message is emotionally anaemic. The other is emotionally intoxicating.

There is also something deeply unsettling about how quickly Britain rehabilitates political dishonesty when wrapped in patriotic theatre. The Brexit era should have permanently discredited the carnival barkers who promised effortless prosperity through national isolation and permanent confrontation with outsiders. Instead, the country appears prepared to indulge them once more. The same slogans return with minor cosmetic adjustments. The same suspicion of expertise reappears. The same xenophobic undertones seep into public conversation until they become ambient background noise. Britain keeps rediscovering the same destructive impulses while convincing itself each revival is somehow fresh and authentic.

The tragedy is that none of this addresses the actual sources of public anger. Britain’s crisis is not caused by asylum seekers crossing the Channel or by vague liberal conspiracies in London. It is rooted in low wages, stagnant productivity, collapsing infrastructure, privatised dysfunction, unaffordable housing, and a political class incapable of long-term thinking. Yet populism thrives precisely because structural problems are complicated while scapegoats are simple. It is easier to rage against foreigners than against an economic model that has systematically concentrated wealth while hollowing out communities for forty years.

Reform understands something Labour still resists understanding, people rarely vote emotionally because they are flourishing. They vote emotionally because they feel humiliated, ignored, and culturally displaced. The danger begins when legitimate frustration is manipulated into bitterness against vulnerable groups rather than directed toward systems of power. Britain now risks drifting back toward a politics where cruelty is marketed as honesty and division is celebrated as courage.

Meanwhile, the Conservatives, hollowed out by scandal and ideological exhaustion, continue acting as though mimicking Reform will somehow neutralise it. It will not. Every concession to nationalist panic merely legitimises the politics of permanent grievance. Britain’s centre keeps moving rightward because too many establishment politicians treat extremity as temporary weather rather than a culture that must be confronted intellectually and morally before it hardens into instinct.

The election map emerging from these contests does not simply reveal a divided country. It reveals a country addicted to political self-harm, repeatedly seduced by performers offering national resurrection through anger alone. Britain escaped the worst fantasies of the Brexit years bruised, poorer, and internationally diminished. The astonishing thing is not that populism survived that experience. It is that so many voters seem eager to relive it.


The farmers paid again Trump’s Iran gamble by Howard Morton

For years Donald Trump cultivated the image of himself as the patron saint of forgotten rural America. He spoke the language of grievance fluently, coastal elites sneering at small towns, bureaucrats suffocating agriculture, globalists sacrificing American workers on the altar of foreign policy adventurism. Farmers, especially across the Midwest, believed him. Many still do. But every so often, reality intrudes with the force of a collapsing grain silo.

The latest blow comes from the escalating confrontation with Iran and the renewed instability surrounding the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime artery through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply moves. When tensions rise there, fuel prices spike everywhere. Diesel costs surge. Fertilizer prices climb. Shipping becomes more expensive. And American farmers, already hanging by a thread after years of volatile markets and punishing debt, are once again handed the bill for Washington’s geopolitical theatrics.

It is difficult to overstate how devastating energy costs are to modern agriculture. Farmers do not merely drive tractors; they operate enormous energy-consuming businesses. Diesel fuels combines, irrigation systems and transport trucks. Natural gas is essential to fertilizer production. Higher oil prices ripple through every acre planted and every bushel harvested. The result is not abstract economic theory. It is foreclosure notices. Equipment auctions. Families quietly selling land that has belonged to them for generations.

What makes this political moment especially bitter is the irony. Trump built his movement by condemning endless wars and interventionist foreign policy. He mocked the architects of Iraq. He promised America First. Yet when tensions with Iran intensify, when saber-rattling replaces diplomacy, the economic consequences land squarely on the shoulders of the same voters who once cheered his rallies in Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska.

And unlike Wall Street traders or multinational oil companies, farmers cannot simply “wait out” volatility. They operate on thin margins and seasonal cycles that do not forgive political chaos. A sudden jump in fuel or fertilizer costs during planting season can erase profits for an entire year. Some farms never recover.

There is also a deeper betrayal unfolding beneath the economics. Rural America was promised stability. Instead, it has received permanent turbulence disguised as strength. Trade wars already damaged export markets for soybeans and corn during Trump’s presidency, forcing taxpayers to subsidize farmers through emergency bailout programs. Now geopolitical brinkmanship threatens another wave of pain. At some point, emergency checks stop feeling like rescue and start looking like compensation for self-inflicted wounds.

The uncomfortable truth is that nationalist politics often romanticize farmers while quietly sacrificing them. Rural voters are praised in speeches but exposed to enormous risk in practice. The same politicians who celebrate “heartland values” frequently pursue foreign policies that send oil markets into panic and commodity prices into uncertainty. Patriotic rhetoric does not lower diesel prices.

None of this means Iran’s regime is benign or that the Strait of Hormuz is unimportant. Iran’s leadership has long destabilized the region through proxy warfare and threats to global shipping. But serious statecraft requires understanding consequences, not merely flexing power for television cameras and campaign slogans. Escalation always has downstream victims, and they are often far from the Persian Gulf.

The tragedy is that many of Trump’s most loyal supporters will absorb these costs while continuing to defend the man whose political instincts helped create them. That is the strange endurance of populism in America: voters harmed by disruption are persuaded that more disruption is the cure.

But bankruptcy courts do not care about campaign branding. Neither do fuel invoices, missed loan payments or failing family farms. Eventually, economic pain cuts through ideology. The farmers who once believed they were electing a protector may increasingly discover they elected a gambler and they are the ones forced to cover the losses.


A balloon over Silicon Valley by Sabine Fischer

For years now the public has watched Elon Musk the way medieval villagers once watched comets, with awe, confusion and the suspicion that something enormous might eventually crash into Earth. Every launch, every feud, every late-night proclamation on social media has seemed to inflate the myth further. The man has become less a CEO than a floating spectacle hovering above modern capitalism, part genius, part provocateur, part performance artist. And now comes the courtroom drama with Sam Altman, a conflict that feels less like a legal dispute and more like the inevitable moment when the balloon finally drifts too close to a power line.

The case matters because it strips away the mythology and forces a simpler, more uncomfortable question, what exactly was all this supposed to become?

Musk once presented himself as a guardian against reckless artificial intelligence. He warned about existential danger with the urgency of a man spotting smoke inside a crowded theater. He helped create an AI venture with lofty ideals about openness and humanity. Then the AI revolution became profitable, spectacularly profitable and suddenly everyone in Silicon Valley started speaking a different language. “Safety” became tangled with market share. “Humanity” became entangled with valuations. “Open” became carefully monetized.

Now Musk is effectively accusing the AI establishment of becoming exactly what it promised not to become.

The irony, of course, is impossible to ignore. Musk himself has spent the better part of a decade building an empire on audacity, bending rules, mocking regulators and treating institutions as obstacles rather than safeguards. Watching him now argue about broken principles feels a bit like seeing a casino owner file complaints about excessive gambling. Yet that contradiction is precisely why the spectacle fascinates the public. Musk has always embodied Silicon Valley’s deepest contradiction, the belief that one extraordinary individual should both disrupt every system and somehow remain morally above the consequences.

But courtrooms are cruel places for mythology. Rockets and electric cars thrive on vision. Legal proceedings thrive on documents, timelines and sworn testimony. The charismatic fog that surrounds tech titans suddenly dissipates under fluorescent lighting. Grand narratives shrink into emails and contracts. That transformation alone makes this case dangerous for Musk. The courtroom does not reward vibes. It rewards consistency.

And consistency has never really been Musk’s preferred fuel source.Still, dismissing him would be a mistake. Beneath the bombast lies a genuine public anxiety about who controls artificial intelligence and whether the people building it can be trusted. Musk may be theatrical, impulsive and self-serving, but he has also proven unusually skilled at sensing the fault lines before everyone else notices the tremors. Years ago, his warnings about AI sounded eccentric. Today they sound mainstream.

That is why this legal battle feels bigger than two billionaires fighting over ideological leftovers from a startup dinner conversation. It is really about the collapse of Silicon Valley’s old self-image. The industry once sold itself as rebellious idealism wrapped in hoodies. Now it increasingly resembles every other concentration of power in American history, secretive, territorial and ferociously competitive.

The balloon may not explode spectacularly inside a courtroom. Real institutional collapses are rarely cinematic. More often, they leak air slowly while everyone pretends not to notice. But the Musk-Altman conflict already reveals something essential. The age of tech messiahs may be entering its final, exhausting act

Berserk Alert! #107 #Cartoon by Tony Zuvela

 

Tony Zuvela and his view of the world around us in a constant berserk alert!
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Puppi & Caesar #44 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Another cartoon with a mean and know-all of a bully cat, Puppi and her intellectual, pompous companion categorically-I-know-all, Caesar the squirrel!  

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A hushed erosion by Markus Gibbons

A paradox dressed in patriotic language, often justified through legal precision and procedural restraint. The latest move by the Supreme Court to further weaken the Voting Rights Act follows this familiar rhythm, measured in tone but seismic in consequence.

The Voting Rights Act was never meant to be a relic. It was designed as a living safeguard, a recognition that democracy requires maintenance not ...nostalgia. Yet, over the years, the Court has treated it less like a vital instrument and more like an artifact whose relevance must be repeatedly proven. Each decision that chips away at its protections is framed as technical, even neutral. But neutrality, in this context, is a posture that masks a deeper transformation.

What is striking is not just the legal reasoning, but the cumulative effect. The Court insists it is merely interpreting the law as written, stepping back from what it views as federal overreach. But stepping back, in a system already tilted by history and power, is not an act of balance, it is an abdication. When protections are removed, they do not vanish into abstraction; they disappear from real communities, real polling places, real lives.

There is an insistence among some justices that the conditions that necessitated the Voting Rights Act have changed, that the country has progressed beyond the need for such robust oversight. This argument, appealing in its optimism, falters under even casual scrutiny. Progress is not a straight line, and history has a way of resurfacing when vigilance fades. To declare victory over voter suppression while dismantling the tools designed to prevent it is to confuse aspiration with reality.

The language of these decisions often leans on the idea of equal treatment among states, a principle that sounds fair until one considers that not all states have traveled the same road. Some have long histories of restricting access to the ballot, histories that do not dissolve simply because time has passed. Treating unequal histories as though they were identical does not produce fairness; it produces erasure.

What emerges from this latest decision is a Court increasingly comfortable with narrowing the scope of federal protections in the name of constitutional purity. But purity, like neutrality, is not without consequence. It reshapes the terrain on which political battles are fought, often in ways that advantage those already positioned to benefit.

There is also a quieter, more insidious effect: the erosion of trust. When voters see the mechanisms meant to protect their participation weakened, the message is not subtle. It suggests that access to the ballot is negotiable, contingent, subject to reinterpretation. Democracy, in this light, begins to look less like a shared enterprise and more like a contested privilege.

The defenders of the decision will argue that it returns power to the states, that it respects the boundaries of federal authority. And there is, in theory, a democratic appeal to local control. But local control, without adequate safeguards, can become a vehicle for exclusion rather than representation. The framers of the Voting Rights Act understood this tension. That is why the law existed in the first place.

What makes this moment particularly unsettling is its familiarity. This is not a dramatic overturning that sparks immediate outrage; it is a continuation of a trend, a slow recalibration that unfolds decision by decision. The danger lies precisely in its subtlety. By the time the full impact is felt, the legal foundation that once supported broad access to the vote may already be too weakened to restore easily.

In the end, the question is not whether the Court is following the letter of the law, but whether it is honoring the spirit of democracy that the law was meant to protect. That spirit is not self-sustaining. It requires reinforcement, attention, and, above all, a willingness to recognize that rights, once secured, can still be undone.

The erosion is quiet. But it is no less real for its silence.


Fortress of doubt by Marja Heikkinen

Europe Day was supposed to commemorate a miracle, a continent that had finally grown tired of burying its children. The European project emerged from the rubble of World War II not merely as a political arrangement but as a moral rebellion against history itself. The idea was simple. Nations that had perfected the machinery of slaughter would instead bind themselves through trade, law, diplomacy, and mutual dependence until war became economically irrational and psychologically unimaginable. Europe would no longer be a battlefield. It would become an argument against barbarism.

And yet, in 2026, Europe celebrates itself with a nervousness it can barely conceal. The speeches still invoke unity, democracy and solidarity but the mood has changed. One can sense it in the guarded language of officials, in the rise of nationalist parties, in the razor wire stretching across borders once advertised as permanently open. Europe now speaks less like a civilization confident in its ideals and more like an aging aristocrat protecting inherited silver from burglars outside the gate.

The war in Ukraine shattered Europe’s illusion that economic integration alone could tame geopolitical ambition. Europeans believed commerce would pacify the continent because it had pacified Western Europe for decades. But Vladimir Putin reminded Europe that history does not retire because intellectuals declare it obsolete. Tanks rolled across borders again. Cities burned again. Refugees crossed Europe again. Suddenly, the twentieth century no longer looked buried. It looked patient.

At the same time, Donald Trump’s hostility toward NATO and the European Union exposed another uncomfortable truth. Post-war Europe was built under the protective umbrella of American power. European countries could invest generously in welfare states partly because the United States carried much of the military burden. Trump’s contempt for alliances forced Europe to confront the possibility that America may no longer guarantee Europe’s security out of sentimentality or habit. The old transatlantic romance has become transactional.

Still, the deeper crisis is not military. It is philosophical. Europe cannot decide whether it remains a moral project or merely a marketplace with a flag. The European Union speaks eloquently about human rights while striking migration deals with authoritarian governments. It condemns illiberalism abroad while tolerating democratic erosion within member states. It celebrates freedom of movement yet increasingly treats desperate migrants as contaminants to be contained beyond its borders. Europe wants the language of universal values without always accepting the sacrifices universalism demands.

This contradiction has produced a peculiar exhaustion. Europeans continue defending liberal democracy rhetorically, but many seem unconvinced it can survive economic inequality, demographic anxiety, digital propaganda and cultural fragmentation. Across the continent, voters increasingly choose leaders who promise protection rather than openness. The politics of fear has replaced the politics of aspiration. Europe once imagined itself as the world’s first post-national civilization. Today, nationalism is staging a noisy comeback across the Union.

And yet it would be unfair to dismiss the European experiment as a failure. The fact that Europeans now argue bitterly about regulations, migration quotas, energy policy, and budget rules instead of invading one another is itself extraordinary. France and Germany now bicker like exhausted business partners. That is progress. Europe has also preserved something increasingly rare in modern politics: the belief that compromise is not weakness. In a century intoxicated by strongmen, that principle still matters.

But Europe’s greatest danger may be complacency disguised as virtue. The post-war generation built institutions because they remembered ruins. Contemporary Europe remembers comfort instead. Peace has lasted so long that many Europeans treat it less as an achievement than as a natural condition. They assume liberal democracy will survive automatically because it has survived before. History suggests otherwise.

So, is Europe what Europeans dreamed of after World War II? Partly. It achieved the unimaginable by transforming a continent of rival empires into a community governed largely through negotiation rather than bloodshed. But the dream was never only about preventing war. It was about creating a civilization confident enough to defend human dignity consistently, even when inconvenient. On that question Europe remains undecided. Europe Day no longer feels like a celebration. It feels like an annual reminder that the European project is unfinished, fragile and still arguing with its own conscience.


#eBook Into Picasso’s blues by Ovi Art eBooks

Before the minotaurs. Before the screaming women and the fractured guitars of Cubism. Before the fame and the fortune and the furious loving there was the blue.

Why make a book about a four-year span in a career that lasted seventy-eight years? Because the Blue Period is the key to everything that followed. Picasso had to learn how to paint grief before he could learn how to paint rage. He had to sit with the blind and the broken before he could shatter a face into a thousand diamonds. The blue was his apprenticeship in darkness.

Turn the page. But dress warmly. It is 1902 inside these pages, and the wind cuts through every cracked window. We are going to meet a young man who has just seen his best friend die and who has decided, without quite knowing why, to paint only the colour of that moment for the next four years.

That young man will become Picasso. But first, he must become blue.

Ovi eBook Publishing 2026

Into Picasso’s blues

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All downloads are FREE!

2nd opinion! 26#08 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Seriously, a human hater self-centred agoraphobic in quarantine!
I think you’ll need a second opinion after this.

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A Fractured Mandate: West Bengal’s 2026 Election and the Strain on India’s Social Fabric By Habib Siddiqui

The results are in, and the unthinkable has happened. What I had feared for the past five years has now come to pass: the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), under the ideological leadership of Narendra Modi, is set to form the next government in West Bengal. Suvendu Adhikari—whose record of incendiary, anti‑Muslim rhetoric has dragged political discourse to new lows—appears poised to become the state’s next chief minister. For a state long celebrated for its pluralism, cultural sophistication, and resistance to communal politics, this moment marks a profound rupture.

Even The Hindu, one of India’s most respected newspapers, described the outcome as a “paradigm shift in the BJP’s political journey.” Adhikari himself wasted no time claiming that the results reveal a “visible crack” in the Trinamool Congress’s (TMC) Muslim support base. For those of us who have watched India’s political evolution over decades, the BJP’s first solo victory in West Bengal is not a sudden development but the culmination of a long, calculated project.

Behind the BJP’s historic breakthrough lies the strategic acumen of Union Home Minister Amit Shah, often described as the party’s modern‑day Chanakya. Shah camped in Bengal for two full weeks, holding late‑night organizational meetings, coordinating booth‑level operations, and addressing more than 50 rallies and roadshows across the state. During this period, he made targeted promises—such as implementing the 7th Pay Commission for government employeesand vowed to crack down on “goons and infiltrators,” language that played directly into the BJP’s polarizing narrative.

After the first phase of voting, Shah confidently declared that the BJP had already secured more than 110 seats, setting the tone for the second phase. This projection, amplified across media and social networks, created a sense of inevitability around the BJP’s victory, especially in regions previously considered difficult terrain for the party.

A National Election Day, but One Result Dominated

The West Bengal elections were one of five whose results were announced on May 4. Tamil Nadu witnessed a political upset as actor‑turned‑politician C. Joseph Vijay swept aside established parties with his new TVK formation. In Kerala, the Congress defeated the ruling left coalition. A BJP‑led alliance captured Puducherry, and in Assam the BJP returned to power with a commanding majority.

Yet, despite this flurry of outcomes, it was West Bengal’s verdict that overshadowed all others. After 15 years of TMC rule, the state’s dramatic political reversal carried implications far beyond its borders. For more than a decade, West Bengal had resisted the BJP’s advance even as the party expanded across India. The state was widely regarded as a bastion of regional pride, cultural pluralism, and resistance to Hindu majoritarianism under Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. That bastion has now fallen.

The BJP’s victory in West Bengal is not merely electoral. It is ideological. The party is now in power uninterruptedly from Gangotri in Uttarakhand, where the Ganga originates, to Gangasagar in West Bengal, where the river meets the Bay of Bengal. Symbolically, this is a triumph of the BJP’s long‑term project to consolidate political control across the entire Gangetic belt.

West Bengal also holds special significance as the birthplace of Shyama Prasad Mookerjee, founder of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, the BJP’s predecessor. For decades, the BJP’s ideological ecosystem has viewed Bengal as unfinished business, a region that must be brought into the fold of its Hindu nationalist vision. The 2026 result fulfills that long‑standing aspiration.

Early results showed the BJP winning or leading in roughly 200 of the state’s 294 seats—an unprecedented leap from its previous best of 77 seats in 2021. The TMC, once dominant, was reduced to fewer than 90 seats. Analysts cited in the reporting describe the outcome as a convergence of anti‑incumbency, religious polarization, and a highly disciplined BJP campaign machine.

The Human Story Behind the Numbers

Yashraj Sharma’s reporting for Al Jazeera opens with the story of Seema Das, a domestic worker who traveled two days across India to cast her vote. Das had always supported the TMC, but this time she switched to the BJP after being convinced that Mamata Banerjee “favours Muslims.” This narrative—long promoted by the BJP—has been central to its strategy in Bengal, a state where Muslims constitute more than a quarter of the population.

Das’s shift reflects a broader trend. Analysts noted that urban Hindu men were particularly polarized. The BJP’s messaging – casting itself as the defender of Hindu interests and portraying the TMC as “pro‑Muslim” – resonated with voters who felt economically insecure or culturally threatened.

The Limits of Welfare Politics

Mamata Banerjee’s political rise was built on welfare schemes, grassroots mobilization, and resistance to both communist rule and Hindu majoritarianism. Yet after 15 years in power, her administration faced growing dissatisfaction. While she remained personally popular, many voters felt alienated by the TMC’s local machinery, which they viewed as intrusive and overbearing in everyday life. At the same time, growing economic hardship and unmet aspirations deepened anti‑incumbency sentiment. Welfare programs that once energized her base could no longer offset the frustration of those who felt left behind, and the party’s inability to offer a fresh vision allowed resentment to build beneath the surface.

Polarization as Strategy

The BJP’s campaign was described as “better‑managed,” with a clear strategy to consolidate Hindu votes while exploiting urban‑rural divides. Suvendu Adhikari openly credited “Hindu consolidation” for the victory. He also claimed that some Muslim voters shifted away from the TMC, though this remains unverified until detailed Election Commission data is released.

The deployment of 2,400 companies of paramilitary forces – the largest ever for a state election –was justified by the central government as necessary to prevent violence. Opposition parties, however, argued that the heavy security presence intimidated voters and created conditions favorable to the BJP.

The Controversial Voter Roll Revision

One of the most contentious aspects of the election was the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of the voter rolls conducted by the Election Commission of India. In West Bengal alone, more than nine million names (nearly 12 percent of the electorate) were removed. Six million were classified as absentee or deceased; the remaining three million lost their voting rights because their cases could not be heard in time.

Opposition parties accused the ECI of bias, arguing that the revision disproportionately disenfranchised Muslims and vulnerable communities. Mamata Banerjee challenged the process in the Supreme Court, calling it “opaque, hasty, and unconstitutional.” Although the Court did not restore voting rights, it ordered the ECI to publish the list of affected voters.

A National Turning Point

The implications of the West Bengal result extend far beyond the state. After the 2024 national elections, the BJP had fallen short of a parliamentary majority and depended on coalition partners. The 2026 state victories, particularly in West Bengal, Assam, and Puducherry, helped the party regain political momentum. Analyst Praveen Rai argues that the Bengal win “substantially increases the national standing of Modi’s leadership” and strengthens the BJP’s ability to govern India.

The Road Ahead

Mamata Banerjee’s initial response was defiant. In a video message, she urged her party workers to remain vigilant during the counting process and accused central forces of “forceful use” against the TMC. Analysts expect significant political turbulence ahead, noting that Banerjee is unlikely to retreat quietly.

The deeper question is what this election means for West Bengal’s social fabric and for neighboring Bangladesh, where the political reverberations may trigger concern among Muslim communities already wary of rising hostility across the border. This anxiety is hardly surprising: the campaign itself was defined by intense Hindu–Muslim polarization, and the voter‑roll controversy has left many vulnerable groups feeling exposed and uncertain about their place in the political order.

The BJP’s rise is often framed as a late‑20th‑century phenomenon, but its ideological roots run deeper: back to the Hindu Mahasabha of the 1940s and to Shyama Prasad Mookerjee’s vision of a culturally unified Hindu nation. Bengal, with its history of communal tensions and competing nationalisms, was the crucible in which this ideology first took shape. Today’s electoral shift thus carries a historical resonance that extends far beyond the state’s borders.

The 2026 West Bengal election is a reminder that democratic outcomes are shaped not only by party performance but by the broader political environment: identity, economic anxiety, institutional trust, and the narratives that resonate with voters.

As I see it, the election noted that the BJP’s victory was driven not only by strategic campaigning and deep anti‑incumbency, but also by a level of polarization intensified by what can be described as an unfathomable rise in intolerance and open bigotry toward Muslims. This atmosphere, repeatedly highlighted in reporting from the ground, became a powerful force shaping voter behavior and the broader political narrative.. The TMC’s defeat underscores the limits of welfare politics when confronted with shifting social dynamics and organizational fatigue.

What remains to be seen is whether West Bengal can preserve its tradition of pluralism, whether disenfranchised voters regain confidence in democratic institutions, and whether political competition can proceed without deepening communal divides. For now, one thing is clear: West Bengal has entered a new political era, and its consequences will reverberate across India.


[Dr. Siddiqui’s forthcoming book, ‘Modi‑fied’ India: The Transformation of a Nation, is slated for publication by Peter Lang in 2026.]


Progress 1+1=10 #Poem by Jan Sand

The word itself is implacable
That time advances in its chances
To endow the inevitable, the reliable,
That failures fail.
To whack that nail
Hammerwise square and solidly
On its head may demand
Lots of lives
Becoming dead.
The no go of the dodo,
The pterodactyls disappearance
Was just an act of clearance
For the hummingbird,
Not at all absurd.

These days that logic still persists.
It cannot be missed that humanity
Is eager to conform.
Evolution cannot resist advance.
Therefore it is obviously a plus
That the atmosphere must rearrange
In planetary change to toss away the
Vast stupidities that now drive with energies
Humanity’s departure from persistence.
Within a decade or two, perhaps a camel
Might remain to gaze in curiosity
At the pyramids.
Perhaps a meerkat might stand and stare
In wonder at the wreckage and blunder
Distributed here and there
Left by a humanity that has terminated
In nowhere.

 

The reform of the same fever by Thanos Kalamidas

The local election results spreading across England feel less like a democratic correction than a national relapse. Reform’s surge in the n...