Modi and Shah Are Once Again Trying to Steal Another Election. This Time, It’s Bihar
Modi and Shah Are Once Again Trying
to Steal Another Election. This Time, It’s Bihar
India is not witnessing free and
fair elections anymore. We are witnessing an operation. An operation run by two
men, Narendra Modi and Amit Shah, with the full force of money, muscle, and a
captured system behind them.
Let’s be clear: every party wants
to win. But only one party has turned winning into a machinery of systematic
electoral theft, powered by money laundering, voter manipulation, and
institutional silence. That party is the BJP, and it has spent the last decade
refining a model not of governance, but of democratic hijack.
Every election begins with
voters. In India, the voter base is broken into three categories:
- Hardcore voters, loyal to a party’s ideology.
- Neutral voters, who are open to being persuaded.
- Dependent voters, vulnerable people whose vote is up
for sale because they are fighting poverty, hunger, insecurity, and daily
survival.
These dependent voters are the
foundation of the BJP’s most ruthless strategy. With deep pockets, the party
floods critical constituencies with cash, gifts, liquor, welfare promises, and
anything else that will turn desperation into loyalty. They do it not out of
generosity, but to buy power.
Where does this money come from?
- From the opaque and now illegal Electoral Bonds
scheme, which the Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional.
- From the PM CARES fund, a private trust wrapped in
government branding with no public audit and no accountability.
- From crony capitalist deals, funneling public
contracts to Gujarat-based billionaires, who then return the favor through
campaign financing and media control.
It’s a vicious cycle: steal
public money, use it to buy votes, stay in power, and repeat. This isn’t
politics it’s organized electoral crime.
And we’ve seen it unfold already:
In Maharashtra, voter rolls
mysteriously swelled by nearly 90 lakh more voters than the actual eligible
population. Senior citizens had their ages suddenly changed to “80+” so that BJP
volunteers could legally collect and cast their postal votes a silent
manipulation that bypasses the ballot box.
In Haryana, thousands of duplicate
and cross-state voters were allowed to cast ballots, with little to no
verification. Opposition parties flagged it. The Election Commission did
nothing.
In Delhi, the BJP couldn’t
manufacture votes, so they tried to block them instead. Legal voters were
removed from the rolls. On election day, roads were blocked and polling access
was choked especially in areas known to oppose the BJP. Elderly voters were
particularly affected. This wasn’t crowd control. It was voter suppression.
Each time, the BJP made just
enough moves in close-margin seats to avoid drawing national outrage, while
quietly tipping the scales.
And now comes Bihar, where the
process started nearly five months ago.
It began with Systematic
Integrated Revision (SIR) of the electoral rolls a process that should clean up
data, but instead has allegedly been used to remove real, living voters from
the rolls, claiming they are dead or relocated. At the same time, the rolls are
being padded with duplicate entries and voters from other states, a carbon copy
of what happened in Haryana and Maharashtra.
And now, 10 IAS officers from the
Gujarat cadre, Modi and Shah’s home turf, have been transferred to Bihar just
ahead of the election. Why Gujarat? Because these are the officers who’ve
“proven” themselves in previous election operations. They’re not neutral
bureaucrats; they’re part of the ecosystem.
When you control the system, the
system doesn’t protect democracy it protects your power.
Let’s not forget: every time
opposition leaders raise these issues, they’re met with either silence or
threats. The Election Commission refuses to share data with parties. The Supreme
Court’s orders are ignored or delayed. Civil servants are pressured into
silence or rewarded for complicity. The media is largely mute, either bought,
threatened, or distracted.
This is not electoral politics.
This is electoral capture.
It’s not paranoia, it’s a pattern.
And now, Bihar is the
battleground. But this time, there’s a variable that has Modi and Shah on edge:
the people of Bihar.
Because if BJP’s own voter base
in Bihar begins to shift, if even a fraction of those who supported the party
begin to see through this machinery and choose differently, this planned theft
might fail. The dependent voters are watching. The neutral voters are waking up.
And some hardcore voters are beginning to question the costs of loyalty.
This is why Modi and Shah are
nervous. This is why they’ve moved 10 trusted IAS officers from Gujarat. This
is why they’re preparing to go even further.
But they don’t control
everything. Bihar has the power to stop this. The BJP may have the system. However,
the people still have the right to vote.
Now, let us wait and see whether
Bihar will allow another election to be stolen, or whether this time, the
people will reclaim their power.
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