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Even before his latest victory, Modi was reshaping India. These numbers show how.

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to return for a third term after a closer-than-expected election.

As results trickled in late Tuesday, it became clear that Mr. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party had failed to claim the 272 seats needed for an outright majority in India’s lower Parliament, a verdict the opposition alliance is calling a moral defeat. But with the party winning well over 200 seats and vowing to form a coalition government, it will continue to wield significant power over the next five years, with Mr. Modi at the helm.

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With India’s weekslong election over, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s last two terms can offer insight into the incoming government’s economic, infrastructure, and welfare agenda – and the future of press freedom in India.

Since coming to power in 2014, Mr. Modi has promised Indians greater prosperity at home and a stronger image of the country abroad. In some ways, his government has moved the needle forward. Indeed, Mr. Modi’s tenure has been marked by rapid infrastructure expansion, economic growth, and streamlined welfare programs. 

But during Mr. Modi’s rule, India has also witnessed a major democratic decline, including new restrictions on journalists and shrinking space for dissent – trends that experts believe will continue during a third term.

India’s sitting Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to return for a third term after a closer-than-expected Lok Sabha race.

As results from the world’s largest-ever election trickled in late Tuesday evening, it became clear that Mr. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party had failed to claim the 272 seats needed for an outright majority in Parliament, a verdict the opposition alliance is calling a moral defeat. But with the BJP winning well over 200 seats and vowing to form a coalition government, the party will continue to wield significant power over the next five years – with Mr. Modi at the helm.

In his first reaction after the results, Mr. Modi thanked his party workers and declared that the BJP “will continue the good work done in the last decade to keep fulfilling the aspirations of people.” Since coming to power in 2014, Mr. Modi has promised Indians greater prosperity at home and a stronger image of the country abroad. In some ways, his government has moved the needle forward. But during Mr. Modi’s rule, India has also witnessed a major democratic decline, with the U.S. nonprofit Freedom House stating last year that democracy was “losing ground” in India due to government crackdowns against dissent and democratic values.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

With India’s weekslong election over, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s last two terms can offer insight into the incoming government’s economic, infrastructure, and welfare agenda – and the future of press freedom in India.

These were issues the opposition raised repeatedly on the campaign trail.

“I think it’s a rap on the knuckles from the voters,” says Neelanjan Sircar, senior fellow at the New Delhi-based think tank Centre for Policy Research, about the election results. 

Still, he says the BJP has claimed “a formidable number” of seats, and will guide the national agenda, as it has for the past decade. 

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