Advertisement
Advertisement
India
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi meets members of the Indian diaspora at Wembley Stadium in London in November 2015. Among them is advertising executive and UK citizen Manish Tiwari (back row, second from left). Photo: Manish Tiwari

India election: overseas Indians love Modi. Most can’t vote, but will they still sway the polls?

  • Only Indian citizens can vote in India’s elections. But that hasn’t stopped Prime Minister Narendra Modi working hard to woo the diaspora
  • Surveys show Modi and his ruling BJP enjoy higher levels of support among overseas Indians than even those at home – and their approval has an impact
India
For Manish Tiwari, the elections under way in India are about the emergence of a nation that is forging ahead on the global stage with confidence under the strong leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

But the advertising executive is not even able to vote in the polls – he is a British citizen of Indian origin who has long been an admirer of Modi’s policies. There is a sense of pride among many ethnic Indians overseas like Tiwari in Modi’s vision, and a feeling that his Bharatiya Janata Party-led government is charting the right path for the country’s future.

India to begin voting on April 19 in world’s largest election

“I would rather support people who are putting energy into creating a New India,” Tiwari said. “Modi may not be humble or 100 per cent correct every time, but he seems to be making an effort and the fortunes of the nation are changing.”

The Indian diaspora’s strong endorsement of Modi and his government can be clearly seen in the opinion polls.

Support among overseas Indians – foreigners of Indian origin and Indian nationals living abroad – has been consistently 15 to 20 per cent higher than those living in India, according to Yashwant Desmukh, founder of Indian pollster C-Voter.

“Modi has consistently been a darling of non-resident Indians [NRIs]. I guess the biggest contribution of NRIs is building on the narrative [of the rise of India]. They have tried to convince family members back home on how to vote,” Desmukh said, adding that Modi’s “aggressive” style of leadership and confidence in conducting himself among world leaders have been welcomed by the Indian diaspora.

Pratik Dattani, founder of London-based think tank Bridge India, which focuses on the diaspora, agreed. “India’s standing in the world and how it has projected itself after conducting a successful G20 [in New Delhi last year] has mattered,” he said. “This is a more assertive India, and it matters to the diaspora more than ever before.”
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi gestures to the crowd alongside his Australian counterpart Anthony Albanese (centre, right) in Sydney last year attended by thousands of expatriate Indians. Photo: Bloomberg

Nearly 970 million people are eligible to vote in India’s 18th general election, which began on Friday and runs to June 1. The results are expected by June 4.

The BJP won 303 out of 543 seats in the Lok Sabha, India’s lower house of parliament, in the 2019 general election. This year, it aims to win 370 seats on its own and 400 together with allies under the National Democratic Alliance.

Rajiv Kapoor, an investment banker based in the United Arab Emirates for the past 20 years, has been impressed by Modi’s leadership on the home front. The Indian national cited controversial issues such as the abolition of Article 370 of the Indian constitution and the construction of a temple to the Hindu god Ram in the northern town of Ayodhya.
Article 370 previously accorded limited autonomy to Indian-administered, Muslim-majority Kashmir. The temple was built on the grounds of a razed mosque.

Praising Modi and the BJP, Kapoor said: “Very few people have the ability to take the bull by horns like that.”

The one thing that comes across through opinion polls among Indians is that they say he has put India on the map like no other prime minister has done
Shubhankar Dam, law professor in the UK

A key factor behind the higher visibility of India’s successes is Modi’s commitment to regular overseas travel and connecting with the Indian diaspora. Since becoming prime minister in 2014, Modi has made 71 foreign trips, according to media reports.

Analysts say the BJP has assiduously wooed overseas Indians, who have flocked to Modi’s events during his trips.

“In so far as the impact of Modi’s travels, it is hard to deny that there is a real, tangible impact. The one thing that comes across through opinion polls among Indians is that they say he has put India on the map like no other prime minister has done,” said Shubhankar Dam, chair professor of public law and governance at the University of Portsmouth’s school of law.

US-based supporters hold Indian flags during a “Howdy, Modi” rally celebrating Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas in 2019. Photo: Reuters

India’s economic ascendancy, in particular, has resonated with the Indian diaspora, many of whom hold white-collar jobs. In its election manifesto, released this week, the BJP outlined a road map to transform India into a developed country by 2047.

While analysts and overseas Indians say India still has some way to go to achieve developed economy status, they agree that the government’s efforts to revamp infrastructure, cut red tape and implement nationwide digitalisation are a step in the right direction.

Kapoor said he was impressed with India’s efforts to stamp out corruption, a perennial scourge affecting India’s global economic standing.

“This government is very intolerant of corruption,” Kapoor said, citing Delhi’s efforts to curb illegal fund transfers. “We can see at least the intent was there to reduce corruption.”

Why do India’s general elections take so long to complete?

Rami Ranger, who used to live in India’s Punjab region before moving to the UK – and being raised to the British peerage in 2019 – has witnessed his homeland’s meteoric rise to economic powerhouse over the decades.

“There is very strong support for the Modi government because people can see the results. India has risen from the No 10 economy to No 4 in the last 10 years. The infrastructure is being developed and inflation is under control. [The government] controlled the Covid virus. India has also become a favourite for global investments,” Ranger told This Week in Asia.

“I have been here in this country [the UK] for 50 years and [as a member of the Indian diaspora] I have never felt so proud as today,” he added.

Ethnic Indians living abroad cannot vote in India’s elections unless they are citizens, but their influence cannot be underestimated, said Sreeradha Dutta, a professor of international affairs at Jindal Global University.

11:56

From India to China, how deepfakes are reshaping Asia politics

From India to China, how deepfakes are reshaping Asia politics

“A substantial number of the Indian diaspora views the present Indian government very favourably. While they may not be in a position to vote, the diaspora has been very forthcoming with their funding and support. The BJP also holds an appeal for the Indian Hindu diaspora along with the sense of pride in being an Indian,” Dutta said.

According to Priyajit Debsarkar, a London-based British-Indian author, overseas Indians’ pride in “the motherland” is palpable, despite the fact that many often hail from a diverse range of backgrounds.

“Unity in diversity is the greatest asset and strength of the country,” said Debsarkar, who is also a geopolitical analyst.

3