Modi Skips Parliament All Week to Campaign in Poll States — Then BJP Ally in EC Drops Election Dates, Neutral?
In the span of just one week, narendra modi visited four politically crucial states — Kerala, tamil Nadu, Assam, and West bengal — each currently heading toward elections. Officially, the visits were framed as government programmes and development events. But the timing has sparked sharp criticism from opposition voices, who argue that the tour looked far more like a carefully planned political campaign than routine governance.
1. A Four-State Tour in Four Days
The sequence of visits was striking.
March 11 – Kerala
March 12 – tamil Nadu
March 13 – Assam
March 14 – West Bengal
Each stop included public appearances, speeches, and interactions that inevitably carried strong political undertones.
To critics, the pattern looked less like a coincidence and more like a strategic pre-election outreach.
2. The parliament Question
Adding to the controversy is the claim that the prime minister has not attended any day of parliament during the ongoing session.
Opposition leaders argue that if the visits were truly about governance, the balance between parliamentary duties and public events should have reflected that.
Instead, they say, the optics suggest a focus on election-bound states rather than legislative engagement.
3. The election Commission’s Timing
The debate intensified when attention shifted to the election commission of India.
According to critics, election dates were not announced until after the prime minister completed this series of state visits. The announcement is now expected from Chief election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar, which would immediately trigger the Model Code of Conduct.
4. Allegations of Institutional Bias
Opposition voices argue that this timing effectively allowed high-profile political outreach before campaign restrictions could take effect.
For them, it raises uncomfortable questions about whether institutions meant to remain neutral are operating independently.
5. A Debate Far Bigger Than One Week
Supporters of the government maintain that a prime minister traveling across states for development programmes is entirely normal. Critics see something else — a carefully timed political advantage.
Either way, the episode has reignited a familiar debate in indian politics: where governance ends and campaigning begins — and whether the system meant to regulate elections truly stands above the political battlefield.