IPSE'S AUTHORS LAST 24h
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IPSEs IN THE LAST 24H
  • Karine Jean-Pierre
    Karine Jean-Pierre “Americans have the right to peacefully protest. Forcibly taking over a building is not peaceful.” 14 hours ago
  • Janet Yellen
    Janet Yellen “Treasury has consistently warned that companies will face significant consequences for providing material support for Russia's war, and the U.S. is imposing them today on almost 300 targets.” 14 hours ago
  • Catherine Russell
    Catherine Russell “Over 200 days of war have already killed or maimed tens of thousands of children in Gaza. For hundreds of thousands of children in the border city of Rafah, there is added fear of an escalated military operation that would bring catastrophe on top of catastrophe for children. Nearly all of the some 600,000 children now crammed into Rafah are either injured, sick, malnourished, traumatised or living with disabilities.” 14 hours ago
  • Eric Adams
    Eric Adams “We cannot allow what should be a lawful protest to turn into a violent spectacle that saves and serves no purpose. There's no place for acts of hate in our city. I want to continue to commend the professionalism of the police department and to thank Columbia University. It was a tough decision, we understood that. But with the very clear evidence of their observation and the clear evidence from our intelligence division, that they understood it was time to move and the action had to end and we brought it to a peaceful conclusion.” 23 hours ago
  • Sergei Shoigu
    Sergei Shoigu “To maintain the required pace of the offensive … it is necessary to increase the volume and quality of weapons and military equipment supplied to the troops, primarily weapons.” 23 hours ago
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India politics

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive related to the Context India politics.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“The opposition - a consortium of nearly two dozen parties - has not been able to rally people around economic distress despite raising it as a prominent election issue. The problem with the opposition is that it is a coming together of parties with divergent views whose only agenda seems to be to dislodge Modi. To the people, that doesn't seem to be a good enough agenda. The fact that the opposition has not projected a face against Modi is also an issue. Rahul Gandhi is slowly emerging as that leader, but in terms of perception, he is still far behind Modi.”

author
Professor of political science at Delhi University
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“A large part of what the BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party] does is thinking about how to centralise all political attribution on Modi. Its campaign promises are pitched as Modi's guarantees. This is the strategy of a party where the leader is a cult figure and the party is the vehicle for the leader. Whether it's economic distress or even issues like violence in Manipur, Modi is not directly sullied. People may blame other leaders of the BJP. In regional elections, as a consequence, BJP might be voted out. But it is not anger against Modi.”

author
Senior fellow at the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi
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“If you look at the way the economy is unfolding, largely things are happening in the urban areas where normal activity has resumed in the period after the COVID pandemic, but there's a fair amount of stress in rural areas which is reflected in the consumption demand. The budget is a sign of a government very comfortable in the prospects of its re-election. They are far more confident of their re-election this time than the previous interim budget in 2019, so played their cards accordingly on the budget … and did not go against convention.”

author
Senior director at India Ratings & Research, a Fitch unit
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“They [B.J.P. leaders] thought they were going to ride the tiger, easily tame it and get down. But you can't easily tame a tiger. If you ride the tiger, you have to decide that at some point the tiger is going to eat. Modi [Narendra Modi] decided to allow the tiger to eat sometimes and lead the tiger when he wants to.”

author
Biographer of Narendra Modi - Journalist, writer and playwright
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“There are virtually only a handful of political leaders left who even mention the need to preserve India's secularism. The B.J.P. may face increasing political challenges, but it has won its cultural war, with lasting effects on India's democracy, and on India's largest minority.”

author
Political science professor at Ashoka University
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“Mr. Modi's [Narendra Modi] retreat could give India's democracy a shot in the arm. It shows that even if the government repeals these laws for electoral reasons, elections still work as a formal mechanism to keep governments in check. It also shows that more substantive aspects of democratic participation like civil protests can be successful. It's good news for India's battered democracy.”

author
Political science professor at Ashoka University
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“'Farmers' is not a category that the B.J.P. [Bharatiya Janata Party] uses. They talk about the poor and they speak the language of caste and obviously the language of religion.”

author
Political science professor at Ashoka University
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“This election verdict is as much an endorsement of Mamata Banerjee as it is a critique or a verdict against Mr Modi and his government's handling of the COVID crisis. The people in India are suffering. There's lots of pain misery and despair. And this was the first time they had an opportunity to give expression to that anger, to give expression to that pain, and they appear to have done it in a resounding manner in West Bengal.”

author
Journalist in New Delhi
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