Prime Minister Narendra Modi has surpassed Jawahar Lal Nehru to become the longest continuously serving democratically elected Prime Minister of India.
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June 10, 2026, marks a special occasion in the history of India after Independence. On this date Prime Minister Narendra Modi surpassed Jawahar Lal Nehru to become the longest continuously serving democratically elected Prime Minister of India. Though a historic landmark in itself, PM Modi’s being a tenure longer than that of Nehru does not capture the more important dimensions of what may be called the watershed period for India since Independence.
Since May 26, 2014, the course of Indian polity took a decisive turn towards Indian-ness of the kind advocated by Mahatma Gandhi, Sardar Patel, Babasahab Ambedkar, Dr. Rajendra Prasad, C. Rajgopalachari, K.M. Munshi and several other architects of modern India who had reimagined the ancient Indian culture and civilisation with a deep sense of pride in its heritage and legacies. In the area of economic development, PM Modi has taken forward the model of Rajaji with inclusivity. Rajaji, as we know, was strongly critical of the ‘command and control’ model of Nehruvian political economy which resulted in ‘quota, permit and licence raj’.
In the sphere of political discourse, despite the historic and scholarly statement by Dr. Ambedkar in his concluding address in the Constituent Assembly on November 25, 1949, that elements of parliamentary democracy were to be found in the Buddhist institutions dating back twenty five hundred years and that those Buddhist institutions would have adopted democratic practices from the then prevalent political institutions, our students and jurists were made to believe that we owed our democracy to western countries. PM Modi has been asserting on global forums that India is the mother of democracy, referring to the ancient Indian democratic ethos and practices. And the world is waking up to this fact of India being not only the most ancient but also the largest and most vibrant democracy.
The sheer size of India’s electorate at nearly 100 crore is a mind-boggling phenomenon for the rest of the world. Incidentally, the size of electorate is nearly three times the total population of India at the time of Independence. Added to the size is the growing complexity of the electoral dynamics. As many as 744 political parties participated in the 2024 General Election compared to only 53 in the 1951-52 General Election. Aspirations of and scrutiny by the people have gone up exponentially compared to the times of Jawahar Lal Nehru. To measure up to such rising expectations and sustain a robust bond of trust with the people is an exceptional success of PM Modi whose approval ratings have remained consistently high compared with Jawahar Lal Nehru who had to witness severe erosion in his stature and popularity during his tenure. During the decades of the 1950s and 1960s and even up to the 1970s, many democratically elected leaders across the world had had long tenures at the helm. The world of the 21st Century has witnessed much shorter shelf-life of political leaders. Prime Minister Modi stands as an exception to the global trend.
It is rightly said that no people can become strong and respectable if they lack self- pride. India’s has been a great story of civilisational and cultural excellence through many centuries. However, the sense of inferiority instilled by the colonial rulers continued to cast its long shadow even after Independence. Continuation, and even glorification of several colonial practices continued after Independence and an elitist minority was created which perpetuated the ideas and ideals of Thomas Babington Macaulay. English was promoted as the language of power during the decades after Independence. The Nehruvian period and its immediate aftermath witnessed a sense of embarrassment among the elite about most things Indian. People speaking and working or expressing themselves in Indian languages were looked down upon as inferior cousins.
Cultural practices and symbols rooted in ancient Indian traditions were ignored in favour of ideologies and practices nurtured in alien soils. The lack of organic continuity and growth of Indian traditions had resulted in lack of confidence and innovativeness. PM Modi has front-staged Indian languages, systems, symbols and belief systems. There is a visible pride among the people in being Indian and expressing Indian-ness. This new sense of pride was shared with me by many people from among the Indian diaspora during my visits to several countries. Prime Minister Modi chose a function organised by a leading English language national daily to articulate the need to achieve the goal of mental decolonisation by 2035. In that function held in November 2025, PM Modi urged the people of India to undertake a 10-year national pledge to shed colonial mindset rooted in Macaulay’s legacy. He also made a very emphatic statement that India isn’t just an emerging market, it is emerging as a confident new model.
The contrast between India’s initial decade since Independence and the last 12 years is highlighted by a major shift. The Nehru years were marked by keenness to seek approval and succour from the west, culturally and economically. The Modi years are marked by the confidence in a robust domestic economy which is able to withstand the most severe global disruptions. The Modi years are also characterised by a strong sense of pride in Indian languages, cultural symbols, values and traditions.
A young but very well-informed boy who happens to be related to us made a statement indicative of his precocity and also of the thinking of his generation. He told me that while I grew up in Nehru’s India, he is growing up in Modi’s Bharat. The boy also explained to me that his generation is better off for it.
Ram Nath Kovind
Former President of India