He in fact even abstained, for the most part, from participating in parliamentary sessions. An excellent speaker, he continued to campaign for the BJP in all the states of the Union of India that went to the polls for regional elections. From then on, the party stopped designating regional leaders to head these campaigns, thus breaking with one of its old habits. The centralization effect was even more dramatic in the New Delhi government, where only a handful of Ministers were allowed (and indeed able) to speak to the public.
Populists often have a propensity to promise a lot, without really acting upon economic and social structures. Although he came to power thanks to his anti-system narrative, Modi was very comfortable with hierarchies and power relations, as long as he was able to use them. In fact, he did not launch any major reforms. He did not liberalize the Indian economy - contrary to the hopes of many economists who supported him back in 2014. His only significant success was the introduction of a uniform tax on goods and services across India, which put an end to decades of fiscal inconsistency.
The fight against corruption in Congress, a key theme of the 2014 campaign, hardly bore fruit. Not only were politicians involved in some of the big scandals that made headlines in the early 2010s (such as the 2G telecoms licensing scandal) released, but the billions of rupees in foreign accounts, which Modi had promised to repatriate, have not budged. Finally, the demonetization of the 500 and 1,000 rupee notes, decided by Modi in 2016, destabilized the economy without getting rid of black money, which had long been invested elsewhere (notably in real estate). Yet Modi managed to present demonetization as a national sacrifice agreed upon by the people to purify "the system" established by Congress since Nehru - his pet peeve.
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