As winter descended, and Delhi embarked on what has become its regular season of poisonous air—a malaise exacerbated by open violations of the ban on firecrackers during Diwali—sections of the press and the liberal elite enacted their annual ritual of outrage and helplessness. Environmentalists lamented the government’s fitful and ineffective action; pulmonologists saw their wards filling up; citizens of the national capital wheezed and choked as the Air Quality Index shot up to hazardous levels.
The air crisis in Delhi, and large parts of north India, has come to be framed predominantly as a failure of environmental and public-health management. The intriguing puzzle, though, is not the repetitive nature of the crisis but the collective inability to fix—or even substantially mitigate—the problem. This is yet another sign of India’s failing democracy.
In March 2021, Freedom House, a US think tank that evaluates democracies across the world, downgraded India’s status from “free” to “partly free” in its annual report. “Political rights and civil liberties in the country have deteriorated since Narendra Modi became prime minister in 2014, with increased, which once pinned great hope on Modi as a free-market reformer—has bracketed India as a “flawed democracy.”