One of India’s most successful female politicians, Mamata Banerjee, is staring into the abyss. Her Trinamool Congress, once a juggernaut in West Bengal, now teeters on the brink of collapse. This is not merely a local squabble; it is a tremor that Westminster observers—those who habitually glance at the subcontinent through the lens of imperial nostalgia—ought to contemplate with grave seriousness. The implications for regional stability are profound, and the parallels with the decline of the Victorian-era Liberal Party are impossible to ignore.
Consider the trajectory. Banerjee, a firebrand who routed the Communist monolith and later defied Narendra Modi’s electoral machine, now finds her party riven by defections, corruption allegations, and internal power struggles. The same forces that undid the Congress Party in the 1970s and the Janata Dal in the 1990s are at play: a cult of personality, a hollowed-out party structure, and an inability to renew its cadre. Her recent loss of a key lieutenant, Mukul Roy, is symptomatic. The party’s machinery, once so fearsome, now leaks talent and credibility.
Westminster analysts will note that this is not an isolated event. India’s political landscape is littered with the skeletons of regionally dominant parties that imploded after their architect’s star faded. The DMK in Tamil Nadu, the Shiv Sena in Maharashtra, the Akali Dal in Punjab—each offers a cautionary tale. But Banerjee’s decline is particularly alarming because she was a bulwark against the BJP’s nationalisation of politics. Her fall weakens the opposition, concentrating power in Delhi and eroding the federal compact that holds India together.
The intellectual decadence at play here is staggering. India’s political class, like the late Roman Senate, has become addicted to short-term gains and personal loyalties. Banerjee’s party, bereft of a coherent ideology beyond anti-Modi sentiment, is a vessel for ambition rather than a vehicle for governance. Her administration’s record on law and order—farcical at best—and its selective violence against political opponents are not merely moral failings but strategic errors. They erode the legitimacy that is the currency of democratic power.
For those in London who wring their hands over Afghanistan or Ukraine, the lesson is stark: regional stability in South Asia is contingent on robust state institutions, not charismatic figures. Banerjee was once the champion of the dispossessed; now she is a queen in a crumbling palace. The next chapter will be written not by her, but by the faceless forces of population movement, economic stagnation, and religious polarisation that she sought to harness and has instead been consumed by.
The question for Westminster is whether the United Kingdom, with its puffed-up pretensions of global Britain, has the wit to understand these dynamics. Likely not. Our foreign policy establishment is too busy self-congratulating on the coronation of a monarch whose empire is a memory, while the real empire of India—messy, fractious, and vital—drifts toward a new dark age of political entropy. Banerjee’s collapse is a warning bell. Let us hope someone in Whitehall is listening.









