In assessing leadership, voters are age agnostic
India, Sept. 24 -- As Prime Minister Narendra Modi celebrated his 75th birthday, speculation intensified about an alleged "age-limit" rule within the BJP and the broader Sangh Parivar. Media and political murmurs pointed to the retirement of veterans such as LK Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi. Critics asked why Modi should be treated differently.
These are all good questions. In the choreography of the birthday commemoration, responses were strong and black and white. They were coloured by political perceptions - one way or the other - rather than facts and a reading of political trends. Now that the milestone birthday is behind us, a considered analysis is called for.
The 1990s saw a marked shift in political communication and symbolism. As the Cold War ended, there was a new hope, an economic boom and an appreciation of politics as a technocratic or even peripheral exercise, amid widespread business and civil society autonomy. This was, of course, most true of the West. Yet, as can be expected, its influence was felt far wider, in other democracies as well.
Among its outcomes was an ageist cult that promoted youth in government as an end in itself. It placed a relatively lower emphasis on a politician's substantive credentials, not necessarily linked to his or her age. In the UK and the US, for instance, it was difficult to be seen as electable if one crossed a fairly low and downright ridiculous age barrier. Take some examples. In the US, Bill Clinton finished his second term at 54, George W Bush at 62, and Barack Obama at 55. A generation of talent was wasted or had careers timed out when there was still a lot to contribute. The UK was a little different. Tony Blair retired at 54, Cameron left 10 Downing Street at 49, and Rishi Sunak at 44.
Public life has limited executive talent available anyway. Combine that with leavening and maturity that comes with years in the legislature and government, and one realises how the West haemorrhaged leadership in falling victim to a telegenic, media-driven youth frenzy. Gradually, even the UK and the US course corrected. Between 1997 and 2013, the average age of a US president at the start of a term was 52 years. Between 2017 and 2025, it went up to 75 years. At 79, President Donald Trump is as old as Clinton and a decade-and-a-half older than Obama.
Clearly, as the political economy has become more complex and challenging, government has come to be perceived differently by voters. The skills they look for in leaders are age agnostic. Put another way, youth is less of a pressing priority. Deft, sure-footed leadership, with an ideational (even ideological) ballast, counts for more, irrespective of age.
In India, multiple prime ministers have remained effective well past the supposed threshold. PV Narasimha Rao was in his seventies when he steered the country through the 1991 financial reforms. Manmohan Singh governed till 81.
The BJP's history reflects this as well. In 2004 Atal Bihari Vajpayee campaigned for re-election at 79 and served in Parliament till 84. Advani carried the party through campaign after campaign well into his eighties, eventually finishing his parliamentary innings at 91. Even the inflection point in 2014 was not because of a BJP age rule, but a generational transformation of a party reorganising to better reflect the sizeable mandate Modi had received. It was never a mechanical formula to be applied sans discretion. The nub then is not age but capacity and capability. Despite his supposedly advanced years, Modi addressed more than 200 public meetings during the three-month 2024 election campaign. On most days, after three or four speeches in peak summer, he would return to Delhi for meetings. In short, he was - and is - up to the job.
Having said that, political longevity is more than just physical stamina. As the most gifted and intellectually agile politician of his generation, the key to Modi's popularity is his admirable and continual evolution. He re-trains himself to become fit-for-purpose, whatever the purpose. His policy prescriptions, his constant keeping up with citizen aspirations and urges, his external engagement strategy, and his economic impulses tells us that he is still the most contemporary political mind in India.
Given this, to assess a political career - and to measure Modi's enduring appeal - solely in terms of physical age is not just unfair but unrealistic. Voter choices are age neutral....
To read the full article or to get the complete feed from this publication, please
Contact Us.