Who they are and where they stand
Amit Shah is the Home Minister and the BJP's chief political strategist. As BJP president (2014-2020), he engineered the party's expansion across India, turning it into the dominant national force. He is widely seen as the second most powerful figure in Indian politics after Modi. Narendra Damodardas Modi was born on September 17, 1950, in Vadnagar, a small town in the Mehsana district of the then-Bombay State (now Gujarat). His father, Damodardas Mulchand Modi, ran a tea stall at the local railway station; Modi is said to have helped sell tea as a child. He was the third of six children in a family of the Other Backward Classes (OBC) — a constitutionally recognized category of historically disadvantaged communities below the dominant castes but above the "untouchable" Dalits and scheduled tribes — and his humble origins have been central to his political identity and populist appeal.
Modi joined the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the Hindu nationalist volunteer organization, as a pracharak (full-time worker) in the 1970s after completing his early education. He received a postgraduate degree in political science through a correspondence program from Gujarat University. The RSS, founded in 1925, is the ideological parent organization of the Bharatiya Janata Party and of a network of affiliated organizations spanning education, culture, trade unions, and student politics. Modi's career trajectory through the RSS and BJP organization before elected office gave him deep roots in the Hindutva movement's social networks.
Modi has served as Prime Minister of India since May 26, 2014, having won three consecutive general elections in 2014, 2019, and 2024. His 2014 victory — the BJP's first outright parliamentary majority since 1984 — ended the decade-long Congress-led UPA government under Manmohan Singh and produced the largest first-time parliamentary majority by a single party in thirty years. His 2019 re-election improved on the 2014 margin; the 2024 election produced a significantly reduced BJP tally that fell short of a majority (240 seats, needing 272 for majority), requiring coalition support from the NDA alliance — the first time since 2014 that Modi would govern without outright majority in the Lok Sabha.
Modi's political significance extends beyond India's borders. As the leader of the world's most populous country, his governance of 1.4 billion people on questions of economic development, democratic norms, minority rights, and great-power competition makes his decisions consequential for global politics. Under Modi, India has pursued a more assertive foreign policy, playing a central role in the Quad (with the US, Australia, and Japan), hosting the G20 presidency in 2023, maintaining relations with Russia despite Western pressure after the Ukraine invasion, and positioning itself as a leader of the Global South while simultaneously deepening strategic partnerships with Western democracies.