
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Narendra Modi is arguably the world’s most popular politician. With nearly 1 billion Indians eligible to vote in a six-week election that concludes on June 4, Modi and his party are expected to win a majority for the third time in a row and extend their decade in power.
But there are also concerns over human rights and religious and press freedoms that many political leaders, CEOs and bankers in the West appear willing to overlook. On our first episode of The Big Take Asia, host K. Oanh Ha and Bloomberg’s Sudhi Ranjan Sen chart how Modi built up so much power over the last several decades – and why he is both a beloved and divisive figure.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4.8
1919 ratings
Narendra Modi is arguably the world’s most popular politician. With nearly 1 billion Indians eligible to vote in a six-week election that concludes on June 4, Modi and his party are expected to win a majority for the third time in a row and extend their decade in power.
But there are also concerns over human rights and religious and press freedoms that many political leaders, CEOs and bankers in the West appear willing to overlook. On our first episode of The Big Take Asia, host K. Oanh Ha and Bloomberg’s Sudhi Ranjan Sen chart how Modi built up so much power over the last several decades – and why he is both a beloved and divisive figure.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1,193 Listeners
399 Listeners
429 Listeners
2,186 Listeners
988 Listeners
346 Listeners
1,770 Listeners
968 Listeners
192 Listeners
1,268 Listeners
65 Listeners
31 Listeners
58 Listeners
155 Listeners
2 Listeners
55 Listeners
2 Listeners
50 Listeners
7 Listeners
194 Listeners
11 Listeners
232 Listeners
7 Listeners
72 Listeners
14 Listeners
51 Listeners
149 Listeners
84 Listeners
368 Listeners
49 Listeners