By Nimrat Ranhotra
The ink fades faster than we expect. A few days after voting, it disappears from our fingers, quietly, without ceremony. The conversations go with it. The urgency softens. Group chats that once debated policies, promises, and possibilities fall back into routine. Somewhere between celebration and disappointment, we return to our lives as if something important has concluded.
But it hasn’t. It has only begun.
This feels especially visible around elections in West Bengal. Here, elections do not just bring politics closer, they make it unavoidable. For days, attention sharpens. The weeks leading up to elections are intense, charged with rhetoric, hope, accusation, and spectacle. Political presence is everywhere, sometimes energising, sometimes overwhelming, and at times coercive in its persistence. Speeches are analysed, alliances are questioned, and opinions grow louder.
And then, almost abruptly, it recedes. I find myself returning to every update, waiting for what comes next. There is a sense that this election could bring a shift that feels nothing short of revolutionary, not just in outcome, but in what it might reset.
We have learned to treat democracy like an event. Something with a clear build up, a visible climax, and a definite end. We follow campaigns, argue over candidates, and form opinions that feel urgent and necessary. Once results are declared, we step away, as if our role has been fulfilled.
But governance does not work like that.
It is slower, quieter, and far less visible. It unfolds in decisions that rarely trend, in policies that do not dominate conversations, and in systems that shape daily life without announcing themselves. It is in these quieter spaces that the real measure of leadership begins. It is also where questions of accountability become harder to ask.In recent years, concerns around political culture in West Bengal have not only been about policy, but about how power is experienced on the ground through local dominance, pressure, and a sense that political presence extends into everyday life in ways that are not always comfortable. The persistence of political intimidation at local levels and the normalisation of aggressive partisanship have created an environment that can feel deeply limiting.
These are not always the stories that lead headlines. But they linger in conversations, in silences, and in the things people hesitate to say openly. No government is beyond criticism. No system remains healthy without the possibility of change.
The idea of a new government is often framed as a dramatic shift, a break, a correction, a fresh start. But at its core, it represents something simpler. The need for power to remain accountable, for authority to feel answerable, and for people to believe that governance is not fixed, but responsive.
Because when that belief weakens, participation begins to feel symbolic rather than meaningful. Elections give us a moment of choice. Governance tests whether that choice continues to matter after the moment has passed.
Perhaps that is why attention drops after results. Staying engaged requires more than opinion. It requires patience, consistency, and a willingness to notice what does not immediately demand attention.
To dismiss these concerns as exaggerated would be easy. But it would also be futile. Because democracy does not weaken in its loudest moments. It weakens in the long, quiet stretches that follow, when participation is replaced by distance, and observation gives way to assumption.
It is easier to debate before an election than to observe after it. Easier to choose a side than to question what that side becomes in power. Easier to speak in moments of intensity than to remain aware in moments of quiet. But democracy does not depend only on moments of intensity. It depends on what follows them. Because governance shapes more than elections ever can. It shapes the conditions people live in, the systems they rely on, and the boundaries within which they speak, work, and exist.
The ink fades. The conversations shift. The urgency dissolves. And in that space, between what we express and what we continue to observe, democracy either deepens, or quietly distances itself from the people it is meant to serve. Maybe the real question is not just who governs next, but whether governance itself continues to feel accountable, visible, and open to change.
We show up for the vote. What happens after should matter just as much.





