India

Sanjay Raut on Democracy, Elections, and International Concerns

Friday, May 8, 2026
5 min read
Sanjay Raut on Democracy, Elections, and International Concerns

Sanjay Raut, the Shiv Sena (UBT) MP , stepped in to defend his letter sent to US President Donald Trump. It was all about the congratulations made to Prime Minister Modi following the BJP’s big win in the West Bengal Assembly elections. Raut insisted it was his duty to raise concerns about the whole democratic process.

He questioned why foreign leaders, like Trump, Macron, and Starmer, would congratulate Modi just because of a state election outcome. He felt democratic institutions in India were really under a lot of pressure right now.

“I believe the news is false,” Raut stated. “If Modi wins the Gram Panchayat elections tomorrow, will President Trump, Macron, and Starmer congratulate him? America is the largest democracy. So is India. The whole world sees what is happening in the name of democracy in India.”

He brought up the other opposition voices, saying Rahul Gandhi, Uddhav Thackeray, and Mamata Banerjee have all repeatedly voiced their views on this.

Raut felt he needed the international community to actually pay attention to the allegations floating around the electoral process. This included claims about how constitutional institutions were being used and where central forces were deployed during those elections.

“I feel it is my duty to correct President Donald Trump,” he continued. “The world needs to know what is happening in the name of democracy in this country. In West Bengal. In Tamil Nadu. In Assam.” He added that he wouldn’t believe Trump actually read his tweet, but he felt he had to do his job. He threw a jab, saying these BJP people were just tarnishing Modi’s image.

The criticism didn't stop there. Raut also hit on the role of Governors, especially in states ruled by the opposition. He suggested that the Raj Bhavans were not neutral spaces.

“BJP agents sitting in the Raj Bhavan, and it’s named Lok Bhavan,” he remarked, sharply. “But in Lok Bhavan, people’s sentiments and votes are murdered. The party with 108 members should be called first. That’s what our Constitution says.”

This led into a bigger point about unity. Raut then talked about Mamata Banerjee. He said the opposition parties would unite behind her. This wasn't just about politics; he framed it as a fight to “save democracy.”

“Now, Mamata will fight. We will all join Mamata in her fight,” he said. Uddhav Thackeray had spoken to her. He stressed that this fight to save democracy has to continue across the country, and everyone needs to join in.

There was another layer of complaint about the consequences of this political shift. Raut alleged that the BJP’s rise often brought about a clear deterioration in law and order.

“There is no law and order issue,” he claimed. “Wherever the BJP goes and forms the government, it automatically disrupts the law and order there.”

Earlier, Raut had already addressed Trump in a detailed post on X. He objected to the US President congratulating Modi over the West Bengal Assembly results. He wrote that those were state-level elections. An internal matter for India’s federal democracy. Any outside endorsement felt premature and misplaced.

The numbers behind the election were stark. The BJP grabbed 207 seats in that 294-member Assembly. The Trinamool Congress, which had been in charge for fifteen years, only managed 80 seats. That gap, Raut seemed to imply, was the real story.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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