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'India Faces Severe Authoritarian Threat, Worst Among 6 Nations': US Group Protect Democracy

author The Wire Staff
Jul 10, 2024
According to the Authoritarian Threat Index, India's rating of 3.5 is the highest. The US is at 2.1, and Poland has a score of 2.3. Germany has a score of 1.5, Canada 1.5 and the UK, 1.8.

New Delhi: Protect Democracy, a non-profit, anti-authoritarianism group which acts as a watchdog for US democracy maintains an Authoritarian Threat Index which counts India as among countries facing a “severe” authoritarian threat.

The index was last updated today, July 10.

According to the project’s website, the index surveys a randomly selected sub-sample of the respondent pool of around 1,000 scholars each weekday and calculates daily a rolling average of these responses. The index has done this since 2017. It functions as a live measure of democracy scholars’ views on threats to mainly American democracy, but it also tracks five other countries. Among them – as recently highlighted by the Financial Times in a report – India’s threat is deemed “severe” at 3.5.

India’s rating is the highest. The US currently scores 2.1 with a “significant” threat warning. Poland has a score of 2.3. Germany has a score of 1.5, Canada 1.5 and the UK, 1.8. These countries face a “low” threat.

The rating defines “severe threats” as violations that signal significant erosion of democracy quality and warn of high potential for breakdown in the future.

The score from 1 (healthy democracy) to 5 (total dictatorship) compiles ratings from democracy experts across the country and political spectrum on six key metrics – treatment of media, executive constraints, elections, civil liberties, civil violence, and rhetoric.

In all, India veers towards severe threat. A comparative picture with the US is below.

India’s track record on democracy indices is dismal. Earlier this year, the V-Dem (or Varieties of Democracy) report found India to be in the bottom 40-50% of the 179 countries reviewed, and now situated between Niger (better) and Ivory Coast (worse). India is no longer termed a democracy, but “dropped down to electoral autocracy in 2018” and remained there at the end of 2023.

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