Tag: NCP

Why Nepal’s Youth Won and Bangladesh’s Faltered

Bangladesh’s political terrain is considerably more rigid. Dynastic narratives continue to exert powerful influence over voter perceptions. The Awami League remains closely associated with the legacy of Sheikh Mujib, while the BNP continues to revolve around the Zia family. In such an environment, new political movements must not only compete with established organizations but also confront deeply embedded historical loyalties.

Trusting the Elders: How a Youth Party Got Talked Out of Power

In the end, that is what happened to NCP. It let itself be persuaded that the bravest thing a youth party can do in its founding election is to make itself small.

Should the Police Killings Be Investigated?

If unlawful killings by police are prosecuted while unlawful killings of police are ignored, the law becomes partisan. If mob killings are investigated while state killings are diluted, the law becomes cynical.

What did February 12 Tell Us?

The immediate challenge before Prime Minister Tarique Rahman is to slow down the gyration of the turning wheel and to set us on a straight path. To assess such possibilities we need to clearly understand the political lessons from the recent elections and to explore the pitfalls which lie ahead.

Counterpoint Generations | Ep 9

Episode 9 of Counterpoint Generations reflects on the immediate post-election landscape, examining voter participation, the formation of the new cabinet, and the institutional challenges facing the incoming government as parliament prepares to begin its term.

How the NCP-Jamaat Alliance Faltered by Forsaking the 1971 Narrative

The 2026 electorate delivered a clear message: A revolution can topple a regime, but it cannot govern by erasing the cultural DNA of its people. Voters chose a path of stability, signaling that while they were ready for a new chapter, they were not ready to rip out the first pages of the book.

Nine Reasons Jamaat Missed Its Moment

On the question of 1971 and apology, Jamaat’s tone was arrogant. Had they shown even minimal reconciliation, people might have celebrated August 5’s victory with them on the election day, specially given their alliance with the student movement.

Reflections of an NCP Candidate

Despite a paucity of resources, a showing of 66,000 was very creditable. Even without all their resources, without AL and minority votes, the BNP candidate would likely not have prevailed. This was an encouraging start that provides a strong base for the future.

NCP and the Perils of Losing One’s Way Too Soon

The NCP is still young. Its leaders are young. When it was launched, the response was electric; crowds gathered wherever it went. That energy is now waning. The atrophy has begun -- but it is not irreversible.

The New Fault-Lines in Bangladeshi Politics

The axes of Bangladeshi politics have shifted dramatically. Where do the political parties line up in the new dynamic?

Is Jamaat Using NCP as a Secular Shield?

If NCP grows too strong, it risks becoming a genuine rival. My sense is that Jamaat has neither the intention to reform itself nor the willingness to allow such growth. Jamaat will remain the benchmark of right-wing politics in Bangladesh, while exploiting the NCP whenever a secular shield becomes necessary. The greatest casualty of this alliance will be July itself.

The New Battle for Bangladesh

Bangladesh’s post-Hasina politics is marked by a fierce contest between old elites and rising aspirants vying to fill newly opened power spaces. This debate is simply one front in this broader elite struggle reshaping the country’s political future.

The Mamdani Moment and Bangladesh’s Missed Chance

The NYC mayor-elect did what Bangladeshi politics refuses to do: Connect democratic renewal to economic dignity. He showed that when people believe their material lives will improve, they don’t hesitate to show up.

Ringing Out the Old, Ringing in the New

The conventional view of politics is an old-fashioned journey

Why So Serious, NCP?

Politics is not a moral monastery. It’s a battlefield of imperfect allies and temporary truces. If the NCP keeps attacking everyone around it, soon it will have no one left to fight beside. Reform may begin with rebellion, but it survives through relationships. And without those, no revolution lasts long enough to write its own constitution.

When Reform Becomes Shortcut: NCP’s PR Gamble

Proportional representation sounds fair, but can lead to fragmentation and fracture of the polity. In the Bangladeshi context, it may deliver instability we don't need.