Rajnath Singh eyes Modi's fourth term as key to Viksit Bharat goal

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Rajnath Singh eyes Modi's fourth term as key to Viksit Bharat goal

Synopsis

A sitting Cabinet minister has put the phrase 'fourth term' on the record — Defence Minister Rajnath Singh explicitly tied Modi's post-2029 leadership to the Viksit Bharat goal at a public event in New Delhi, making it one of the most direct senior-level signals yet of the BJP's long-arc electoral framing ahead of 2029.

Key Takeaways

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh referenced a fourth term for PM Modi at the NBT Utsav event on 4 July in New Delhi .
Singh described Modi's 12 years in office as transformational and essential to the Viksit Bharat vision.
He highlighted Make in India , the semiconductor manufacturing push, abrogation of Article 370 , and the rollback of Maoism as key milestones.
Singh presented NBT Navratna awards to nine personalities and one NBT Bhushan award at the 79th anniversary of Navbharat Times.
The remarks are among the most direct senior- BJP references to post- 2029 electoral continuity for Modi.

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on Saturday, 4 July described Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 12 years in office as transformational for India, and openly referenced a fourth term for Modi after the 2029 Lok Sabha elections as the critical window to realise the Viksit Bharat vision. Singh was speaking as the chief guest at the NBT Utsav programme in New Delhi, marking the 79th anniversary of Navbharat Times.

What Rajnath Singh Said

'During the fourth term of PM Modi, the world will see the nation's confident march in the direction of rising as Viksit Bharat,' Singh said in his address. He framed Modi's continued leadership as indispensable to completing what he called an ongoing civilisational and economic transformation.

Singh also articulated a broader philosophy of governance: 'Embracing modernity while taking pride in our civilisation, culture, and heritage is the hallmark of the new India. It is this balance that empowers India to lead the 21st century with confidence. The confluence of Tradition and Technology is India's greatest strength.'

Key Achievements Highlighted

The Defence Minister argued that the Modi-led government had dismantled what he described as a negative institutional mindset that had taken hold in the pre-2014 era. He pointed to flagship programmes — Make in India and the semiconductor manufacturing campaign — as evidence of a structural shift in India's industrial ambition.

Singh also credited the government with actions that critics had once deemed impossible, including the abrogation of Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir and the significant rollback of Left-wing extremism (Maoism) across affected states.

India's Global Standing

'Today, observers do not ask the question if India can achieve a certain target. They ask how fast India will achieve a particular target,' Singh said, underlining what he characterised as a decisive shift in global perceptions of India's capabilities.

He further noted that over the past decade, India's economy had expanded consistently despite global headwinds, driven by a model that, in his framing, pairs economic growth with digital empowerment, good governance, and social justice.

NBT Navratna Awards

On the occasion, Singh presented the NBT Navratna awards to nine eminent personalities and one NBT Bhushan award, recognising contributions across fields as part of Navbharat Times' anniversary celebrations.

What This Signals

Singh's explicit invocation of a 'fourth term' is among the most direct senior-level references by a Cabinet minister to post-2029 electoral continuity for Modi. This comes amid the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)'s ongoing effort to frame the Viksit Bharat 2047 agenda — India's centenary of independence — as a long-arc project requiring sustained political leadership. With the 2029 general elections still years away, the remark is being read as an early signal of the party's intent to centre its next campaign on developmental continuity.

Point of View

The BJP is attempting to convert a development target into an electoral argument years before the next general election. The risk in this framing is that it personalises a national goal, making the 2047 vision contingent on one leader rather than institutional momentum. It also raises accountability questions: if 12 years have been transformational, what specific, measurable milestones remain — and who verifies them? Mainstream coverage has largely treated this as a political speech; the more pointed question is whether the Viksit Bharat metrics are publicly trackable enough to hold any government, present or future, to account.
NationPress
4 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What did Rajnath Singh say about PM Modi's fourth term?
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh said that during 'the fourth term of PM Modi, the world will see the nation's confident march in the direction of rising as Viksit Bharat.' He made the remark on 4 July at the NBT Utsav event in New Delhi, marking it as one of the most explicit senior-level references to post-2029 electoral continuity for Modi.
What is Viksit Bharat and why is it significant?
Viksit Bharat — or 'Developed India' — is the BJP-led government's overarching goal to transform India into a fully developed nation by 2047, the centenary of independence. Singh framed it as a long-term project requiring sustained political leadership beyond the current term.
What achievements did Rajnath Singh highlight in his speech?
Singh cited Make in India, the semiconductor manufacturing campaign, the abrogation of Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir, and the significant reduction of Left-wing extremism as landmark achievements of the Modi government over the past 12 years.
What was the NBT Utsav event where Singh spoke?
NBT Utsav was a programme marking the 79th anniversary of Navbharat Times, held in New Delhi on 4 July. Singh attended as chief guest and presented NBT Navratna awards to nine eminent personalities and one NBT Bhushan award.
How has India's global standing changed according to Rajnath Singh?
Singh argued that global observers have shifted from questioning whether India can achieve targets to asking how quickly it will achieve them. He credited this to consistent economic growth alongside digital empowerment, good governance, and social justice under the Modi government.
Nation Press
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