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India's ruling party BJP's predilection for numbers, especially Number 4

India's ruling party BJP's predilection for numbers, especially Number 4

I usually do not write anything about numerology, given that my time is occupied by astrology mostly. However, some time back, I started observing a strong preference of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which is India's ruling party now since quite some time, for the Number 4. Today's assumption of office by the new Delhi Chief Minister confirmed that suspicion, so I decided to look more into it.

On looking at some dates in the past few years, I found that while Number 4 (and sometimes its numerological counterpart, Number 8) did rule the roost completely in 2024, but if one sees things from 2020 onwards, overall, besides Number 4, which does hold a dominating position, there is also some preference for Number 7 (and, occasionally, its counterpart, Number 2).

[A digression: In Chaldean numerology, 4-8, 2-7, 3-6-9 are groupings of numbers with similar energies, with 1 and 5 forming no group with another number. Note also that in Vedic astrology, Number 4 is associated with Rahu, the planet associated with material ambition and power, greed, illusion and छद्म, masquerade or deception. The equivalent in Western tropical astrology would not be the North Node but Pluto.]

Let me start with all the election dates in the year 2024. (Note that astrologically when you begin something, that is an important auguring moment: thus, when an election takes place in several rounds, it is the first round's date that is important, so only that is taken in this discussion.)

Year 2024

  • 19 April 2024 (1+9+4+2+0+2+4=22=4): national elections
  • 13 May 2024 (1+3=4): assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh & Odisha
  • 18 September 2024 (1+8+9+2+0+2+4=26=8): assembly elections in Jammu & Kashmir
  • 5 October 2024 (5+8=13=4): assembly elections in Haryana
  • 13 November 2024 (1+3=4): assembly elections in Jharkhand
  • 20 November 2024 (2+11=13=4): assembly elections in Maharashtra

As we can see, each and every election date of 2024 has the influence/energy of Number 4 (or its counterpart, Number 8) in it.

Now let us look at election dates for the other years from 2020 onwards.

Year 2020

  • 8 February 2020 (8): assembly elections in Delhi
  • 28 October 2020 (2+8+10=20=2): assembly elections in Bihar

Year 2021

  • 27 March 2021 (2+7+3+2+0+2+1=17=8): assembly elections in West Bengal & Assam
  • 6 April 2021 (6): assembly elections in Kerala & Tamil Nadu

Year 2022

  • 10 February 2022 (1+0+2=3): assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh
  • 14 February 2022 (1+4+2=7): assembly elections in Uttarakhand & Goa
  • 20 February 2022 (2+0+2=4): assembly elections in Punjab
  • 28 February 2022 (2+8+2=12=3): assembly elections in Manipur
  • 18 July 2022 (1+8+7+2+0+2+2=22=4): Presidential election
  • 6 August 2022 (6+8+2+0+2+2=20=2): Vice Presidential election
  • 12 November 2022 (1+2+11+2+0+2+2=20=2): assembly elections in Himachal Pradesh
  • 1 December 2022 (1+12=13=4): assembly elections in Gujarat

Year 2023

  • 16 February 2023 (1+6=7): assembly elections in Tripura
  • 27 February 2023 (2+7+2=11=2): assembly elections in Meghalaya & Nagaland
  • 10 May 2023 (1+0+5+2+0+2+3=13=4): assembly elections in Karnataka
  • 7 November 2023 (7): assembly elections in Chhattisgarh & Mizoram
  • 17 November 2023 (1+7=8): assembly elections in Madhya Pradesh
  • 25 November 2023 (2+5=7): assembly elections in Rajasthan
  • 30 November 2023 (3+0=3): assembly elections in Telangana

Year 2024 (already covered above)

Year 2025

  • 5 February 2025 (5+2=7): assembly elections in Delhi

Thus, as you would notice, that there is clearly a strong pattern of preference for dates that yield either Numbers 4-8 or Numbers 2-7. We could only find four instances in all the above dates where these Numbers are not in play. We analysed 26 dates above, and out of them only 4 dates did not yield Numbers 4-8 or Numbers 2-7!

What is curious here is that it is a supposedly independent body, the Election Commission of India, which decides the poll dates.

Let us now look at some non-election dates and events, where the BJP had control or where the BJP or its allies had someone assuming office at a top position:

15 May 2022 (8): Manik Saha becomes Chief Minister of Tripura

26 May 2022 (8): Vinai Kumar Saxena becomes new Lieutenant Governor of Delhi

25 July 2022 (7): Droupadi Murmu becomes President of India

11 August 2022 (7): Jagdeep Dhankhar becomes Vice President of India

28 May 2023 (4): New Parliament House is inaugurated

4 August 2023 (4): The Delhi Ordinance Bill is passed in the Upper House

13 December 2023 (4): Vishnu Deo Sai becomes Chief Minister of Chhattisgarh

13 December 2023 (4): Mohan Yadav becomes Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh

15 December 2023 (7): Bhajan Lal Sharma becomes Chief Minister of Rajasthan

22 January 2024 (4): Inauguration of the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya

11 March 2024 (4): Citizenship Amendment Act implemented

12 June 2024 (8): N. Chandrababu Naidu becomes Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh

12 June 2024 (8): Mohan Charan Majhi becomes Chief Minister of Odisha

1 July 2024 (8): Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, the new Criminal Code, enters into force

5 December 2024 (8): Devendra Fadnavis becomes Chief Minister of Maharashtra

20 February 2025 (4): Rekha Gupta becomes Chief Minister of Delhi

As you can see, except for Nayab Singh Saini's 12 March 2024 date of becoming the Chief Minister of Haryana, every single date carries the stamp of 4-8 (mostly) or 2-7.


A few other seminal dates from earlier years for the present BJP dispensation:

19 July 2016 (8): Citizenship (Amendment) Bill introduced in the Parliament

8 November 2016 (8): announcement of demonetisation of the majority of Indian currency notes

26 February 2019 (8): the Balakot airstrike, a bombing raid conducted by India's warplanes in Pakistan

5 August 2019 (4): Revocation of the special status to Jammu & Kashmir, granted under Article 370

22 March 2020 (4): Janta Curfew date (the one-day lockdown before the actual Covid-19 lockdown in India).

Lastly, let us see one very important date for the BJP, arguably the most important date for it in the last two decades:

26 May 2014 (8): Shri Narendra Modi becomes the Prime Minister of India for the first time

The above date 26 May 2014 is an interesting, foolproof date, selected carefully. Look at it:

26 gives 2+6=8.

26 May gives 8+5=13=4.

26 May 2014 gives 4+2+0+1+4=11=2.

May I rest my case now?

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