
New Delhi, December 27, 2025: As 2025 draws to a close, historians and citizens alike are looking back at a year that redefined “messy.” While India entered the year with the promise of becoming the world’s third-largest economy, it ends it as a nation grappling with a series of “latent” issues that finally boiled over into public crises. From the deepening ethnic scars in Manipur to a “vote theft” controversy that shook democratic trust, 2025 was the year almost everything became an issue.
The year was defined by a sharp contrast in political fortunes. The BJP reasserted its dominance with emphatic wins in Delhi and Bihar, ending long droughts and proving its narrative control remains potent. However, this electoral “winning juggernaut” was met with a fragmented but vocal opposition.
The political atmosphere turned truly chaotic in July with the sudden resignation of Vice-President Jagdeep Dhankhar, citing health concerns but sparking feverish speculation about institutional friction. Meanwhile, the Waqf (Amendment) Act became a primary flashpoint, triggering nationwide protests and a high-stakes legal battle in the Supreme Court over religious autonomy and state control.
Perhaps the most damaging “mess” of 2025 was the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. What the Election Commission termed a “purification” exercise was branded “vote chori” (vote theft) by the opposition.
On paper, India’s GDP growth remained resilient, hovering around 7%. Yet, the ground reality was a “messy” tale of two economies.
2025 was one of the costliest years for climate disasters. A brutal heatwave with temperatures touching 53°C paralyzed parts of North India, while extreme monsoon flooding caused losses exceeding $5.6 billion.
On the security front, the “latent” crisis in Manipur reached a breaking point. The surfacing of controversial audio recordings allegedly involving the Chief Minister led to his resignation in early 2025, but the state remained under President’s Rule as ethnic reconciliation stayed elusive.
As we head into 2026, the “mess” of 2025 serves as a stark reminder: economic numbers alone cannot mask deep-seated social and institutional friction. India has proven its capacity for decisive action, but the year has shown that when systemic issues are left “latent,” their eventual eruption is rarely clean.