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First Place
Daniel Berehulak
Getty Images Reportage for The New York Times
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AMRITSAR, PUNJAB, INDIA - APRIL 30, 2014: Indian men cast their vote at a polling station on April 30, 2014 in a village near Amritsar, in the agricultural state of Punjab, India. Narendra Modi, leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party, won a landslide victory in India's 2014 general elections, which took place between April 7 and May 12. With over 550 million votes cast, it was the largest election in history. It was the first time since 1984 that a party has won enough seats to govern without the support of other parties. Modi, the former governor of Gujarat State, led his party to defeat the Indian National Congress party, which has led the central government for a total of 49 years since the country's 1947 Independence. In the run up to the election, with India's economy faltering and the government plagued by corruption scandals, BJP were able to position itself as the party of the urban middle class, an increasing constituency as more Indians move from the countryside to cities and those cities, in turn, become more prosperous.
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