For decades, Jantar Mantar occupied a special place in India’s democratic imagination. It was where voices from distant corners of the country converged to seek justice, recognition, and change. A protest at Jantar Mantar carried significance. It signalled that an issue had travelled all the way to the nation’s capital and demanded attention from those in power.
But times have changed.
Today, the country’s most famous protest site increasingly resembles a political ritual rather than a political instrument. Leaders arrive with supporters, slogans, banners, and cameras. Speeches are delivered. Memoranda are submitted. Social media posts are uploaded. News channels carry a few sound bites. Then everyone returns home.
The question that deserves asking is simple: Has Jantar Mantar become a stage where political activity is displayed rather than political outcomes achieved?
Nobody Protests Where Decisions Can Actually Be Influenced
The first bitter truth is that many modern protests appear designed more for visibility than effectiveness.
The purpose of a protest should be to influence those capable of solving a problem. Yet increasingly, demonstrations seem aimed at attracting media coverage rather than securing concrete results. Quiet negotiations, policy discussions, administrative follow-up, and sustained engagement often produce far greater outcomes than a few hours of slogan-shouting. However, such efforts lack dramatic visuals and therefore attract little public attention.
As a result, political leaders often find it easier to organise a dharna than to pursue the slower and less glamorous process of problem-solving. The protest itself becomes the message, regardless of whether it advances the cause.
Jantar Mantar Has Become a Political Washing Machine
Over the years, Jantar Mantar has evolved into a convenient political washing machine.
Governments use it. Opposition parties use it. Activist groups use it. Regional leaders use it. Everyone arrives carrying grievances and leaves carrying photographs. Responsibility enters one side, symbolism emerges from the other.
What makes this phenomenon particularly fascinating is that leaders who possess substantial political authority often present themselves as powerless protesters. Those responsible for governance frequently choose the language of agitation rather than administration. Instead of explaining solutions, they explain why someone else is responsible for the problem.
The result is a curious democratic spectacle where everyone claims to be fighting for the people while citizens continue waiting for actual delivery.
Social Media Replaced Street Power
The political landscape of the twenty-first century bears little resemblance to that of earlier decades.
There was a time when assembling thousands of people at Jantar Mantar represented a significant mobilisation of public opinion. Today, a single viral video can reach millions within hours. A well-crafted social media campaign can generate more awareness than an entire day’s protest.
Public opinion is increasingly formed on mobile screens rather than public squares.
Yet many political leaders continue to rely upon methods that belong to a different era. They gather supporters, organise rallies, and raise slogans in the belief that physical presence automatically translates into political pressure. In reality, the most influential political battles today are often fought through narratives, digital engagement, and public perception.
The power of the street has not disappeared, but it no longer enjoys the monopoly it once did.
The Real Audience Is Not Delhi
Perhaps the most uncomfortable truth is that many protests at Jantar Mantar are not actually directed at Delhi.
Their real audience is back home.
When leaders travel hundreds of kilometres to protest in the national capital, they are often communicating with their own supporters rather than with policymakers. The objective is to demonstrate commitment, generate headlines, and reassure voters that their concerns are being championed.
Whether the protest influences decision-makers is frequently secondary.
This is what explains the persistence of symbolic demonstrations even when participants privately understand that the actual decision-making process lies elsewhere. The protest becomes a political advertisement. The photographs become evidence of activism. The optics become the outcome.
In such circumstances, success is measured not by policy changes but by the number of headlines generated.
Results Matter More Than Resistance
Citizens ultimately judge leaders not by the intensity of their protests but by the quality of their results.
People remember who improved roads, strengthened hospitals, created jobs, enhanced education, and delivered public services. They rarely remember how many press conferences were held or how many placards were displayed before television cameras.
History is remarkably unforgiving in this regard.
It rewards outcomes rather than intentions. It celebrates delivery rather than demonstrations.
This is particularly relevant whenever major political demands are linked to high-profile protests. Constitutional changes, structural reforms, statehood questions, and major policy decisions are not achieved through slogans alone. They emerge through negotiation, persuasion, political strategy, and institutional processes.
A protest may draw attention to an issue. It cannot substitute for the hard work required to resolve it.
The irony is difficult to ignore. Jantar Mantar was originally constructed to observe the movement of celestial bodies. Centuries later, it has become a place where citizens observe the movement of politicians. Leaders arrive with great enthusiasm, deliver speeches about urgent causes, pose for photographs, submit memoranda, and depart.
The next day, another group arrives to repeat the cycle.
Perhaps that is why many citizens now view such demonstrations with increasing scepticism. Protest remains a vital democratic right and should never be diminished. But the growing tendency to confuse visibility with effectiveness has diluted its impact.
The bitter truth is that Jantar Mantar has not become less relevant because people protest there.
It has become less effective because too many political leaders have started believing that the protest itself is the achievement.
Citizens, however, continue to expect something more.
They expect solutions.
And solutions have never been manufactured on a stage.
When Jantar Mantar Protests Failed to Deliver the Desired Political Outcome
| Leader / Group | Main Demand or Protest | Immediate Publicity | Long-Term Outcome |
| V.P. Singh supporters (post-Mandal counter-protests era) | Various anti-government mobilizations in Delhi | High media attention | Political momentum shifted elsewhere; protests alone did not determine national politics. |
| Farmers’ groups (multiple pre-2020 protests) | MSP, debt relief, procurement reforms | Considerable coverage | Most faded without major structural policy changes. |
| Anna Hazare movement associates | Jan Lokpal and anti-corruption agenda | Massive national attention | Movement fractured; several leaders disappeared politically while institutional outcomes remained mixed. |
| Arvind Kejriwal’s early dharnas as Delhi CM | Administrative control and governance disputes | National headlines | Ultimately governance performance mattered more than protest politics. |
| Ex-servicemen OROP agitation | One Rank One Pension implementation | Sustained visibility | Partial concessions came through negotiations, not merely through the protest site itself. |
| Jat reservation protests delegations | Reservation-related demands | Significant political attention | Outcomes emerged through legal and political processes rather than dharnas alone. |
| Various statehood and regional autonomy groups | Separate statehood/autonomy demands | Periodic media focus | Most demands remained unresolved for years despite repeated demonstrations. |
| Numerous employees’ unions and daily-wager associations | Regularisation and service benefits | Recurring coverage | Many issues continue decades later despite repeated protests. |
Lesson: Publicity is not policy. Visibility is not victory. A protest can draw attention to a problem, but durable solutions usually emerge through negotiation, legislation, judicial processes, electoral strength, and administrative execution.
How a Jantar Mantar Protest Risks Reducing the National Conference to Petty Politics
- From Government to Agitator: The National Conference is not an opposition party in Jammu & Kashmir. It heads the elected government. When a ruling party spends more time protesting than governing, it risks appearing confused about its own role.
- Optics Over Outcomes: Citizens may begin to wonder whether the objective is to secure statehood or merely to create images and headlines that can be circulated back home.
- A Shrinking Political Horizon: A party that once negotiated directly with Prime Ministers and shaped national debates risks appearing reduced to the politics of placards, slogans and symbolic demonstrations.
- Substituting Governance with Theatre: Every hour spent preparing for a protest is an hour not spent explaining how governance, development, employment and public services will improve people’s lives.
- Turning a Constitutional Issue into a Street Event: Statehood is ultimately a constitutional and political question requiring dialogue, consensus and parliamentary action. Presenting it primarily as a protest issue risks trivialising its seriousness.
- Creating Expectations That Cannot Be Met: Supporters may be led to believe that a dharna can unlock statehood, whereas everyone involved understands that the decision lies elsewhere. Unrealistic expectations often lead to greater public disappointment.
- Looking More Reactive Than Strategic: Strong political leadership is usually associated with negotiations, alliances, persuasion and long-term planning. Frequent resort to protests can create the impression of limited strategic options.
- Handing Opponents an Easy Narrative: Political rivals can readily portray the protest as an admission that the party has exhausted its influence despite being in government.
- Replacing Substance with Symbolism: Citizens generally judge governments on roads, jobs, schools, hospitals, electricity and public services. Symbolic politics rarely compensates for shortcomings in these areas.
- Risking the Legacy of a Historic Party: The National Conference has historically projected itself as a major political force capable of influencing national policy. Repeated reliance on protest politics risks making it look like just another pressure group competing for attention in Delhi.
The Bitter Truth
The danger for Omar Abdullah is not that the protest may fail. The greater danger is that it may succeed only in generating photographs. If the outcome is limited to speeches, slogans and media coverage, the exercise may leave the impression that a party entrusted with governance chose agitation over influence, symbolism over strategy, and optics over outcomes.




