In defence of Himanta Biswa Sarma: The "AntiGaslighting" CM
June 10, 2026
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Home Politics

In defence of Himanta Biswa Sarma: The “AntiGaslighting” chief minister

Assam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma's statements echo long-standing concerns flagged by constitutional authorities, including observations made by the Supreme Court on the impact of unchecked cross-border migration in Assam

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Feb 2, 2026, 05:10 pm IST
in Politics, Bharat, Assam
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Assam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma

Assam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma

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If you’ve been scrolling through social media lately, you’d think Himanta Biswa Sarma woke up one morning and decided to audition for the role of a “villain” in a political thriller. The outrage brigade is out in full force, clutching their virtual pearls because the Assam CM used the word “Miyan” and dared to point out that, hey, maybe having a “silent invasion” across the border isn’t exactly the “vibrant diversity” we were promised.

But before we order the pitchforks and write the think-pieces, let’s take a deep breath and look at the logic. Because as it turns out, Himanta isn’t just “freestyling” his political rhetoric; he’s basically reading the Cliff Notes of the Supreme Court of India.

1.  When the Supreme Court is Your Scriptwriter
Usually, when a politician says “demographic invasion,” the elite “intellectual” circuit screams “Conspiracy theory!” or “Dog-whistle!” Well, if it’s a dog-whistle, then the Supreme Court is the one blowing it.

In the landmark Sarbananda Sonowal vs. Union of India case, the apex court didn’t just use strong language; they dropped a verbal nuke. They literally called the influx of illegal migrants an “external aggression” and a “silent invasion.” When the highest constitutional court in the land warns that lower Assam could be severed from the rest of the country and turned into a foreign province, it’s not “communalism”—it’s Geography 101. Himanta is basically the student in the back of the class who actually reads the textbook while everyone else is busy making paper aeroplanes out of the Constitution.

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2. The “Miyan” Math: It’s Not Hate, It’s a Census Crisis
The controversy over the word “Miyan” is a classic case of ignoring the context to win a debate. In Assam, the term has specific baggage related to illegal migration from Bangladesh. Himanta isn’t attacking a religion; he’s flagging a National Security breach.

Look, if your neighbourhood suddenly sees a 400 per cent spike in “unregistered guests” who aren’t on the lease, you don’t call it a “cultural exchange”—you call it an encroachment.

Himanta is just the “Society Secretary” who’s tired of people jumping the fence, taking over the park, and then demanding the right to change the society’s name. If acknowledging a “demographic invasion” is hateful, then apparently the Supreme Court needs to attend a sensitivity training workshop.

3. The “Chicken’s Neck” Isn’t Just for Tandoori

The critics love to pretend this is an attack on Indian citizens. But read the fine print: Himanta’s beef is specifically with illegal migration. He’s trying to protect the identity of the indigenous Assamese—the people who actually have a stake in the land’s history and future.

Ignoring the Supreme Court’s warning about losing the Siliguri Corridor (the “Chicken’s Neck” that connects the Northeast to the rest of India) is like ignoring a fire alarm because you think the siren is “too loud and offensive.” You can hate the noise all you want, but the house is still on fire. Himanta is simply refusing to play the violin while Rome (or in this case, Guwahati) burns under the pressure of illegal demographic shifts.

Common Sense Over Soft Feelings

Himanta Biswa Sarma is essentially the “Anti-Gaslight” Chief Minister. He’s refusing to pretend that a massive, state-altering demographic shift is “natural” just to look polite at Delhi dinner parties.

He’s doing exactly what the court asked the government to do decades ago: Identify, Delete, and Protect. If telling the truth makes people uncomfortable, maybe the problem isn’t the guy telling the truth—maybe it’s the truth itself that’s actually scary.

While the pundits in air-conditioned studios analyse his “tone,” Himanta is busy making sure Assam doesn’t end up needing a visa to talk to the rest of India. And honestly?

That’s not “polarisation”—that’s just good management.

Topics: Supreme CourtBangladeshAsam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa SarmaAnti-GaslightSarbananda Sonowal
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