The Hindu Editorial Vocabulary– Jun 6, 2022; Day 304
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Difficult Word/ PhraseContextual Sense
Bypoll an election held in a single political constituency to fill a vacancy arising during a government’s term of office
Do-or-die Desperately determined
High-stake involving serious risks if there is no success
Slumber Dormant state
Chaos A state of extreme confusion and disorder
Stronghold an area in which there is a lot of support for a particular belief or group of people especially a political party
Demise death 
Align Adjust 
Referendum A popular vote by the electorate whether to approve a specific legislative act
Championing to support or fight for a particular group or idea
Reinforce Make stronger
Humility a lack of false pride
Recalibrate Make fine adjustments
Necessitate to make something necessary
Revamp to change or arrange something again, in order to improve it
Nurture Help grow 
Eat humble pie speak or behave in a way which tells people that you admit you were wrong about something
Churn frequent replacement of employees with new employees

Message from voters: On Odisha, Uttarakhand bypoll results

Chief Ministers of Odisha and Uttarakhand have been strengthened by the bypoll (an election held in a single political constituency to fill a vacancy arising during a government’s term of office) results

It is not often that by-elections are of any significant consequence. But Uttarakhand, where the Chief Minister was in a do-or-die (Desperately determined) battle; Kerala, where the main Opposition, the Congress, was fighting for survival; and Odisha, where the ruling party was seeking another vote of confidence; all saw high-stakes (involving serious risks if there is no success) contests. An impressive victory in the Thrikkakara Assembly by-election has revived the Congress in Kerala from the slumber (dorment state) and the chaos (A state of extreme confusion and disorder) that had gripped the party following two consecutive Assembly election defeats, in 2016 and 2021. The seat is a Congress stronghold (an area in which there is a lot of support for a particular belief or group of people especially a political party) that stayed with the party even in 2021, when the ruling Left Democratic Front (LDF) won 99 of the 140 seats. The seat had fallen vacant following the demise (death) of P.T. Thomas, who had shown great courage to stand up to the Catholic Church on issues of public policy. His wife Uma Thomas was the Congress candidate. The LDF was criticised on grounds that it sought to align (adjust) its selection of candidate and campaign with the wishes of the Church. The Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) also turned the election into a referendum (A popular vote by the electorate whether to approve a specific legislative act) on the Silver Line semi-high speed railway project that the Pinarayi Vijayan government was championing (to support or fight for a particular group or idea). The victory, by an increased margin in comparison with 2021, reinforces (Make stronger) the leadership of V.D. Satheesan, the leader of Opposition, and K. Sudhakaran, the President of the Congress State unit. The CPI(M) and the LDF must take the lessons from the results with humility (a lack of false pride) and appropriately recalibrate (Make fine adjustments) their positions.

In Odisha’s Brajarajnagar Assembly constituency, the ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD) candidate, Alaka Mohanty, won by a margin of 66,122 votes, defeating the Congress that pushed the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to the third position. The bypoll was necessitated (to make something necessary) by the death of the winner’s husband Kishore Mohanty. The result has further strengthened the hands of Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik, who revamped (to change or arrange something again, in order to improve it) his Council of Ministers immediately after the victory. The BJP that has been nurturing (help grow) ambitions to replace the BJD in the State had to eat humble pie (speak or behave in a way which tells people that you admit you were wrong about something) in the seat, though it is part of the Bargarh Parliamentary Constituency which it had won in 2019. In 2024, Mr. Patnaik will be on his way to becoming one of the longest serving Chief Ministers. In Uttarakhand, Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami won the Champawat Assembly seat as expected, tightening his grip over the party. The BJP has been going through a churn (frequent replacement of employees with new employees) in the State, leading to the elevation of Mr. Dhami who was not an MLA, after the Assembly elections in February-March. But the path ahead will depend on how smartly Mr. Dhami navigates the dangerous roads in the hill State’s politics.

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