Nepal, April 20 -- Nepal's 2026 elections have been widely framed as a rupture-a moment of reckoning shaped by youth anger, media scrutiny and a deep erosion of political credibility. But this is not the first time Nepal has stood at what feels like a turning point. It is rather the latest in a long series of beginnings that have yet to lead anywhere. What Nepal confronts today is a crisis of outcomes.
The real question, therefore, is not who has won or lost, but whether anything fundamental has changed. Can a state transform itself through the periodic rotation of power? Or does real transformation demand something far more difficult-a restructuring of institutions, incentives and the very purpose of governance?
A system in stasis
Nep...
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