Politics tag — quick, clear updates from RealTime TV News

Politics affects your city, your commute, and sometimes even your weekend plans. On this tag page you’ll find fast reports, simple explainers, and opinion pieces that help you understand what’s actually happening and why it matters.

What you'll find here

We mix breaking stories with practical explainers. For example, our report on Arun Gawli’s bail breaks down what his release could mean for Mumbai’s underworld and local safety. Another piece answers whether you can file a case directly in the Supreme Court of India and explains the usual path through lower courts. If you want to send suggestions to the Supreme Court, we have a short, step-by-step guide showing how to draft and where to send them.

Politics isn’t only court cases and crime stories. We cover leaders and their public image — like the piece on whether Narendra Modi is the most loved prime minister — and we report on how weather or events affect politics, such as the postponed Nagpur visit. Short culture or regional posts, like what people from Uttar Pradesh take pride in, help you see how politics ties into identity and local issues.

How to use these stories

Start with the latest headlines for quick updates. If a story sounds complex, open the explainer pieces — they use plain language and give next steps you can take, like where to send a letter or how a court appeal works. For local impact, look for reporting that mentions police, public events, or infrastructure changes; those stories show immediate effects on daily life.

Want to follow a topic closely? Bookmark this tag and check back often. Our posts mix news and Q&A so you can both stay updated and learn how the system works. If you need to cite a story or share it, use the headline and a short summary to explain why it matters to your friends or community.

We cut the jargon. Each article aims to answer three simple questions: what happened, why it matters, and what might come next. That approach keeps you informed without wasting time. Expect clear timelines, named sources where available, and practical takeaways — not vague opinions.

If you’re new to following politics online, read a recent breaking story, then pick one explainer. That sequence helps you connect headlines to the bigger picture. If you already follow things closely, check our quick takes for links and fresh angles you might not see elsewhere.

Browse the posts, pick a topic, and if something matters to you — comment or save it. Politics changes fast; this tag helps you keep up without the confusion.

News in India: What are the political leanings of firstpost.com?

14 February 2023

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