NEW DELHI: In a landmark moment for the nation’s political landscape, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has officially become India’s longest-serving elected prime minister. Marking an unbroken tenure of 4,399 days in office on Wednesday, PM Modi has overtaken the long-standing record held by the country’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru.
The record specifically measures time served as a democratically elected leader following institutionalized national polls. While Jawaharlal Nehru led the country from 1947 onward, his tenure as an elected prime minister began after the historic 1952 general elections and lasted for 4,398 days until May 1964. Having been first elected to the top post in 2014, PM Modi’s uninterrupted leadership has now eclipsed that milestone.
The milestone drew high-profile accolades from across the Union Cabinet. Defence Minister Rajnath Singh hailed the achievement as a powerful symbol of the enduring trust reposed in his leadership by the Indian electorate, praising his “Nation First” governance philosophy.
Emphasizing the economic and social impact of the last 12 years, Union Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal noted that the administration’s transformative grassroots initiatives have successfully modernized the economy while uplifting farmers, MSMEs, and the middle class. Furthermore, Union Law Minister Arjun Ram Meghwal lauded the Prime Minister’s decisive national security policies and his strategic focus on expanding the country’s financial architecture toward a $5 trillion economy.
As the government celebrates this historic transition, political commentators and leaders alike underscored that PM Modi’s ongoing stewardship remains the cornerstone of India’s long-term aspiration to emerge as a developed global superpower—Viksit Bharat—by 2047.

