United Progressive Alliance (UPA), alliance of political parties in India whose largest and predominant constituent is the Indian National Congress (Congress Party). From 2004 to 2014 it was the core of the ruling coalition under Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
The centre-left alliance was formed following the 2004 Lok Sabha elections, whose indecisive outcome prompted the Congress Party and several small parties to present a united agenda (known as the National Common Minimum Programme [NCMP]) in order to muster support to form a coalition. Although the alliance did not command a majority of seats in the Lok Sabha, it received support from other left-leaning parties that were united in unseating the incumbent right-wing National Democratic Alliance (NDA) led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Among the more salient issues at stake was the exclusion of rural areas from the NDA’s economic agenda, which had left many of them stagnant even amid a national economic boom. The UPA, by contrast, espoused a strongly pro-farmer message and sought to introduce rural programs, reminiscent of those of the New Deal era in the United States, which were aimed at revitalizing the agrarian economy, stepping up investment in agriculture, providing access to credit, and improving the quality of rural infrastructure.
During its first term in power (2004–09) the UPA oversaw an economy that continued to expand, although it was also marked by inflation from rising fuel costs. The government faced ridicule, even from its own supporters in parliament, for seeking a deal on nuclear cooperation with the United States. Progress on the deal, which critics believed would give the United States undue leverage over the Indian government, prompted a confidence vote that the UPA government only narrowly survived.
In its second term (2009–14) the UPA witnessed a significant decline in popularity. A major factor was the Indian economy, which initially had weathered the global financial crisis of 2008–09 but later began to decline. It was encumbered by such factors as slipping growth and rising inflation rates, escalating costs for food and energy supplies, and high interest rates that discouraged investment. More serious, however, was a string of corruption scandals that implicated a number of government officials from the UPA—including, in 2013, Prime Minister Singh—and caused the UPA to grow increasingly distasteful to the country’s electorate.
The Congress Party likewise became associated with both corruption and elitism. The NDA, and in particular the BJP, was able to capitalize on the Congress Party’s declining image in the 2014 parliamentary elections. With the charismatic populist Narendra Modi as its candidate for prime minister, the BJP was able to bill itself as a party of the people, and it successfully unseated the UPA in a landslide victory. Despite the BJP’s tumultuous and at times polarizing tenure, the UPA found itself unable to shed its image of corruption and elitism into the 2020s, especially as the Nehru-Gandhi family continued to hold the reins of the Congress Party.