Every election season brings a carnival-like atmosphere: endless rallies, glittering promises, slogans that vanish after voting day. The media narrates it as sport—who’s ahead, who’s lagging, who’s switching sides. But beneath the noise lies profound emptiness. When ideology is absent, politics becomes theatre. Every speech is a performance, every alliance a scene, and every victory a curtain call. But democracy cannot survive on performances alone. Governance demands moral direction—a sense of purpose that cannot be supplied by marketing agencies or data analytics or the genre now called “election consultants”. The language of ideology—whether of social justice, secularism, socialism, or human rights—once provided that moral compass. It reminded governments of their duties toward the marginalised, the oppressed, and the excluded. It demanded accountability not just for efficiency, but for equality and fair representation. Without that anchor, politics drifts into populism, where raw emotion replaces ethics and the nation becomes a stage for personal ambition.