Political worker Rajesh Naik has not read manifesto of any political party in a long time. When he had first stepped into the political arena about 31 years ago, he was an avid reader of manifestos. As Naik got a foothold in the field, he realised that manifestos are a “mere election formality” that is necessary due to the directives of the Election Commission of India (ECI). When he witnessed large-scale party-hopping by MLAs before the 2022 Assembly polls in Goa, manifestos stopped being relevant to him. They could hold some importance in other states, but not in Goa, says Naik. “Here, only money power and muscle power wins. In a state which is so corrupt, who will look at manifestos,” he wonders.