Democratic politics has always faced serious challenges in the conflict-ridden Kashmir Valley, not only in the last three decades of militancy and separatism but even prior to that. In fact, the long term roots of separatism and militancy have been traced to the distortions in democratic political space since the early 1950s. While questions have been raised about the legitimacy of the electoral process, there have been issues related to the manipulations, intrusions from above and arbitrary dismissals of governments. All this seemed to have changed during the 2002 elections. With the PDP emerging as another Kashmir-based regional party and challenging the hegemony of the National Conference, electoral politics became highly competitive. For the first time in the history of Kashmir’s politics, electoral politics acquired legitimacy. The democratic politics thereafter started thriving with not only the NC and PDP in the field but also the Congress and the People’s Conference (PC). Each election after 2002 - be it the 2008 Assembly election or the 2011 Panchayat election, or the 2014 Assembly election - became quite participatory. The trust of Kashmiris in electoral politics was so enhanced that despite the overall situation of separatism, they gave credence to the ‘politics of governance’. Though there were occasions when there was a massive assertion of separatism (as in 2008 and 2010), and yet the democratic political space did not cave in. By the 2014 Assembly election, the democratic space had expanded significantly and gained sufficient depth.