In Karnataka, the resignation of BS Yeddyurappa as Chief Minister before being able to prove his majority in the legislative assembly has somewhat shown that India still possesses institutional resilience to hold on to its democracy. However, Karnataka experience also shows that the threats to Indian democracy is not subtle and sugar-coated anymore. It is true that there were several instances in the past, when Governors had not acted the way they were expected to according to the constitutional norms and principles. However, since 1990s, the coalition politics and increasingly more independent judiciary had restrained the center’s urge to use state Governors for partisan politics. That positive democratic development of a federal country like India came to a halt in 2014. BJP having a majority in the Parliament on its own under the leadership of a ‘strongman’ Prime Minister Narendra Modi has brought back the role of Governors as destabilizers and spoilers of democratic process.