Why would a government allow the biggest brand name that India’s ever had to go to ruin? Why does the Congress Chief Minister Dharam Singh let his coalition partner—former Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda’s Janata Dal (Secular)—pressure him into stopping some of India’s most innovative and successful urban renewal projects? Why does he leave out in the cold a battery of officers and CEOs who worked together to keep Bangalore in shape for the years ahead? The answer to the studied disdain of Bangalore’s crumbling infrastructure and the periodic outbursts against its tech moghuls lies in the political report card of Gowda’s JD (S). It contested 16 legislature seats from the city in the elections of April 2004. The result: JD(S), 0; Vote share: 7 per cent (The Congress got 14 seats and the BJP, four). Bangalore snubbed Gowda. To that rejection, add Gowda’s visceral dislike of former Chief Minister S M Krishna—and an unstated desire, reveal JD sources, to undo what he did—and the recipe for Bangalore’s downturn is complete. The coalition is among India’s strangest: two traditional rivals, who ran a bitter election campaign against each other, suddenly find themselves running—or trying to run— a government together.