An Indian filmmaker returns to his homeland during the national elections. With voting spread over a period of six long weeks, he starts travelling the country, turning the camera towards his family. Their privileged life contrasts starkly with the lives of the ordinary Indian citizens working for them. Collecting stories of chauffeurs, golf caddies and farm workers, who's fates are invariably intertwined with his family's path, the filmmaker searches for the meaning of democracy. With a dry sense of humour and eye for the absurd, he tries to comprehend the India of today, connecting collective and family history, and confronting the recent rise of right-wing populism. A bittersweet and often hilarious tale about the biggest and most chaotic democracy in the world.