AAP- A Political Awakening In India
First, the anti-corruption activist-turned politician and his cabinet colleagues were sworn in. Then he made the masses take an oath of good citizenship: never to take or give a bribe.
A sea of humanity that had surged from across the country to witness the tectonic shift in Indian politics — from the politics of hypocrisy and hatred to the politics of hope — did not return disappointed from Ramleela Maidan, the cradle of several historic revolutions such as the JP Movement of 1975 and Anna’s Hazare-Kejriwal-led anti-corruption movement of 2011.
“Today, Arvind Kejriwal hasn’t become the Chief Minister. It is the common man who has become the Chief Minister of Delhi,” he told the crowd which returned the favor by chanting: “Today’s CM is tomorrow’s PM.”
Buoyed by its impressive electoral debut in the national capital, AAP has decided to go national and contest the upcoming parliamentary elections due next year, sending shivers down the spine of the mainstream parties — the ‘corrupt’ Congress and the ‘communal’ BJP.
But now a bigger challenge is staring at Kejriwal. He first needs to pass the floor test on January 3. It is very likely that resentment in the rank and file of the Congress over supporting the AAP government could play out in the open on the floor of the house. A sting operation has already revealed the evil designs of at least a section of the Congress leaders as to how they plan to topple Kejriwal’s government. If the dissident Congress leaders do cross voting on that fateful day, the government is bound to fall.
Kejriwal, however, looked prepared for the imminent adversity, too. “If we fail to prove majority in the House, we will go back to the electorate again seeking a clear mandate,” he said.
Whether the government in Delhi remains or falls, the national parties are not going to take AAP lightly anymore.
Sheila Dikshit, chief minister of Delhi for three terms, and her party have learned it the hard way. She had deemed Kejriwal and his fledgling party irrelevant only to realize later that the frail-looking former revenue officer was her nemesis.
In the run-up to the December 1 state elections, either flank of the broad and neatly laid streets of the national capital was dotted with political hoardings of all hues, but the ones which stood out were invariably of the AAP.
While some of their in-your-face ad campaigns irked the Congress and BJP alike, some purely reeked of over confidence. One such ad perched on top a public toilet read: “Lokpal Bill will be passed on December 8”, the day state assembly poll results would be announced, literally advertising how confident the AAP was about a clean sweep.
The results came and the new kid on the block suddenly became the new challenger. Born out of a popular anti-corruption movement just a year ago, AAP routed not only 127-year-old Congress, but it also ruined the party of a resurgent BJP in Delhi. It made a mind boggling debut by winning 28 seats, demoting Congress to a hopeless third slot.
While Congress and BJP took turns to dub the AAP a team B of one another, the fledgling party quietly made inroads into the hearts of people who wanted to get a good riddance from corruption-scarred and arrogant government.
Then and Now: The same Delhi Police that dragged Arvind Kejriwal out of a protest venue last year, escorts him to the seat of power in Delhi.
Then and Now: The same Delhi Police that dragged Arvind Kejriwal out of a protest venue last year, escorts him to the seat of power in Delhi.
Drunk on power and arrogance, the Congress saw a conspiracy in every institution that predicted doom for them. The party, which had no problem with opinion polls until last year when prediction showed them gaining in southern state of Karnataka, suddenly started questioning the credibility and authenticity of such opinion polls. They knocked on the door of the Election Commission of India — the apex body that oversees election procedures in the world’s largest democracy — demanding to put a ban on opinion polls.
This irked the media and the masses alike. The BJP and the AAP certainly scored a point over the Congress by opposing the move.
Channeling the rage within, the general public came out in numbers to vote the Congress out on December 1. For the first time in its electoral history, Delhi registered a whopping 65% voter turnout.
Proud to have voted for change, jubilant people including celebrities and social activists put out their selfies on social networking sites, showing their inked finger.
After the results were announced, an AAP supporter tweeted, “Rahul and Sonia (Gandhi) had no clue that people who posted their selfies, sporting their inked finger on December 1, were actually showing their middle-finger to the Congress,” mirroring the mood of the nation.
Many of AAP candidates who defeated Congress and BJP heavyweights were first-time politicians with a background in public service, journalism and teaching.
Kejriwal, who himself is a former bureaucrat, toppled Dikshit in her bastion, dominated by civil servants and staunch Congress loyalists. Across Delhi Congress won just eight of 70 assembly seats, its worst-ever performance.
In a country where a third of lawmakers have criminal cases pending against them, the AAP fielded only candidates with a squeaky-clean image.
The AAP cadres, clad in trade-mark white Nehru caps and wielding brooms (the party’s symbol), were mocked by Congress and BJP supporters as they went about campaigning for their candidates in residential areas across Delhi. Unlike their rival in Congress and the BJP, which spend millions of dollars on campaigning anually, the AAP had a shoestring budget for electioneering. But they managed to win over the masses by promising them cheaper water and electricity, and clean governance. Needless to say, their innovative strategies — including able use of the social media — worked wonders for the novice party.
AAP has changed the face of politics in India. The party not only humiliated the giant called Congress, it also managed to tame the BJP, a crouching tiger of sorts that routed the Congress in the northern states of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. Of the 28 seats the AAP won in Delhi, the party defeated the BJP candidates in 25 of them, stopping the right wing party short of a clear majority at 32 in the Delhi Assembly.
Some political commentators are euphorically saying that if AAP contests national elections in the northern states — including Uttar Pradesh that sends 80 lawmakers to parliament — it could possibly upset the BJP’s apple cart at the national level, too. The Modi-wave might well crash at Kejriwal’s feet. Even fresh from a victory in Delhi, Kejriwal needs to tread cautiously. The heartland states like Uttar Pradesh have been blindly voting on caste and religious lines for ages. So it is very likely that his political righteousness and clean image might not click with the voters there and could therefore turn out be a misadventure. more