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You are here: Home / Archives for Delhi

Arvind Kejriwal: Behind soft exterior a man of steel

February 10, 2015 by Nasheman

Arvind Kejriwal

by M.R. Narayan Swamy & Gaurav Sharma

For one dubbed a maverick and written off politically less than a year ago, Arvind Kejriwal has proved to be more wily than his seasoned political rivals who underestimated this slightly built, doughty fighter who has made an incredible comeback by scripting his second sensational election victory in the space of just 15 months.

After being a lone ranger for years when he battled corruption by contractors and officials in a Delhi slum, the former government official-turned activist-turned-chief minister has become a household name across India with his direct style and unconventional dressing that earned him this time the sobriquet of “Muffler man” because of the way he campaigned through Delhi’s severe winter wrapped in colourful mufflers.

But those who have known him for long say Kejriwal is much more than an activist-turned-politician devoted to battling corruption. He knows his mission.

“AK is really focussed,” said Pankaj Gupta, a former IT professional who has known the 46-year-old leader for 15 years. “He has clear thinking. He is a very tough taskmaster.”

Gupta, who has been with the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) since it was born in 2012, says the former Delhi chief minister, otherwise a diabetic, is very energetic-a trait he shares with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

But what friends like about Kejriwal is that despite his stunning political success, he lives and dresses simply, has no airs about himself, has a spiritual bent of mind and respects elders. In fact he displayed a puckish sense of humour when he reportedly told the online chat show The Viral Fever: “Political parties criticise me for my political statement; you are criticising me for my fashion statement. At home my wife criticises me for my bank statement. Everyone just criticises me.”

After the AAP was routed across the country in the 2014 Lok Sabha election, and Kejriwal personally lost a prestigious battle to Narendra Modi in Varanasi, there was gloom in the party. Kejriwal – who had earlier quit as Delhi’s chief minister after just 49 days – became a butt of jokes.

The I-care-a-damn Kejriwal was the first to come out of the shock. Showing uncommon resilience for a political rookie, he immediately began to rebuild the bruised AAP, now determined to claw back to power in the capital. His personality ensured that despite some desertions, the bulk of AAP’s volunteers remained with him, sharing his idealism and confidence that the the party could bounce back.

And when it did in Saturday’s Delhi election, the BJP and the Congress-who had mocked at him a “bagoda” (quitter) -had egg on their face. There was also a grudging respect for the born fighter.

Much before embracing politics, Kejriwal for years fought for the rights of the urban poor as he took up issues-from transparency to corruption. But few knew him, even after he got the Ramon Magsaysay award in the Philippines, an honour often described as Asia’s Nobel Prize.

It was Kejriwal who dramatically transformed the anti-corruption movement of social activist Anna Hazare into a successful political party in just two years and took to politics much against his mentor’s wishes as he knew that, if he had to change things in the country, there was no other way but the political route.

Kejriwal was born Aug 16, 1968 in a middle class family in Siwan village in Haryana where he had early education in English-medium missionary schools. The eldest of three children grew up with a Hindu religious mindset. But religion faded away in college.

Kejriwal wanted to be a doctor. But he went to the Indian Institute of Technology at Kharagpur instead, studying mechanical engineering. He went on to join the Indian Revenue Service. He married a colleague, and they have two children, Harshita and Pulkit.

As an officer in the income tax department notorious for corruption, Kejriwal did what few would have dared-he tried to clean up the system within. A chastened income tax department was forced to implement his reforms to make itself more transparent and less capricious.

While on leave, Kejriwal unleashed a “Don’t Pay Bribes” campaign at the electricity department. He asked visitors not to pay bribes and offered to facilitate their dealings for free.

By then, he had founded an NGO, Parivartan (Change), which put to use the Delhi Right to Information Act of 2001 to expose mind-boggling swindling of money by corrupt officers and contractors at Sundernagari, a slum area.

His dedication fetched him the Ramon Magsaysay award in 2006 — for “emergent leadership”. But it was his decision to join forces with Hazare that made Kejriwal a household name in Delhi in 2011.

While Hazare returned to his village in Maharashtra after the government caved in to mass protests, Kejriwal kept up the tempo, branching off from the India Against Corruption group to form the AAP in November 2012.

The AAP steadily expanded its influence in Delhi as it took up one public issue after another, undermining the Congress and the BJP.

Kejriwal was not content with just fighting petty officials. He called Congress president Sonia Gandhi’s son-in-law Robert Vadra corrupt. And he also targeted then BJP president Nitin Gadkari.

In December 2013, AAP stunned everyone by bagging 28 of Delhi’s 70 seats, reducing the then ruling Congress to a single digit and preventing the Bharatiya Janata Party from getting a majority.

Kejriwal himself created history by defeating three-time chief minister Sheila Dikshit by over 25,000 votes.

But the 49 days he was chief minister with Congress backing proved to be tumultuous. Kejriwal lost much of middle class support as he took to the streets against Delhi Police and did a two-night long ‘dharna’ (sit-in) close to Rajpath just before Republic Day 2014. Critics declared the man would always be a street fighter and an anti-establishment protester, never an administrator.

Kejriwal re-invented himself after the Lok Sabha debacle, rebuilding the AAP brick by brick, with the help of close associates and dedicated volunteers. By the time Delhi elections were announced for February 2015, the man had gained much of the goodwill he had lost.

For all his activism and politics, Kejriwal is a movie buff and loves to crack and hear jokes. Friends say he would often pull others’ legs. “He is honest to the core,” says Manish Sisodia, who was a minister in Kejriwal’s government. “And courageous. It is not often you find a man both honest and courageous.”

(IANS)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Aam Aadmi Party, AAP, Arvind Kejriwal, Delhi, Elections

An Election of Hope Versus Fear

February 9, 2015 by Nasheman

muffler-man-kejriwal

by Sunalini Kumar

Yes it’s a simplistic dichotomy, but there is really no better way to describe the current Delhi elections. On the one hand, a little ragtag army of Davids behind “Mufflerman”, as his faithful supporters affectionately call him, a person in baggy sweater and sneakers, one you wouldn’t look at twice if you passed him on the road.

On the other hand, a massively funded, aggressively confident political  formation, openly backed by the corporate bodies and full-page ads, riding a  national “Wave” higher than most Tsunamis, topped by the 56-inch chest of “Modiman”, even if recently modestly covered by a 12-lakh rupee vest.

On the one hand, a fearful and awed media establishment donating PR for free to the seemingly invincible King of Gujarat, and on the other, an aam aadmi, a volunteer-cadre run campaign and a palpable vibe of trust and openness on the ground. I know I know, some will say it’s all ‘perception management’ and PR, but barring the googly of the 2 crores party donation thrown at the opportune moment, if Mufflerman’s party was any cleaner, it could have given Lalita ji’s Surf a run for its money. Whatever the result on the 10th (and there is reason to be hawk-eyed about the possibility of tampering as Nivedita Menon’s post has urged), how does anybody not get what a miracle this alone is, in a political economy with a black economy of a size that is higher than the GDPs of most smaller countries? Perhaps this is in fact about hope and fear after all, however clichéd that sounds.

Hope is what has sustained the AAP campaign until now, one which has begun to look more and more concrete as the results draw closer. It is fear too that I am thinking about, when considering elections again, on a much more humble scale – at the level of the University. Delhi University teachers just voted to elect officials for the Academic Council and Executive Council of the University – statutory bodies of the University that are in clear and present danger of being dissolved if the Knowledge-Industrial Complex has its way in the near future. For they function on the increasingly archaic-looking principle of workplace democracy – a principle that nobody seems to really understand, leave alone support. Much more convenient to simply empower the VC to take all decisions. Which would be wonderful if the VC had descended from heaven, solution in hand for the myriad plagues of our vast and complex universities, just as we hoped Modiman could offer to a nation of 1.2 billion. But the inconvenience is this: the number of scandals involving past VCs – charges of plagiarism, unsafe research conditions (and by unsafe I mean radiation-in-the-chemistry-lab-level unsafe!), shielding sexual offenders, silencing any inconvenient voices, the list is sordid and long…should be enough to wonder if this office is seriously compromised. More importantly, we should wonder further if that actually is the plan, dumbed down and compliant universities topped by bullies, so when in doubt, appoint a retired army general or naval chief as VC, as many especially minority institutions have had the grand luck to recently experience. Attention!! Learning!! March Past!!

None of this should surprise us of course. This is a country that spends an abysmal 3.1% of our GDP on education, (below not only almost all the developed countries with the exception of Singapore) and our arch rival China (which has since the 1950s provided a nine-year compulsory school education to a fifth of the world’s population, apart from supporting an expanding list of top class universities) but also below countries like Burkina Faso, Samoa and Saudi Arabia. The low spending on education has remained constant, like Brahma himself, while other political and economic indicators have swung wildly from this corner to that. Neither Nehruvian “socialism” nor Modi-ist “development” have found place for education, for hiring and training teachers, for infrastructure, for equity and access, for even real merit or quality which is supposedly the hallmark of a market system. So teaching increasingly attracts either the very privileged, or those with no other options, creating a swelling reserve army of footloose adjunct faculty across the country and a field day for authorities who would always prefer a vulnerable employee to one who has secure employment and a chance to assess her situation. The link between tenure and academic freedom has been recognised and pursued since at least 1940 by University Professors in the U.S. What is amazing is that the conversation hasn’t even started here.

Take the entry qualifications for university teachers – either an almost comically arbitrary examination called the National Entrance Test (NET) or a PhD. The NET examination is possibly the only examination in India that a genuinely talented scholar is embarrassed of passing – so inexplicable are its questions, and so random are its results. With an average pass percentage of less than 10%, the thousands who don’t qualify must enrol in one of a tiny handful of decent universities for a PhD. This in itself would be no problem at all of course. But what awaits these PhDs at the end of years of research on meagre research grants and practically no infrastructure? At a recent interview for permanent posts in a college in Delhi University, 200candidates were interviewed for 8 posts! Nearly half of them – a hundred – had PhDs from good universities. Ok, NET is exempted for teachers in some of the better private universities that have been set up recently. But the catch is that while you don’t need a NET, you probably don’t stand a chance without a foreign PhD. By foreign is meant from one of the recognised First World universities. So where do these thousands of Indian PhDs go, after years spent preparing for an academic career?

Back to the public universities, where an absolute epidemic of contractualisation combined with stressful working and service conditions including no possibility of promotions, leave alone pension, leave and medical benefits has meant a pervasive culture of fear and self-censorship amongst faculty members. Staff associations – teachers’ unions – where they exist, are demonised – the current Delhi University VC famously denounced them as illegal bodies that were made up by the teachers themselves. Yes, Sir, that is because you or your predecessors were not going to make a union for us in any hurry! There is a widely-felt sense that surveillance – both formal and informal – is on the rise, that colleagues are ratting on each other to authorities, and that classrooms and tutorials are being watched for any signs of anti-establishment talk. One visible result is the construction of the good teacher as one who is intellectually self-effacing, competent without being brilliant or charismatic, and ultimately a conformist. This of course has long term consequences for that other archaic thing that apparently research can’t do without – freedom of thought and ideas. Ramachandra Guha’s points to the damaging absence of a genuine research culture in India, in the midst of what he terms the staggering vanity of the powerful in academia. I am reminded of the VC’s infamous arrival on an elephant for an annual cultural “fest” at Delhi University a couple of years ago. From that height, his colleagues who ‘simply’ teach and go about their daily lives must have looked really small and inconsequential.

The vanity of the powerful is only matched by the mousiness of the not-powerful. Recently, Spiked Magazine published the results of a survey of universities in the U.K, and concluded that more than half were in serious danger of becoming anti-free speech zones. This survey is itself controversial, since it argues against student unions policing speech in order to rule out fascist, sexist or other extremist views. It is arguable that these views do need policing in fact, even if of the mildest and most self-regulated form. However, what is at stake at universities worldwide is the freedom of various members including teachers to speak without fear, and it is such a survey that Spiked’s survey indirectly points to the need for. One surprising – perhaps not so surprising – finding is that the more elite and better funded universities fare worse on free speech norms.

The only reason this country still functions is because we have a high tolerance for collateral damage as a society. Long before the Americans introduced the euphemism to the global vocabulary by carpet-bombing parts of Afghanistan and Iraq, Indians already knew that shoving our way to the top without looking down or back is the way to go. But maybe Perhaps Mufflerman is a powerful portent. As I have been writing this post, the exit polls have predicted a big edge for Mufflerman, and Abha Dev Habib of the Left-oriented Democratic Teachers’ Front – a classic teachers’ union of the old style – has won in the election at Delhi University, giving us another day to fight on. If we have chosen the daily humdrum right to take decisions in the workplace and the city over shiny vests and chests and the always-receding horizon of development, we have chosen hope over fear. Hail the humble Muffler!

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: AAP, Arvind Kejriwal, BJP, Delhi, Elections, Narendra Modi

Delhi polls: President refrains from voting

February 7, 2015 by Nasheman

Republic Day Pranab Mukherjee

New Delhi: President Pranab Mukherjee Saturday visited the polling station in Rashtrapati Bhavan but refrained from casting his vote for the Delhi assembly election.

“Mukherjee visited the model polling station in Rashtrapati Bhavan Saturday morning,” the Twitter account of the Rashtrapati Bhavan said.

The president, however, did not cast his vote for the Delhi assembly polls, said an official.

Rashtrapati Bhavan official told IANS: “The president will not cast his vote and he did not vote in the general election either.”

Sources from the Rashtrapati Bhavan said Mukherjee decided not to vote in the general election as he felt that as the president he should not take side of any political party.

President’s daughter and Congress candidate from Greater Kailash assembly constituency Sharmistha Mukherjee cast her vote.

“I am very confident I will win. I have been working in my constituency and have received very warm response,” she said.

Voting for the 70-member Delhi assembly began across the national capital at 8 a.m. Saturday.

(IANS)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Delhi, Elections, Pranab Mukherjee

Polling begins for 70 assembly seats in Delhi

February 7, 2015 by Nasheman

delhi_polls

New Delhi: Polling began this morning for the 70-member Delhi Assembly polls in which AAP and BJP appeared to be the main contenders.

The voting began at 8 AM at over 12,000 polling stations, of which 714 have been identified as “critical” and 191 “highly critical”.

A total of over 1.33 crore voters are eligible to exercise their franchise. A total of 673 candidates are in the fray in the contest.

Over 64,000 police personnel had been deployed across the city to ensure free and fair polls.

The BJP, which is out of power in Delhi for the last 16 years, made a gamble by bringing in former Team Anna member Kiran Bedi into the party and made her its Chief Ministerial candidate which is said to have triggered discontent among the party leaders and rank and file.

The BJP strategy has been countered by Kejriwal-led AAP which has put up a spirited campaign in a bid to stop the Narendra Modi juggernaut that has been on a roll ever since the Lok Sabha election victory in May last year.

The Congress, which had ruled Delhi for 15 years till December, 2013 has been projected way behind AAP and BJP in pre-poll surveys. Some opinion polls have given AAP a clear majority while a few have predicted BJP’s win.

The Burari constituency in North Delhi has a maximum of 18 candidates while the Ambedkar Nagar seat in South Delhi has the lowest number of contenders at four.

The Matia Mahal constituency has the largest number of electorate at 3.47 lakh while Chandni Chowk the lowest at 1.13 lakh.

(PTI)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: AAP, Arvind Kejriwal, BJP, Congress, Delhi, Elections, Kiran Bedi

Bukhari's new diktat to Muslims: Vote for AAP in Delhi. Party rejects support

February 6, 2015 by Nasheman

A file photo of Syed Ahmed Bukhari, the Imam of the Jama Masjid.

A file photo of Syed Ahmed Bukhari, the Imam of the Jama Masjid.

New Delhi: With less than a day left for Delhi to go to polls, Imam Syed Ahmed Bukhari of Jama Masjid has asked Muslims to support the Arvind Kejriwal-led Aam Aadmi Party in the Delhi Assembly elections.

He appealed Muslims to vote for AAP candidates and help in forming a secular government in Delhi.

AAP however, has rejected Imam Syed Ahmed Bukhari’s support for the Delhi polls. AAP says, “We don’t agree with his ideology, people of all religions support us.”

The imam catapults himself in the news during each election by offering support to parties which are either in power or who have popular support.

In 2004, Bukhari had launched a surrogate campaign for the then BJP leader and PM A B Vajpayee. During the Lok Sabha polls, AICC president Sonia Gandhi met Bukhari, triggering a political row. The religious leader then announced his support to the Congress, the Trinamool Congress in West Bengal and the Rashtriya Janata Dal in Bihar.

Filed Under: India, Indian Muslims Tagged With: AAP, Delhi, Elections, Imam Bukhari, Indian Muslims, Jama Masjid, Muslims, Syed Ahmed Bukhari

Through AAP, Delhi’s vast underclass speaks up

February 6, 2015 by Nasheman

Economic indicators reveal Delhi’s vast and growing inequalities, especially on parameters that the AAP frequently highlights: water, electricity, jobs and living conditions.

AAP

by Devanik Saha, IndiaSpend.com

Delhi’s people are India’s richest. They use the best, most extensive network of roads, and they have one of the highest rates of vehicle ownership in India. The number of companies serving and investing in their economy is growing.

On the face of it, Delhi, the world’s second-most populous city, is one of India’s booming economies. Its 25 million people—according to the United Nations’ department of economic and social affairs, which counts suburbs in other states; the 2011 Census records 16.8 million—are India’s most pampered.

Delhi (82% Hindus, 11.7% Muslim) is an aspirational, hard-working city, built on the collective commercial ethos of Punjabi refugees who streamed in after Independence.

In other words, it appears to be fertile electoral territory for Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which he has re-crafted to represent Indian aspirations for a better life.

So, why is the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP)—as the latest opinion polls indicate—set to either defeat the BJP or run it close?

First, a quick glance at some of Delhi’s positive economic indicators:

  1. Dilliwallas have more money than other Indians

Source: Press Information Bureau

  1. Delhi has India’s highest density of roads per 1000 sq km

Source: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation

  1. Dilliwallas are among India’s top three vehicle owners (topped only by Goa and Chandigarh)

Source: Data.gov.in

  1. Companies are flocking to Delhi and their investments are rising

Source: Delhi Statistical Abstract

  1. Delhiites are among India’s most educated people

Source: Census 2011

The underclass finds a political voice

But Delhi also has a vast, striving and frustrated underclass, which now appears to be firmly in the AAP camp.

This report explained how 10.2 million people (60% of the population) earn less than Rs 13,500 per month.

A further examination of economic indicators by IndiaSpend reveals Delhi’s vast and growing inequalities, especially on parameters that the AAP frequently highlights: water, electricity, jobs and living conditions.

Here is what our analysis reveals:

Water: Providing 700 litres of free water to every household is one of AAP’s pet promises. There is a wide disparity in water-supply across income groups, the data reveal. The Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) report, released in April 2013, stated that 24.8% of Delhi’s households (around 32.5 lakh people) do not receive piped water. Each person gets, on average, 3.82 litres a day, 36 litres less than the minimum 40 suggested by the World Health Organisation.

Electricity: High electricity prices, a favourite AAP topic, are a major concern for many Dilliwalas. The data reveal that locally generated electricity has decreased 49%, while electricity purchased from other states has surged 51.8% over the past five years. This reportexplains how power cuts occur, in spite of distribution companies having surplus power.

Source: Delhi Statistical Abstract

Jobs: Rising unemployment is a big worry among Delhi’s underclass. Statistics reveal that the unemployment rate has increased, with female unemployment doubling over six years.

Source: Delhi Statistical Abstract

Slums: Nearly 15% of Delhi’s households officially live in slums, according to the 2011 Census. This is lower than in other cities such as Mumbai (41.3%) and Chennai (28.5%), but this figure does not include Delhi’s vast, unauthorised colonies, home to one in three Dilliwalas. Unauthorised colonies are not officially categorised as slums but suffer from their infirmities: cramped, unsanitary living, water and electricity shortages.

Source: Census 2011

Image Credit: AamAadmiParty.org

Filed Under: India Tagged With: AAP, BJP, Delhi, Elections

Left parties announce support for AAP to keep BJP, Congress out of power in Delhi

February 5, 2015 by Nasheman

Communist Party of India

New Delhi: In its effort to keep BJP and Congress out of power in Delhi, Left parties on Wednesday announced their support to AAP and asked their supporters to vote in favour Arvind Kejriwal-led party on those seats from where the joint front of the Left parties has not put up candidates in Assembly polls.

“15 seats are being contested jointly by Left parties in the Delhi polls. Rest of the 55 seats, our party has decided that it will ask our party members and voters to vote for the AAP. Most of the other left parties are also of the same view,” CPI(M) general secretary Prakash Karat told reporters in New Delhi.

He said the line of the party was not to support Congress and BJP and especially the latter. He said his party has taken similar stands earlier as well and had even voted for BSP in Delhi in earlier elections.

The elections for the 70-member Delhi Assembly will be held on 7 February. The counting of votes will take place on 10 February and tomorrow is the last day of electioneering.

The CPI Delhi state council has also decided to extend support to AAP candidates in all those constituencies where the joint front of the left parties has not put up candidates.

“The decision in this regard is being taken after seeing the all-out offencive by the rabid communal forces led by BJP and spearheaded by divisive anti-national RSS to stoop down to unheard levels to somehow capture power.

“These pro-corporate Hindutva forces are using both money and muscle power along with slanderous campaigns and pernicious attempts even to amend nationally accepted Indian Constitution for scrapping secular, socialist contents,” a CPI statement said.

The party said the Delhi voters are also wary of the anti-people neo-liberal policies that the UPA-II had imposed on them throwing their daily life out of gear.

“Hence to ensure that the there is no hung assembly again, the party has decided to support AAP nominees to avoid a division among the anti-BJP votes,” it said.

The CPI, CPI(M), CPI(ML) Liberation, SUCI(C), Forward Bloc, RSP and Socialist Party (India) have come to a seat-sharing arrangement and will be extending support to each other on 15 seats.

CPI appealed to Delhi voters to elect the Left candidates and urged its various branches, supporters, sympathisers and workers to ensure the defeat of BJP by fully supporting AAP candidates in those constituencies where CPI and other left candidates are not in the fray.

(PTI)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: AAP, BJP, Congress, CPI-ML, Delhi, Elections

Protests over church attack ahead of polls in the capital

February 5, 2015 by Nasheman

Indian Christians protest outside the Delhi police headquarters in New Delhi on December 2, 2014 after a Catholic church was badly damaged in a fire which some suspect was arson. EPA

File photo of protest outside the Delhi police headquarters in New Delhi on December 2, 2014 after a Catholic church was badly damaged in a fire which some suspect was arson. EPA

New Delhi: Just ahead of the Delhi Assembly polls, hundreds of Delhiites have come together for a protest march over the recent church attacks and governments inaction in the case.

The protesters will be marching from the Scared Heart Church till Home Minister Rajnath Singh’s residence in Delhi.

It’s a silent protest to express our anguish over government’s inaction in the church attack cases, said a protester to TV reporters.

The protesters demand an answer as to why police has not taken any action against the miscreants and why the government is silent.

The Delhi police has reached the spot and is detaining the protesters.

Section 144 has been imposed outside Home Minister’s residence.

A church was vandalised by unidentified miscreants in South Delhi’s Vasant Kunj area on Feb 2, 2015.

This is the fifth such attack on a church since November last year.

Last month, a church was vandalised in West Delhi’s Vikaspuri area. In December, the St Sebastian’s Church in Dilshad Garden, was partly gutted and the Christian community had alleged foul play in the incident.

(Agencies)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Christians, Communalism, Delhi, St Aphonsa Church

38-46 seats for AAP, says India Today Group-CICERO opinion poll

February 4, 2015 by Nasheman

AAP

New Delhi: With three days left for the Delhi assembly elections, the TG-CICERO opinion poll projected the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) getting the highest number of seats (between 38- 46 seats) and the BJP between 19-25 seats in the 70-member house.

According to it, the Congress would get between three and seven seats while the other parties would get between zero to two seats.

It said the AAP would get over 43 percent of the votes, the BJP over 35 percent of votes, the Congress 13 percent, down by over 11 percent votes, and the others eight percent votes, a slide of nearly four percent votes.

According to the India Today Group-Cicero poll, over 44 percent respondents feel AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal is best suited to be chief minister, while 35 percent think so of BJP’s chief ministerial candidate Kiran Bedi and just 12 percent hold Congress’ Ajay Maken best suited for the post.

The Delhi elections are on Feb 7 and results would be out on Feb 10.

(IANS)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: AAP, BJP, Delhi, Elections, Opinion Poll, TG-CICERO

AAP has reclaimed its lost ground in Delhi, admits RSS

February 3, 2015 by Nasheman

Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh

New Delhi: The RSS on Tuesday in its mouthpiece ‘Organiser’ admitted that the BJP is not in a comfortable position in Delhi and added that the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) has reclaimed its lost ground in the city.

It has also said that the Arvind Kejriwal-led party has rejuvenated its cadres. It has accepted that the BJP chose Kiran Bedi as its CM candidate after receiving negative response from the field.

“The top BJP leadership after receiving adverse feedback from field against the Delhi BJP, inducted Kiran Bedi and projected her as BJP’s chief ministerial nominee,” the article says.

The article talks about the resentment in the state unit after Kiran Bedi was inducted in the BJP and made the CM candidate by the party’s central leadership and adds that the party has gained after that.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: AAP, BJP, Delhi, Kiran Bedi, RSS

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