Business Standard

The stormy petrel of AAP

How long will Kumar Vishwas stay in the party?

- ADITI PHADNIS

Kumar Vishwas’s dreams were loaded in a tweet on December 27. As the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) was debating the issue of which three of its members to send to the Rajya Sabha (the Rajya Sabha elections for the three Delhi seats will be held on January 16. AAP with 66MLAs in Delhi’s 70-member assembly is set to win all three), Vishwas tweeted his reaction to Samajwadi Party leader Naresh Aggarwal’s comments justifying Pakistan’s treatment of Kulbhushan Jadhav. Without naming Aggarwal, Vishwas called him the King (Aggarwal) of brazenness, adding: “I wish people sitting in the Rajya Sabha had given him a fitting reply.” Implicit was the premise that had Vishwas been in the Rajya Sabha, Aggarwal would have got the treatment he deserved.

It was not to be. Vi sh was did not figure on the list of those his party nominated to the upper house as its members. Of late, Vi sh was’ s statements and comments have had a strong pro-B JP tone. He put out a picture of himself reading a book on‘ the Ge eta in Urdu Shayari’; has strongly supported the B JP’ strip le ta laq legislatio­n as a defeat for appeasemen­t by various political groups; and has hailed the US President Donald Trump’ s move to suspend aid to Pakistan. In one fell swoop, from local to domestic to foreignpol­icy! But Vishwas was unable to convince his party that he was the best candidate to be sent to the Raj ya S ab ha and others( some newcomers in the party) pipped him to the post. The party nominated senior leader San jay Singh, along with Delhi-based business man Sushil Gupta, and a chartered accountant, ND Gupta.

The question is, what will Vishwas do next?

He has made no secret of his disappoint­ment at being overlooked. “Whatever the name of those Guptas, congratula­tions to Kejriwal and them for loyal work to AAP... They will now sit where Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Indira Gandhi and other stalwarts sat... I have to say, I have never felt more disappoint­ed with this party. They couldn’t have been more blatant about their shady dealings,” Vishwas said.

He said his criticism of several decisions taken by party boss Arvind Kejriw al since last year were “my honest opinions and I have been punished for that ”, adding ,“I was told by Kejriwal you have died but I will not let you become a martyr ... Today I would like to say: don’ t interfere with a dead body. Don’ t spread the bad smell”. Vishwas is a poet-politician. Heisa powerful speaker and communicat­or, undoubtedl­y talented. But he has had several run-ins with the party’ s higher bureaucrac­y and leadership. In May last year, Delhi ML AA man a tull ah Khan had called Vi sh was an “RS S agent ”, and Vi sh was had threatened to quit. At the time, A AP was still reeling from losses in the M CD and Punjab assembly polls, and there were fear soft he party “breaking up ”. While Vi sh was was pacified, he continued to make repeated references to a “conspiracy” to stop his as cent to the Raj ya S ab ha.

So it is safe to assume that things have come to a breaking point. But what is to be watched is how the break will happen— and whether Kejriwal will make the first move to appease a disappoint­ed colleague or just let him go.

Of late, Vishwas’s comments have had a strong pro-BJP tone. He has supported the BJP’s triple talaq legislatio­n

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