Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Being in power is no liability, feels AAP

- Vishal Kant vishal.kant@hindustant­imes.com

BAWANA BYPOLL The ruling party says BJP will find it difficult to explain to the voters why it fielded its former MLA as their candidate

Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) is banking on the pull factor of ‘being in power’, and the ‘individual anti-incumbency’ against BJP candidate Ved Parkash who quit as AAP legislator, to taste electoral success in the bypoll to Bawana assembly constituen­cy on August 23.

To buck the trend after back to back electoral losses in the Rajouri Garden bypoll and the municipal elections, the party machinery, led by labour minister Gopal Rai, has been active in the constituen­cy for the past two months, strengthen­ing its volunteer base and trying to set the agenda for the election.

“The biggest advantage for AAP is the fact that it is the ruling party. One of the major underlinin­g discourses in the assembly is who can offer better for the assembly, in terms of developmen­t, over the remaining twoand-a-half-year term,” said Rai, the convener of AAP’s Delhi unit.

“Also, on the front of candidates in the fray, the liability of justifying why Parkash quit as legislator lies with the BJP. This is completely different from the Rajouri bypoll, where we could not come convince the electorate and paid the price,” Rai said.

The bypoll in Bawana has been necessitat­ed after AAP legislator Ved Parkash quit the Delhi assembly just ahead of the municipal elections to join the BJP.

One of the 12 reserved seats in the 70-member Delhi assembly, Bawana is a mix of slum clusters, unauthoris­ed colonies, 26 rural villages and a few pockets of Rohini.

The AAP leaders feel the party draws its strength from the unauthoris­ed colonies and slum clusters. The party, therefore, fielded its candidate from one of these colonies this time.

AAP candidate Ramchandra is a resident of Shahbad dairy, one of the biggest slum colonies in the area. Being a Purvanchal­i, Rammchandr­a is expected to mobilise voters in the clusters dominated by migrants from Bihar and eastern Uttar Pradesh.

The party think tanks are of the view that the government has initiated developmen­t works in the relatively undevelope­d area that would pay political dividends in the bypoll.

“Over the past two-and-a-half years, developmen­t works worth ₹207 crore were allocated in the assembly under different heads. The assembly received extra funds under the mohalla sabha scheme that was implemente­d on a pilot basis in 11 assembly seats in 2015,” Rai said.

Though AAP draws its strengths from slum clusters and unauthoris­ed colonies, the ruling party is trying to make inroads in the rural villages, which have been the bastion of the BJP and Congress, by putting forward a developmen­t blueprint and special fund allocation.

The Delhi government has recently constitute­d a rural area developmen­t board and has decided to allocate R 2 crore to each village annually under the ‘Smart Village’ scheme. Gopal Rai has been holding seedhi baat events in these villages for the purpose, during which suggestion­s of the villagers are being sought on priority projects.

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