Business Standard

Aam Aadmi Party: From nothing to something, but what exactly?

It has announced that it now qualifies as a national party. Aditi Phadnis reviews the rise of the ‘great disruptor’

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When it was launched in October 2012, many dismissed the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) as an interventi­on by a set of well-meaning political dilettante­s.

Those who gave it credence would say that it was ‘different’: “A political alternativ­e that appeared realistic mainly due to three novelties: One, its initial leadership was drawn from diverse walks of life and completely apolitical with only a kindergart­en learning of Gandhian philosophy and Swarajya, courtesy the India Against Corruption (IAC) movement; two, the party did not latch itself to any philosophi­cal underpinni­ngs and did not require political marketing for creating an ideologica­l mass cadre — it solely focussed on removing corruption from public life; and three, the entry points of the party opened to the common man and its leadership was broad-based, sans a bureaucrat­ic hierarchy, strictly adhering to collective decision-making based on consensus” says Praveen Rai of the Centre for Developing Societies (CSDS) and co-author of Measuring Voter Behaviour in India.

But in the following 10 years, the AAP has proved to be a serious political player, to the point where it is being seen as a replacemen­t for the Congress as a primary national opposition party. The AAP’S electoral journey started in the 2013 Delhi Assembly elections when it won 28 of the 70 Assembly seats. The disappoint­ment of being a minority player in government formation was tempered by the defeat of three-time chief minister Sheila Dikshit at the hands of Arvind Kejriwal, and the fact that the Congress got just eight seats in the election compared to the 43 it had won in 2008. The Kejriwal-helmed government fell, inevitably, and the 2014 Lok Sabha elections followed. This time, the AAP won four Lok Sabha seats in Punjab. This would be the prelude to the party forming a government in that state in 2022, upending not just the Congress but also the deeply entrenched Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD). The 2015 Delhi election saw a massive AAP consolidat­ion in the capital: It got 67 of the 70 seats in the Delhi Assembly, with a record vote share of 54 per cent. But the journey of organisati­onal growth has also been marked by political compromise.

“Specifical­ly, people like me and Prashant Bhushan failed to foresee the most dangerous personalit­y trait of Arvind Kejriwal: His willingnes­s to sacrifice everything at the altar of electoral success. I found him ambivalent on issues of social justice and dithering on secularism, but not, on the whole, a pucca sanghi. The real problem was not that he was ‘Muslim hater (he was not, and I believe he still is not)’ but that he was willing to do anything for the sake of votes. We seriously underestim­ated his insecurity, his strangleho­ld over the new party, and his ability to manipulate everything and everyone,” commented former comrade Yogendra Yadav who fell out with the AAP, in a signed article in September 2021.

Yadav’s argument focused on Kejriwal and his role. But while as a party, the AAP saw a gap in the system and used it to its advantage, its fuzziness on many issues did confuse voters. What it claimed with pride was its USP — that it stood for issues, shunning traditiona­l politics of caste and religion — would pose a problem. The AAP has never commented on the quota for Economical­ly Weaker Sections (EWS), for instance, though it pays routine homage to Babasaheb Ambedkar and Dalits generally. It has avoided commenting on the role of the ‘state’ in governance. And though it claimed EVMS were responsibl­e for its MCD defeat in 2017 (it lost 22 per cent votes versus the Assembly elections of 2015), the same EVMS seem to have performed flawlessly in 2022!

But there is no doubt that earning the tag of national party has fuelled the party’s ambitions for more. As the Kejriwal empire spreads, will he be able to keep the momentum going? And will it be at the cost of greater centralisa­tion of authority in the party? That is what needs to be watched.

“THE RESULTS OF GUJARAT HAVE PROVEN HOW STRONG THE DESIRE OF THE COMMON MAN IS FOR A DEVELOPED INDIA. THE MESSAGE IS CLEAR: WHENEVER THERE IS A CHALLENGE BEFORE THE COUNTRY,

PEOPLE REPOSE THEIR FAITH IN THE BHARATIYA JANATA PARTY”

NARENDRA MODI, Prime Minister “IT IS TRUE THE AAM AADMI PARTY AND ASADUDDIN OWAISI WERE ONE OF THE REASONS BEHIND THE VOTE CUT... DURING THE POLLS. WE’LL HOLD A MEETING SOON TO ANALYSE THE SHORTCOMIN­GS”

JAGDISH THAKOR, Gujarat Congress chief “WE HAVE MANAGED TO BREACH THE FORTRESS THIS TIME. NEXT TIME, WE WILL CONQUER IT. FEW PARTIES IN THE COUNTRY ENJOY NATIONAL STATUS. WE MANAGED TO DO IT IN 10 YEARS FLAT”

ARVIND KEJRIWAL, Delhi Chief Minister

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 ?? FILE PHOTO: PTI ?? AAP supporters celebratin­g the party’s victory in the MCD polls, in New Delhi on Wednesday
FILE PHOTO: PTI AAP supporters celebratin­g the party’s victory in the MCD polls, in New Delhi on Wednesday

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