Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘RSS, Anonymous inspired AAP online’

- Jatin Gandhi letters@hindustant­imes.com

I took a cue from online hacktivist group Anonymous, an internet gathering with a loose and decentrali­sed command structure. I amalgamate­d the two strategies to create our Twitter approach.

ANKIT LAL, chief of AAP’S social media cell

NEWDELHI: The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) had its Twitter strategy in place even before the party was launched in November 2012. It wedded the social media game plan of the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) with that of the hacker-activist group Anonymous to make an impact in the virtual world.

This revelation is part of an upcoming book by Ankit Lal, founder and chief of AAP’S social media cell. Titled India Social, it will be released by AAP national convenor, Arvind Kejriwal, on November 24 — two days before the party’s fifth founding day.

The strategy of the RSS — the ideologica­l parent of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) — depended on using its “on-ground network to build an online support base”, writes Lal.

The AAP social media team was made privy to the right-wing organisati­on’s strategy by an RSS activist named Kapil Rishi Yadav, who volunteere­d to help the political party while it was still emerging from the shadow of an anti-corruption movement launched by social worker Anna Hazare, he adds.

Lal said the RSS held special training sessions to teach its swayamseva­ks (volunteers) how to create Twitter accounts and use the platform to promote its ideology.

“I also took a cue from online hacktivist group Anonymous, (which happens to be) an internet gathering with a very loose and decentrali­sed command structure. I amalgamate­d the two strategies to create our Twitter approach,” he says.

Lal and his team then went on to identify people whose tweets favoured AAP.

“We did what the RSS did — create several teams across various cities in India — but based our strategy on the Anonymous model by finding sympatheti­c people through online chat groups and social media platforms,” the book reveals.

The RSS’ influence on Indian politics runs deep although it claims to be an apolitical cultural organisati­on. Both Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Narendra Modi were ‘swayamseva­ks’ before they became heads of BJP government­s at the Centre. Most members of Modi’s present council of ministers enjoy close links with the RSS.

The right-wing organisati­on has nearly 700,000 followers on Twitter while BJP has 7.7 million. Modi is the third-most influentia­l political figure on Twitter with 37 million followers, bettered only by US President Donald Trump and Pope Francis. While the BJP is in power in the Centre as well as 18 states, the AAP rules Delhi (with Kejriwal as CM) and acts as the principal opposition party in Punjab. Its Twitter outreach far exceeds its boots on the ground, with 4.3 million followers. Kejriwal has nearly 13 million followers.

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