The Free Press Journal

DOES ‘DIRTY POLITICS’ PREVAIL EVEN IN AAP?

- AMULYA GANGULI

For the Aam Admi Party (AAP) to begin falling apart less than a month after its famous victory in the Delhi election will be a cause of surprise and disappoint­ment to its legions of followers in the national capital and outside.

Surprise will be felt because it was believed that the party had learnt the right lessons from the suicidal tendencies which it displayed after its electoral success last year. The need for piping down was evident from Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal’s call for eschewing arrogance during his speech after being sworn-in.

Yet, it cannot be anything other than hauteur along with personal animus which pitted Kejriwal against the two stalwarts, Yogendra Yadav and Prashant Bhushan. However, it was a skirmish which was waiting to happen because the grouse of the two founding members against their chief was an old one – the innate authoritar­ianism of the seemingly humble leader.

In setting his house in order, Kejriwal displayed a previously unsuspecte­d trait of deft maneuverin­g by letting the AAP’s national executive oust Yadav and Bhushan from the political affairs committee by a majority vote while the chief minister himself stayed away. By demonstrat­ing that the national executive will be able to read his mind in his absence, Kejriwal removed all doubts about his total control over the party.

To prove his point, the national executive also rejected his offer to resign from the party convener’s post, another maneuver which showed that he is learning the tricks of the trade – fake resignatio­ns and pulling the strings from behind to make followers in the party dance to his tune.

However, only the naive will believe that the eviction of Yadav and Bhushan marks the end of dissension. In a way, their departure is only a continuati­on of other farewells by important party members like Capt. G.R. Gopinath, Shazia Ilmi and Madhu Bhaduri, and the marginalis­ation of others like Shanti Bhushan and Santosh Hegde.

All of them severed their links with the AAP because they felt that the party wasn’t democratic enough. The difference, however, between their departures and the ouster of Yadav and Bhushan is that the former psephologi­st and the Supreme Court lawyer are a great deal more canny than the others.

They are also unlikely to walk quietly into the sunset or join a rival party as some of the others have done. Instead, they are expected to wait for an opportunit­y for Kejriwal to stumble before launching a frontal attack in the name of saving the party.

They have already received some help from an AAP blogger, Mayank Gandhi, who has revealed the “secret” deliberati­ons of the national executive, which had apparently made up its mind to punish the two dissenters because of the “irreconcil­able” difference­s between them and Kejriwal.

How the difference­s assumed such proportion­s within weeks of the party’s stunning success is something which is likely to come out in course of time because, as Yadav has said, the truth will ultimately prevail.

Ironically, a film, entitled “Dirty Politics”, in which the wellknown actor, Naseeruddi­n Shah, plays what he calls an “idolised version” of Kejriwal, is currently in the making. However, by the time it is released, the image of the AAP leader might have undergone a change.

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