Jakarta Globe – AFP, Abhaya Srivastava on 5:29 pm January 11, 2014
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| Indian Aam Aadmi Party leader Arvind Kejriwal (C) gestures with his ink-marked finger after casting his vote for the Delhi state assembly election in New Delhi on December 4, 2013. (AFP Photo) |
New Delhi.
India’s new anti-graft party has signed up tens of thousands of members in a
nationwide recruitment drive as it seeks to build support ahead of general
elections, an official said Saturday.
The Aam
Aadmi (Common Man) Party plans to contest seats in the elections due by May following
its success in the Delhi state polls last month in which it routed the
scandal-tainted Congress party that rules at the national level.
“We had
nearly 50,000 people sign up in the first three hours of our membership drive,”
senior party leader Gopal Rai told AFP.
The party
is spearheaded by Arvind Kejriwal, 44, a former taxman who has modelled himself
as an anti-corruption activist and is now Delhi’s chief minister.
Observers
say the Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) popularity suggests it could become a bigger
movement that could threaten the grip of the main parties, Congress, and the
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), on national politics.
The AAP has
also drawn a string of high-profile recruits in a boost to its national
aspirations and efforts to change the face of India’s graft-ridden politics.
Prominent
banker Meera Sanyal and G. R. Gopinath, the founder of a budget airline, are
among those who have signed up with Kejriwal’s party.
Kejriwal
has said the party’s target is to enrol 10 million members by January 26.
The AAP’s
success in the Delhi elections “has spread hope for honest politics throughout
the country. So many people want to be a member of the party and work for
change,” said Rai.
A public
meeting called Saturday by the AAP to hear grievances saw a huge crowd turn up
in central Delhi, armed with written complaints.
The meeting
had to be called off midway as the crowd exceeded expected numbers, leading to
chaos and a near stampede.
AAP
officials promised to streamline the process to avoid future similar scenes.
A new
anti-corruption hotline launched this week was similarly overwhelmed by
thousands of calls on its first day.
Kejriwal
has said his cabinet will sit in front of Delhi government offices every
Saturday to hear public grievances in what he called a “Janata Durbar” or
people’s court.
“It’s the
duty of every government to resolve grievances,” said Kejriwal.
The step
marks another novel move by the party founded a year ago to connect with the
public.
The AAP
will “make a huge difference in the elections,” said K.G. Suresh, a fellow at
the Vivekanand International Foundation, a think-tank.
“People are
flocking to join the AAP. It’s going to hurt the BJP most because it wanted to
cash in on anti-Congress sentiment,” Suresh said.
The BJP has
been strongly attacking the AAP, saying it will unravel under the weight of its
electoral promises.
As well as
setting up the anti-corruption hotline, the AAP has slashed electricity bills
and promised limited free water supplies.
The AAP’s
growing popularity seems also to have rattled the Congress-led national
government.
Congress
scion Rahul Gandhi, expected to be named its prime ministerial candidate for
the elections, met party leaders late Friday to discuss stepping up an
anti-corruption drive in a move seen as aimed at stealing some of the AAP’s
thunder.

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