Chenoy quit AAP barely two years later. In a personal exit note to Arvind Kejriwal, the party’s chief, he suggested a course correction and getting rid of a coterie that surrounded him. Clearly, monopolist use of power was rearing its head again.
In a more unsophisticated way, all the supporters turned critics of the AAP are saying the same thing today. That when everyone is forced to think like the boss, no one thinks very much. Can un-democracy be the foundation for a democratic party that aspires to be different from all other parties in India?
In its short life, AAP has distinguished itself in many governance spheres. But, party democracy is not one of these. This was clearly evident in the events in Punjab, the outbreak of rebellion in Delhi after a debilitating defeat in the municipal elections and the way Prashant Bhushan and Yogendra Yadav were thrown out of the party in 2015.
Bhushan, Yadav and Anand Kumar were charged with undermining AAP’s efforts to win the Delhi Assembly elections. All strongly refute this, saying they were only trying to make AAP operate in a more democratic way.
Sucha Singh Chhotepur, an independent-minded legislator in Punjab, left the Shiromani Akali Dal and joined AAP before the 2014 elections. AAP leaders say his oratory impressed Kejriwal, who heard him for the first time in Gurdaspur. When AAP lost two Assembly byelections, Kejriwal asked Chhotepur to keep the party afloat in Punjab. But, Chhotepur is not a complaisant individual. AAP says they have him on video accepting a packet of money. Even his rivals say they could fault Chhotepur on many grounds but corruption was not one of these. Chhotepur himself says he was turfed out when he refused to be a yes-man to Kejriwal and his ‘coterie’.
With so many exits from the party, the last thing Kejriwal and his colleagues wanted was the exit of someone as articulate and visible as Kumar Vishwas. Insiders in the party say Vishwas does not have too much following in its Political Affairs Committee (PAC). He is a poet, a gifted speaker and popular among party volunteers. But, many in the PAC see him as too individualistic, a man who does his own thing, has little time to devote to the party.
The turning point was a video made by Vishwas around the attacks on security forces in Kashmir. He touches upon the Kashmir issue and condemns the “humiliation” of jawans in the Valley but then segues to another message: “If you form a government in Delhi with a promise to wipe out corruption and then try to protect those under the corruption scanner, you will be questioned,” Vishwas says in Hindi. Asking people to go beyond personality cults such as “Modi-Modi, Arvind-Arvind, Rahul-Rahul, India is Indira”, he says governments will last a brief while but the country is 5,000 years old.
The video caused a stir for two reasons. It came as the campaign for the Delhi municipal elections was at a height and it attacked Kejriwal without naming him. When the results were out, Vishwas turned the knife by saying it was not Electronic Voting Machines that should be blamed for the AAP’s defeat, and that the party needed to introspect.
| From a people’s movement to the chief ministership of Delhi: Arvind Kejriwal’s first year On October 2, 2012: OnGandhi Jayanti, Arvind Kejriwal announced the formation of his political party in Delhi |