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AAP GUARDS FORT PUNJAB
India Today
|February 24, 2025
For Arvind Kejriwal, the question is not whether the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) has a future in Delhi-it's whether the party can continue to remain relevant as an idea in national politics. In a half-hour meeting with 86 of the 95 AAP MLAs of Punjab led by Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann on February 11, three days after the party's rout in Delhi, Kejriwal apparently let on what he has in mind for the party's future.
Those present at the meeting said the main focus would be to keep alive the "AAP model of governance" carefully created over a decade's rule in Delhi. Think schools, hospitals, free power et al. The message to the MLAs was simple: now that it doesn't have Delhi anymore, Punjab will have to serve as the AAP canvas for the country to see. The border state will be going to polls in two years-so Punjab can expect to see a lot more of Kejriwal now than it did in the past five years, say sources. Going forward, also expect good chances for that association to be formalised: there is talk in AAP ranks about Kejriwal getting himself nominated to the Rajya Sabha through the Punjab route. This will give him the eyeballs he needs on the national stage, and proximity to national allies. Punjab sends seven parliamentarians to the Upper House. All are AAP members now.
In politics, though, things are rarely what they seem. Many felt the meeting was called as a show of unity by the high command-a "roll call" of sorts to make sure the Punjab unit is intact. That's top priority at the moment, with Congress leaders in the state openly claiming that a number of AAP MLAs would now jump ship, a claim that CM Mann has to take pains to dismiss all too often.
This story is from the February 24, 2025 edition of India Today.
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