The silhouette appeared in the winter fog in the capital in 2011. This has been found to be India’s most important anti-corruption movement in 40 years, shunning the status of India’s revenue services. With a basic ball point in his pocket, the muffler is wrapped around his neck and driving a baggy sweater and a blue wagon R car, Arvind Kejriwal quickly puts the middle class imagination into a typical normal person I caught it.

When his then-mentor Anna Hazare’s anti-corruption movement promoted young people, Kejwal emerged as its chief strategist. In the swelling heat of Ramlila Maidan, he transformed the inexplicable Jan Lokpal Bill into compelling street rhetoric. And when he announced an early political party named after “Aam Aadmi” in the historic Jantar Mantal in November 2012, it marked the pervert of commoners from activists to politicians. I did.
Less than a year later, the Infant Party was racing the founding heavyweights, the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Congress. It emerged from the proximity of poll season with an astounding 28 seats, and commoners held the pulse of the capital. A new era of politics had begun.
It was 2013. On Saturday 12 years later, the story was in full circle.
Kejriwal – Now, a scarf, ballpoint pen, and once signed cough was cut off, but crashed into the worst defeat of his political career. The 56-year-old is no longer a commoner, and one of India’s top leaders and two-term prime ministers, and the city where his party acted as his political sway, now exiled. They face an existential crisis as they lose control. For the next five years, the opposition bench – he won’t even be at the rally.
His rise and stumbling tales are good from a political newcomer who once sat in darna outside the government office and quit after a 49-day whirlwind, and from a political newcomer who resigned on a whim, on a whim. It’s an incredible story, from the wise political leaders who have built a careful, good political leader in governance. And we only find ourselves out that welfare delivery is outstripping ourselves by the mix of incompatibility and anti-employment of the governor.
Worse, Kejriwal experienced a shocking defeat from New Delhi’s Pocket Borough with 3,925 votes at the hands of BJP leader Parvesh Sahib Singh Verma. Vote share.
“We have never lost the Delhi parliamentary elections, so this defeat, especially the defeat of our top leaders, is what is necessary for the party workers to come out. In the meantime, we are low It has been decided to lie down,” the party leader said.
Despite many people gathered outside, Kejwal didn’t go out from his five Feros Shah Road bungalows all day, releasing a gloomy video message later that day.
“We accept the mission of humble people. We hope that the Bharatiya Janata Party will bless this victory and that they will fulfill all the promises that people have voted for them,” Kejwal said in the video. I did.
As news spread that the previous commercial was kicking him out of the grass at his home, silence enveloped the AAP office near Mandy House in central Delhi. The gate was quickly closed.
“We don’t live in politics for power, we see politics as a way of serving people… we will continue our work. We want to congratulate all the workers in AAP. They Fighted well, they worked very hard, they dealt with a lot in this election, Kejwal further said.
Defeat marks the beginning of a new phase in a leader’s career.
First, he was an angry destroyer when he became India’s leader against corruption. He then founded a political party, became prime minister in 2013, went to Darna, and in 2014 he fought against Varanasi Prime Minister Narendra Modi, trying to expand the party nationwide. An inexperienced politician whose ambitions far outweigh his party’s foundation and experience. However, in his third phase he took Delhi in 2015 and 2020, won, confronted the Centre on Governance Issues, expanded and won in Punjab, and evolved as an administrator.
The fourth stage has been in place over the past few years as it fought an avalanche of corruption allegations. From those currently associated with the absorbed liquor policy to accusations of exorbitant renovations at the Prime Minister’s residence.
Now he is facing a new test – not only as a party leader who has been kicked out of Delhi and appears for reelection in Punjab, but also has a considerable presence in the Congress, and is a key figure in the development of the Indian people. Some have voices. Inclusive Alliance (India). He must hold the party together and fight the barrage of legal cases. With a middle-class background, professional career, stellar social services career, small ideological baggage, aspects of his career appear to be diminishing in front of the BJP juggernaut.
His actions over the next few months will shape this new phase of his career.