Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
India

Punjab Elections: AAP Turmoil, Sidhu's Non-Starter 4th Front Add To Uncertainty

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Sep, 2016 12:49 PM
    What was expected to be an interesting election in Punjab with triangular contests for the first time for most assembly seats is turning out to be a politically uncertain one with the way things have changed in the past one month.
     
    First, there was the turmoil within the AAP Punjab unit and second was the idea of a fourth front, announced with much fanfare by cricketer-turned-politician Navjot Singh Sidhu and others, which later became a non-starter.
     
    Making the contest triangular was the newest challenger on Punjab's electoral scene -- the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). The way its political fortunes were shaping up in the past over one year, it was being speculated that the party was also set to challenge the two major traditional players in Punjab -- the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal-Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) combine and the Congress.
     
    However, the way the AAP virtually imploded in the past one month has revived the fortunes of the Akali Dal-BJP alliance as well as the Congress. Their leaders have suddenly become upbeat about their respective chances in the assembly polls to be held in January-February next year.
     
     
     
    The AAP first saw infighting when it announced the names of candidates for 32 of the 117 assembly seats. Accusations of seats being sold to "moneybags and outsiders" were openly made.
     
    While party leaders and volunteers, upset over the tickets distributed so far, started leaving, the Punjab unit was hit by another scandal as its convener, Sucha Singh Chhotepur, was sacked on charges of corruption after a video emerged in which he was allegedly seen taking money from a party volunteer.
     
    Chhotepur had also contended that wrong selections were made for at least 25 of the 32 seats.
     
    The Chhotepur episode divided the Punjab unit in the middle with nearly half of its leaders getting behind him. Despite the AAP central leadership announcing a probe into the issue, Chhotepur refused to join the proceedings and openly defied the AAP leadership.
     
    Since then, Chhotepur and his supporters have started a political campaign against the AAP to "expose" the party's leadership. Chhotepur openly accuses the AAP leadership, particularly AAP convener and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and senior leaders Dugesh Pathak and Sanjay Singh, of sidelining the Punjabi leadership in the party. It is being alleged that the AAP Delhi leadership, comprising non-Punjabi leaders, wanted to take control of Punjab.
     
     
    Chhotepur even alleged that Kejriwal was dreaming of becoming Punjab's Chief Minister if the AAP won the assembly polls.
     
    Till earlier this year, a few opinion polls had even projected 75-plus seats for the AAP. The party itself was putting its tally at 110-plus. But, things have changed drastically for the party. Kejriwal is trying to revive the AAP fortunes by making trips to Punjab, but things are no longer as smooth for the party as before.
     
    The AAP has also not been able to recover from its brief political hobnobbing with Navjot Singh Sidhu. The wily Sidhu, who quit the Rajya Sabha in July and the BJP earlier this month, did not finally join the AAP, as was being speculated, and even accused Kejriwal of having nothing to offer for Punjab.
     
    Sidhu then went ahead and launched his new political front, Awaaz-e-Punjab, but later retracted and said that it was not conducive to launch a new party at this stage. It is still not clear whether Sidhu, who has even announced that he is quitting the popular comedy show "The Kapil Sharma Show" to concentrate on Punjab, will join or support the AAP or the Congress.
     
     
    Clearly, the political situation in Punjab has become uncertain. The electorate too feels the same as they are unable to decide which way to go.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Modi Flags Terrorism, Balochistan Atrocities At Kashmir Meet

    Modi Flags Terrorism, Balochistan Atrocities At Kashmir Meet
    Modi told the all-party meeting that the roots of tension in the Kashmir Valley lay in cross-border terrorism sponsored by Pakistan.

    Modi Flags Terrorism, Balochistan Atrocities At Kashmir Meet

    'AAP In Touch With Radicals; Pak's ISI Plans To Trouble Punjab': Sukhbir Badal

    'AAP In Touch With Radicals; Pak's ISI Plans To Trouble Punjab': Sukhbir Badal
    Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal has accused Aam Aadmi Party leaders of "aligning with radical groups" of the state and urged the Centre to probe the party's source of funding.

    'AAP In Touch With Radicals; Pak's ISI Plans To Trouble Punjab': Sukhbir Badal

    Meet The Indian Couple Who Fulfilled Their Olympic Dream In Rio

    Sanjeev and Anita Nagpal cherished the accommodative nature of the people while insisting that they are really enjoying Brazil's culture.

    Meet The Indian Couple Who Fulfilled Their Olympic Dream In Rio

    How Delhi Ignored A Dying Man On The Road

    How Delhi Ignored A Dying Man On The Road
    CCTV footage that has since gone viral shows Matibool on his way home from an overnight shift as a security guard, carrying a cellphone in his hand. It is dawn. Suddenly, a speeding three-wheeled truck barrels down on him from behind, knocking him into the air.

    How Delhi Ignored A Dying Man On The Road

    1984 Riots: Prem Singh Chandumajra Accuses Jagdish Tytler Of Buying Witnesses

    The 1984 anti-Sikh riots issue was raised again in the Lok Sabha today with an Akali Dal member seeking action against Congress leader Jagdish Tytler alleging that he was giving money to witnesses to turn hostile in a case.

    1984 Riots: Prem Singh Chandumajra Accuses Jagdish Tytler Of Buying Witnesses

    Parkash Singh Badal Trying To Divide People: Amarinder Singh

    Parkash Singh Badal Trying To Divide People: Amarinder Singh
    Punjab Congress president Amarinder Singh today accused chief minister Parkash Singh Badal of "trying to polarise people" along communal lines for "political gains", and said his party will not let this happen as the state cannot afford "another dark era".

    Parkash Singh Badal Trying To Divide People: Amarinder Singh