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AustraliaCulture3 days ago

India’s youth-led Cockroach party may prove as hard to kill as its namesake

An Australian-based article discusses the emergence of the Cockroach Janata Party (CJP) in India, which originated as an online joke in response to a comment by the Supreme Court Chief Justice describing unemployed youth as 'cockroaches'. The party was founded by Abhijeet Dipke, who created a parody political group representing these individuals. Despite gaining significant online traction with millions of social media followers, the CJP has not led to a tangible political shift or success in challenging the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The article explores whether the CJP has had any

The greatest challenge to India’s government in years began as an online joke.

On May 16, after Supreme Court Chief Justice Surya Kant described unemployed youth as “cockroaches”, Abhijeet Dipke, an international student in the United States, mused on X, “What if all cockroaches come together?”

Thousands responded. Dipke had hit a nerve. Soon after, he launched a parody political party that would represent all “cockroaches”, calling it the Cockroach Janata Party (CJP), a play on the name of India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

But as Dipke returned to India on June 6 and the CJP’s rallies did not lead to a revolution that toppled the BJP-led government, many have dismissed the online movement’s chances of succeeding “in real life”.

But perhaps the better question is, has the CJP fundamentally changed Indian politics?

‘Voice of the lazy and unemployed’

On the new party’s website , Dipke described the CJP as the “Voice of the Lazy and Unemployed” and insisted membership required being both, as well as chronically online and “able to rant professionally”.

The CJP became an instant internet sensation, accruing 10 million Instagram followers in four days . The only account to grow faster belonged to Kim Taehyung , a member of the K-pop boy band BTS, in 2021.

Within a month, CJP’s following had reached 22.5 million , more than twice as many as the BJP .

The CJP’s success, like many good jokes, mixed humour and pain. It spoke to young Indians who face intense competition for university places, unemployment and precarious gig work , a mental health crisis , and eco-anxiety about increasing pollution and longer heat waves .

Generational pain

Chief Justice Kant’s “cockroach” remarks followed weeks of student protests against the cancellation of the national medical entrance exam, after its questions were leaked and widespread irregularities were uncovered.

Students also alleged there were discrepancies in the class 12 (school leaving) and public service entrance exams.

The exams are intensely competitive, and the education system is so underfunded that families drain their savings to pay for private coaching .

For many, cancellation was not a delay. Their families could not afford a re-sit.

This crushing exam pressure reflects deeper problems. Much of India’s economic growth has gone to the top 10%, who earn three-fifths of the country’s income and own two-thirds of its wealth .

Meanwhile, 40% of young graduates are unemployed.

Young Indians are anxious about the future , distrustful of unaccountable institutions, and convinced the rules no longer work.

They have also seen advocates punished for criticising the government . The CJP represents a break in the cycle of silent frustration.

Its immediate demands were the resignation of Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan – whom it holds accountable for the exam fiascos – and educational improvements.

It also pressed for broader democratic reforms : judicial independence, voting rights, 50% parliamentary representation for women, a media free from billionaire capture (such as the BJP-aligned Gautam Adani and Mukesh Ambani ), penalties for politicians’ party defections and public accountability for government spending.

Crackdown response

The government response was heavy-handed. It blocked the CJP’s website in India and pressured X to suspend its account .

Dipke also reported its Instagram account was hacked , so the CJP switched to WhatsApp, Telegram and Discord.

The government justified its X ban on “national security” grounds. Officials also invoked familiar claims of foreign interference , and incorrectly claimed the CJP’s followers were overseas or bots .

Speaking on France 24 , Dipke dismissed these allegations, insisting “94% of our followers are from India”.

The government’s jumpy response may reflect broader anxieties. Gen Z-driven protests have recently brought down governments in Bangladesh , Nepal and Sri Lanka . In the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, young voters propelled actor-turned-politician C. Joseph Vijay’s new party to electoral success.

The opposition Congress party has recognised the shift. Its AI-driven campaign against the controversial development in the Nicobar Islands is aimed at Gen Z voters and includes a cockroach-headed human like those on the CJP website.

Did the revolution fizzle?

The CJP’s first offline test came after Dipke returned from the United States last week and led rallies at multiple cities across the country. At Monday’s Jaipur rally, he was attacked as he was carried through the crowd, then tried to protect his attacker .

The Cockroach Janata Party held rallies across India this week.

Rajat Gupta/EPA

The protests were well attended, but they did not start another Gen Z revolution. This is likely because CJP has yet to develop a coherent ideological core or messaging strategy .

Despite their calls for equal representation, they have had no female spokespeople . The CJP also has no p…

Read the full article at The Conversation (AU)
Source document: azimpremjiuniversity.edu.in

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The Conversation (AU)IndependentCenter3 days ago
India’s youth-led Cockroach party may prove as hard to kill as its namesake

An Australian-based article discusses the emergence of the Cockroach Janata Party (CJP) in India, which originated as an online joke in response to a comment by the Supreme Court Chief Justice describing unemployed youth as 'cockroaches'. The party was founded by Abhijeet Dipke, who created a parody political group representing these individuals. Despite gaining significant online traction with millions of social media followers, the CJP has not led to a tangible political shift or success in challenging the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The article explores whether the CJP has had any

Bias read (Center): The article provides a factual overview of the emergence and growth of the Cockroach Janata Party without taking a clear stance or using biased language. It presents the situation objectively, discussing both the origin of the party and its impact without favoring any particular viewpoint.