AAP should learn from Janata Party experiment
Reporters Name | CAMIL PARKHE | Thursday, 9 April 2015 AT 12:47 PM IST
The recent unprecedented victory of the Aam Aadmi Party in the Delhi state polls reminded me of the landslide victory of the then unborn Janata Party in the 1977 general elections. At that time, for the first time, the country's sitting prime minister Indira Gandhi was defeated and the Congress was routed in nine northern cow-belt states. I, then still a higher secondary school student and so non-voter, was an active participant of this political bloodless revolution (as naively we had then called it). I was one of the polling agents representing the Peasants and Workers Party, one of the constituents of the Janata Party, in the counting of votes held at Satara. Congress candidates in Satara and Karad Lok Sabha constituencies were Union Minister Yashwantrao Chavan and Pramila Chavan, mother of former Maharashtra chief minister Prithviraj Chavan, respectively. As the counting of votes continued, at around 2 pm, we learnt that Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was defeated by Raj Narain in Rae Bareily constituency and our celebrations knew no bounds.
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