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Aam Aadmi Kejriwal turned khaas | Politics of anarchy | | Rustam
JAMMU, Jan 12 : Are the Aam Aadmi Pary (AAP) and its convener and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal losing their sheen and coming in their true colours? Reports emanating from Delhi do suggest so. In fact, people with their complaints and demands visiting Delhi Chief Ministerv Arvind Kejriwal are discovering much to their chagrin and disappointment that the "aam aadmi" they had reposed faith in and placed their hopes on is not measuring up. It seems that the AAP chief is no more a common man and that he is feeling pinch for not being able to deliver or come up to the expectations of the people whose hopes the AAP had raised during the election campaign and at the time of formation of government with the Congress which it had dismissed as the "most corrupt and badmas party". According to a report published in a leading Hindi language national daily, "people visiting either Arvind Kejriwal's residence or the AAP's office are returning empty-handed and are not allowed to meet the Chief Minister citing his tight and busy schedule or paucity of time. People also are saying that the newly- appointed Chief Minister Kejriwal, who earlier promised to address their problems personally, is now trying to evade them and it is this change that is making many people believe that he and his colleagues are no more than rabble-rousers and anarchists, who misled them. It bears recalling that after forming government in Delhi with the support of the defeated Congress, Arvind Kejriwal had announced that public grievances will be addressed personally by him or his Ministers on regular basis. Kejhriwal's AAP has twenty eight MLAs in the 70-member Delhi Assembly and the Congress eight In 2008, the Congress had won 43 seats. |
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