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Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Month after Delhi polls success, AAP says it will to go national - Hindustan Times


A month after it took power in Delhi after crushing the BJP and the Congress, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) announced on Tuesday that it has decided to go national.


"After out spectacular victory in Delhi and seeing the love of the people, we have decided to expand at the national level," party leader Sanjay Singh told the media here.


The AAP's Political Affairs Committee (PAC), its highest decision making body, also decided to enroll "active volunteers" and to form a committee to decide their role in different states.


Five of the PAC's seven members met at the residence of Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, who returned to the capital late on Monday after 10 days of naturopathy treatment in Bengaluru for his nagging cough and high blood sugar.


The AAP, India's youngest political party, would also decide in which states it should contest elections, Sanjay Singh said.


He added that the crisis in the party would soon end, and party leaders would reach out to Prashant Bhushan, one of the two senior figures who was ousted from the PAC this month.


Those who took part in the meeting included Kejriwal, his deputy Manish Sisodia, Delhi minister Gopal Rai, Sanjay Singh and Ashutosh. Ashish Khetan and Dilip Pandey also attended. Two PAC members were not in town.


Tuesday's announcement marks the most significant decisions taken by the AAP following the return to Delhi of Kejriwal, who had earlier expressed his reservations about fighting elections in other parts of the country.


AAP leaders have in the past stated that the party was determined to contest the next assembly election in Punjab, where it scored a quarter of all votes in the Lok Sabha polls.


The AAP is also said to be keen to fight municipal elections in Mumbai and Bengaluru, two cities where it enjoys a wide network of volunteers.


Kejriwal took oath as Delhi's common man chief minister on February 14, promising statehood, an end to corruption and VIP culture, and the security of people of all faiths in the next five years that he would devote solely to the city.


A day to the year he ended his first stint as CM after a chaotic 49-day reign, the AAP chief presented a slightly older, much wiser persona as he profusely thanked Delhiites for giving him a second chance and assured them that this time, he was here to stay. "I have decided that for the next five years, we (AAP) will focus only on Delhi. I will serve Delhi with all my heart," he said.



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