Growing Fan Base of Cockroach Janata Party in India

"Indians live like cockroaches and die like cockroaches", argued Jayant Bhandari in an X post in April this year. "They vote for bottom of the barrel cockroaches as rulers, who rightly treat them as cockroaches", he added, faulting the people of India for this state of affairs. More recently, Indian Supreme Court Chief Justice Surya Kant said during a hearing that certain unemployed youth were "like cockroaches" who enter professions with fake degrees or become social media and RTI activists attacking the system.  Abhijeet Dipke, a 30-year-old Indian graduate of the public relations program at Boston University, picked up on it. He posted on X on May 16: “What if all cockroaches came together?” Dipke created a political party, named it Cockroach Janata Party (CJP), a parody of the ruling Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), and established a website that quickly gained tens of millions of followers, according to the New York Times

Cockroach Janata Party Logo. Source: CJP Website


Dipke embraced “cockroach” in the party’s name to reinforce the fact that the insect, which arouses visceral disgust in many people, is also nearly indestructible. “What was thrown at them as an insult, now they are carrying it with pride,” he said. 

The group of Indians described by the Indian Chief Justice as "cockroaches" is made up of over 100 million young people aged 15-29 years who are not in education, employment or training (NEET) as estimated by the World Bank. They make up the world's largest NEET population in any country. Such massive numbers threaten the country’s demographic dividend, risking long-term economic stagnation, widening gender disparities, and severe social instability. They represent a massive reservoir of untapped human potential that drains productivity. 
As a result of failed policies and lack of opportunities at home, India is driving its best and brightest to the West, particularly to the United States, at an increasingly rapid pace. A 2023 study of the 1,000 top scorers in the 2010 entrance exams to the Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT) — a network of prestigious institutions of higher learning based in 23 Indian cities — revealed the scale of the problem. Around 36% migrated abroad, and of the top 100 scorers, 62% left the country, according to a report in the science journal Nature.  Nearly two-thirds of those leaving India are highly educated, having received academic or vocational training. This is the highest for any country, according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.

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Comment by Riaz Haq 8 hours ago

India’s ‘Cockroach’ Army and the Great Exam Betrayal

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2026-06-03/india-s-cockr...


India's youth are fighting battles over shrinking returns on college education, disappearing good jobs, and fading hopes of a middle-class life, with a comment from the chief justice of India being the final insult.
The comment sparked the birth of the Cockroach Janta Party, a movement that began as satire but has gained viral mass appeal, with a charter calling for a cleanup of the electoral system and other reforms.
The movement is focusing on the issue of a high-school exam, whose integrity has been put under doubt by a switch to digitization, and is planning a peaceful protest in New Delhi to demand the education minister's resignation.




India’s youth have many reasons to feel wounded. From shrinking returns on college education to the disappearance of good jobs and fading hopes of a middle-class life, they are fighting one battle after another. In the end, though, what broke Gen Z’s dam of patience was an insult from the highest court in the land.

“There are youngsters like cockroaches, who don’t get any employment or have any place in the (legal) profession,” Surya Kant, the chief justice of India, said during a May 15 court hearing on a petition about delayed recognition of advocates’ seniority. “Some of them become media, some of them become social media … right-to-information activists and other activists, and they start attacking everyone.”


Although Kant quickly walked back his comments, insisting he was misquoted and that his words were meant only as a rebuke to unscrupulous lawyers entering the profession solely to cause mischief, the damage was done. Abhijeet Dipke, an Indian communications strategist in the US, responded to what he took as a generational slight with a social-media post announcing the birth of the Cockroach Janta Party — Janta or Janata being the Hindi word for “people.”


What began as satire, a fleeting internet meme featuring AI-generated images and videos of anthropomorphic insects, has almost overnight emerged as a movement with viral mass appeal. The CJP has amassed 22 million followers on Instagram, more than double the numbers for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP.

Even though the CJP is not a registered political party, it has released a charter. The self-described “Voice of the Lazy and Unemployed” has called for a cleanup of the electoral system, an end to the growing proximity between the political executive and the judiciary, more women in parliament and government, and a domestic media free from the clutches of oligarchs.

But the hot-button issue for the youth right now is their all-important high-school exam. Its integrity has been put under severe doubt by an ill-prepared switch to digitization, imperiling the fate of millions of future college-goers. Dipke has pounced on the opportunity by announcing that he will return to India Saturday and hold a peaceful protest in New Delhi to demand the education minister’s resignation. “Meet me at the airport,” he said in a video message to his followers.

Comment by Riaz Haq 1 hour ago

India Is Losing Its Economic Edge

While external forces have hurt the economy, New Delhi’s troubles are also self-inflicted.

By Sadanand Dhume

https://www.wsj.com/opinion/india-is-losing-its-economic-edge-800c7...


After more than 12 years in office, Prime Minister Narendra Modi faces a painful reality check: His promise to modernize India’s economy hasn’t panned out. Instead, the country faces a rapidly weakening rupee, dwindling net foreign investment, and worries that artificial intelligence will take a wrecking ball to the information technology industry.

————-

Recent weeks have brought a spate of bad news. The rupee, already among Asia’s worst-performing currencies in 2025, has lost 11% of its value against the dollar over the past 12 months. It may breach 100 to the dollar for the first time.

Just last year, Indian officials trumpeted an International Monetary Fund forecast that India was on the cusp of overtaking Japan as the world’s fourth-largest economy at market exchange rates. Instead, India has fallen to sixth place, behind the U.K.. Meanwhile, the IMF projects that India’s per capita income at market exchange rates ($2,812) will fall behind Bangladesh’s ($2,911) this year.

The slippage extends to the financial markets. In the past two weeks, powered by technology stocks, the South Korean and Taiwanese stock markets have overtaken India in market capitalization, pushing India to seventh place in global rankings. Foreign investors have pulled more than $23 billion from Indian equities since the start of the year. Net foreign direct investment in the fiscal year that ended March 31 was a paltry $7.7 billion, down from $28 billion three years earlier. This reflects both repatriations by foreign investors and outbound investments by Indian companies.

The corporate landscape also reflects investor hesitation. Tesla last month said it was abandoning plans to build a factory in India. The Modi government had publicly wooed the U.S. company, hoping to replicate some of the limited success it has had with giving Apple incentives to locate a chunk of iPhone production in India.

These setbacks have triggered criticism of the Modi government. The economist Surjit Bhalla, a former member of the prime minister’s Economic Advisory Council, recently wrote for the Indian Express that the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s “handling of the economy has hit a low with no guarantee that it cannot go lower.” Arvind Subramanian, a former chief economic adviser to the Indian government, called for a revamping of the prime minister’s economic team, warning that “sameness of personnel and staleness of ideas are fatal for all political systems.”

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