
By Prakash Nanda
Imagine a person who was closely associated with a political party, failed miserably, and then he introduced himself as an independent satirist and went abroad under the cover of higher education, but became part of a foreign-funded anti-India and anti-Modi movement.
I am talking of Abhijeet Dipke, the so-called digital communication strategist and public relations student at Boston University. He previously worked behind the scenes for the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP).
Between 2020 and 2023, Dipke worked as a volunteer and strategist for AAP's social media and election campaign machinery. He designed meme-driven digital campaigns during the 2020 Delhi Assembly elections to boost online outreach among youth. Apparently, the AAP did not reward him well and did not allot him a ticket to the Assembly or Parliament. Frustrated, he left the party, then moved to the United States to pursue a Master’s degree in Public Relations.
But today, he is “the shining star” for the Congress party and its eternal leader, Ragul Gandhi, and his Khan Market Gang. Because he has founded the so-called Cockroach Janta Party (CJP).
CJP is said to be a viral Indian satirical political movement launched on May 16, 2026. Dipke claims that the CJP started as a massive online youth and Gen Z protest against systemic issues such as unemployment, education failures, and political corruption.
However, in the name of satire, he has decided to become another online fighter against Modi, after his disastrous failure in the AAP. No wonder why Rahul Gandhi loves him.
CJP, as a name, is a direct parody of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). It was triggered by oral observations made on May 15, 2026, by the Chief Justice of India (CJI), Surya Kant. During a Supreme Court hearing regarding fake law degrees, the CJI allegedly compared unemployed youth turning to social media activism to "cockroaches" and "parasites".
Although the CJI later clarified his remarks were strictly aimed at individuals entering the legal profession with fake credentials, Meme, in all possibility, with the strong backing of the anti-India forces in America and the Soros-funded organisations, which had failed to unseat Modi from power in the 2024 general elections in India, flipped the insult into what his admirers say is a symbol of resilience and digital defiance.
In all probability, thanks to these foreign fundings and guidance, the CJP, operating under the self-deprecating tagline "Voice of the Lazy and Unemployed," has witnessed unprecedented digital growth.
In less than a week, its official Instagram account accumulated over 22 million followers—surpassing the BJP's official following. Over 10 lakh (1 million) users registered as members using an online portal.
The campaign inspired the trending hashtag #MainBhiCockroach ("I too am a cockroach"), along with extensive AI-generated imagery of cockroach mascots.
Dipke has now released a satirical five-point charter demanding structural political and legal accountability:
Judicial Restrictions: Barring any retired Chief Justice of India from receiving a post-retirement Rajya Sabha seat.
Electoral Accountability: Arresting the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) under the UAPA if legitimate citizen votes are deleted.
Gender Representation: Upgrading women's legislative reservation to 50% instead of 33%.
Media Regularization: Cancelling corporate-monopolised media licenses.
Anti-Defection: Barring any switching of Member of Parliament (MP) or Member of Legislative Assembly (MLA) from contesting elections for 20 years.
Following the NEET-UG 2026 paper leak controversy, the CJP has also launched an aggressive online petition demanding the immediate resignation of Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, amassing over 600,000 digital signatures
It is now obvious that after failing to oust Modi in the 2024 elections and the subsequent polls in various states, including West Bengal, the likes of Gandhi in India and Soros in America find Dipke to propagate their politics of anarchy by mobilising the youth through online and street violence to force Modi out of office. Any doubts about it have been dispelled with Rahul Gandhi’s “prediction” two days back that the Modi government would collapse shortly.
However, will the plan succeed? No way, as the so-called spike in the followers of Dipke is not due to genuine supporters but artificially generated numbers to create an anti-Modi political perception.
Dipke’s sudden follower jumps into Indian politics often are not at all organic. Just consider the following:
1. *Election timing*: Follower spikes often happen right before state/national elections. That’s when political IT cells ramp up digital outreach. Rapid growth without a viral post is a red flag, as there are no elections round the corner.
2. *Engagement mismatch*: India has very high social media use. If a page gains 1 lakh followers in 2 days but average likes/comments stay at 200-300, the new followers aren’t interacting. That pattern is common with purchased or bot followers. This is the case with the CJP.
3. *Geography mismatch*: For an India-focused party like CJP, a sudden influx of followers from Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nigeria, or generic “South Asia” locations, combined with non-Hindi/English usernames, often indicates bot networks. Organic Indian political growth usually mirrors the party’s state/regional base first.
4. *Account quality*: Many new followers with no posts, 0-2 following, usernames like “user123456789”, or accounts created in the same week, suggest inauthentic activity. X, Instagram, and Meta have all taken down such networks linked to Indian political actors in recent years.
On the other hand, genuine organic growth builds slowly through content, media coverage, events, or endorsements. Engagement rates, likes, comments, and shares stay in line with follower count. The audience is spread across regions and demographics that match the group’s base. But that is not the case with Dipke.
To conclude, a sudden rise in followers does not prove anything by itself. It is highly likely that the foreign-funded Dipke’s viral moment, which has become a media hit, is an inorganic activity. He may have emerged as Rahul Gandhi’s glimmer of hope, but Dipke’s game will not end with a bang but with a whimper.
Comments (1)
K
Very well analysed. Prakash as you have rightly said the "show" of mammoth number of followers itself is self betraying. Rahul Gandhi has been restlessly tirading to incite India Gen Z but failed miserably. Nonetheless, the Soros-Rahul clique should not be taken lightly by India. Anything against PM Modi should be viewed as an attack on India and retaliation must be crippling for the Enemy.