This Article is From Sep 17, 2022

"I Don't Get All That": Arvind Kejriwal On 2024 Opposition Unity

At NDTV Townhall, AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal responds to efforts by Bihar's Nitish Kumar and Bengal's Mamata Banerjee for a wider alliance against BJP

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India News Edited by
New Delhi:

Aam Aadmi Party chief Arvind Kejriwal today walked around the question if he's in "Ekla Chalo" ('I walk alone') mode amid efforts towards Opposition unity for 2024. "Gathering political leaders will not make an alliance that can make India number one. We must gather all 130 crore people of India to make this country number one," he said, repeating the tagline of his new mission to go national.

"I am not against anyone," the Delhi Chief Minister said, speaking at the NDTV Townhall in Delhi. "But I don't understand this politics of making or breaking alliances. I don't get all that. That's for them to do," he said on the efforts by Bihar's Nitish Kumar and West Bengal's Mamata Banerjee, among others, to make a "rainbow alliance" against the BJP.

Mr Kejriwal pushed to keep the conversation about what he terms his only agenda: "Call me if you want schools, hospitals built. If you want roads, or if your power supply isn't working, you can call me. I'll fix all that. I an engineer from IIT."

"If you ask me about how alliances will work, about seat adjustment... all that is beyond me," Mr Kejriwal repeatedly said.  

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Mr Kejriwal was one of the leaders whom Nitish Kumar met earlier this month on his Opposition unity tour to Delhi. Mr Kumar, who recently dumped the BJP to form a new government in Bihar, also met Congress leader Rahul Gandhi.

But Mr Kejriwal today took a pointed jibe at Rahul Gandhi and underlined his aversion to the Congress, a party he deems "inconsequential" and "finished" despite that fact that it remains the largest Opposition party in Parliament.

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"Frankly, you tell me... Do you need me to weaken the Congress? Isn't Rahul Gandhi sufficient?," he quipped, responding to allegations that AAP is BJP's B-Team that weakens the Congress and other Opposition parties by dividing anti-BJP votes. 

About Rahul Gandhi's 'Bharat Jodo Yatra' that aims to claim the anti-BJP space, Mr Kejriwal responded with a smile: "Good, let them do it, everyone should do something good. I wish them luck."

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