AAP's Raghav Chadha In Parliamentary Limbo: What Happens When An MP Is Silenced By Own Party?

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Last Updated:April 03, 2026, 17:13 IST

For now, Raghav Chadha remains an AAP MP from Punjab, but one without a formal voice in the Rajya Sabha

Chadha’s perceived silence during high-profile developments involving senior leaders and his absence from recent star campaigner lists had already fuelled rumours of a fallout. File pic/PTI

Chadha’s perceived silence during high-profile developments involving senior leaders and his absence from recent star campaigner lists had already fuelled rumours of a fallout. File pic/PTI

The sudden demotion of Raghav Chadha on April 2 has sent shockwaves through the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and the wider Indian political landscape. Once considered a key architect of the party’s expansion and a close confidant of Arvind Kejriwal, Chadha was formally replaced as the Deputy Leader of the AAP in the Rajya Sabha by Punjab MP Ashok Mittal. However, the most striking detail of this reshuffle was not just the change in title, but the party’s formal request to the Rajya Sabha Secretariat to ensure Chadha is no longer allotted speaking time from the AAP’s parliamentary quota.

Can a party legally stop its own MP from speaking?

In the Indian parliamentary system, the answer is a nuanced “yes", particularly regarding the time allocated to a political party. Speaking time in the Rajya Sabha is distributed among various parties based on their numerical strength in the House. As AAP currently holds 10 seats, it is the fourth-largest party and is entitled to a specific “quota" of minutes during debates, such as the Motion of Thanks or the Budget discussion.

The Leader of the Party in the House—currently Sanjay Singh for AAP—has the primary authority to decide which MPs from their ranks will utilise that time. By writing to the Secretariat to request that Chadha not be allotted time from AAP’s quota, the party leadership is effectively exercising its administrative right to sideline a member. While the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha has the ultimate discretion to allow any member to speak, it is highly unconventional for the Chair to override a party’s internal decision on how to use its allotted minutes.

What happens to MPs barred from representing their party’s voice?

When a Member of Parliament remains a member of the party but is stripped of speaking time and leadership roles, they enter a state of “parliamentary limbo". Legally, Raghav Chadha remains an MP with all the associated privileges, including the right to vote on bills, attend committee meetings, and receive a salary. However, his ability to influence public discourse from the floor of the House is severely curtailed.

This situation often indicates a deep-seated internal rift where the party wants to avoid a “defection" but seeks to neutralise the member’s influence. If Chadha were to resign or join another party, he would likely face disqualification under the Tenth Schedule (Anti-Defection Law). By keeping him in the party but silencing him, the leadership ensures he cannot officially speak against the party line in the House while also preventing him from easily jumping ship to a rival camp without losing his seat.

Why has AAP taken this drastic step now?

The timing of the demotion, coming just after the party’s top leadership was cleared in various legal cases, suggests a strategic “spring cleaning" of the internal hierarchy. Sources indicate that the party leadership was increasingly frustrated with Chadha’s focus on “soft" public issues—such as high airfares, gig workers’ rights, and even parliamentary canteen food—which were perceived as a distraction from the party’s more aggressive political messaging against the central government.

Furthermore, Chadha’s perceived silence during high-profile developments involving senior leaders and his absence from recent star campaigner lists had already fuelled rumours of a fallout. While his replacement, Ashok Mittal, has termed the move a “routine organisational decision" to rotate responsibilities, the specific request to strip Chadha of his speaking time suggests a much more significant disciplinary or strategic shift than a simple administrative reshuffle.

What is the road ahead for Raghav Chadha?

For now, Raghav Chadha remains an AAP MP from Punjab, but one without a formal voice in the Upper House. In a defiant video message posted shortly after his demotion, Chadha claimed he was “silenced, but not defeated", highlighting his recent efforts to raise citizen-centric issues.

As the Rajya Sabha moves towards the end of its current session in April 2026, the focus will be on whether the Chairman intervenes to grant Chadha time as an individual member or if the 37-year-old leader will be forced to take his political battles entirely to the “court of the people" outside the halls of Parliament. For AAP, the challenge will be whether silencing one of its most articulate national faces will consolidate party discipline or create a new centre of dissent within its ranks.

First Published:

April 03, 2026, 17:13 IST

News politics AAP's Raghav Chadha In Parliamentary Limbo: What Happens When An MP Is Silenced By Own Party?

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