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Last Updated:April 25, 2026, 18:17 IST
AAP's 2022 victory in Punjab was heralded as the successful export of the 'Delhi model', but the administrative reality that followed created deep-seated resentment

Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann with Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and then AAP MP Raghav Chadha in Gurdaspur on December 2, 2023. File pic/PTI
The tectonic shift in India’s Upper House on Friday has left the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) facing an existential crisis in its most successful frontier: Punjab. The defection of seven Rajya Sabha lawmakers, including the primary architects of the 2022 Punjab landslide, signifies more than just a loss of numbers. By losing Raghav Chadha and Sandeep Pathak, AAP has essentially seen its intellectual and operational headquarters decamp to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). As the party navigates this internal “flood," the central question is whether the very state that gave AAP its biggest victory has now become the catalyst for its fragmentation.
Was the ‘Delhi model’ in Punjab a double-edged sword?
The 2022 victory of the Aam Aadmi Party in Punjab was heralded as the successful export of the “Delhi model", but the administrative reality that followed created deep-seated resentment. From the outset, the perception that the Bhagwant Mann government was being “remotely controlled" from the national capital became a focal point for internal dissent. Critics and now-departed insiders suggest that the Punjab unit felt treated as a secondary satellite, tasked with funding national ambitions rather than local priorities.
This friction was personified by the role of Raghav Chadha, who served as the chairman of the Punjab government’s advisory committee. While Chadha was the “blue-eyed boy" of the high command, his presence in Chandigarh was often seen by local leaders as an encroachment on Punjab’s regional autonomy. The exit of Chadha and five other Punjab-elected MPs suggests that the “Delhi-over-Punjab" narrative eventually became a structural vulnerability that the BJP was able to exploit with surgical precision.
How does the loss of Sandeep Pathak cripple AAP’s election machinery?
If the Aam Aadmi Party is a “start-up" in the political world, Sandeep Pathak was its chief technology officer. A former IIT-Delhi professor, Pathak was the “silent mastermind" who built the data-driven algorithms that powered the 92-seat sweep in Punjab. His departure is arguably the most devastating blow to the party’s future prospects. Pathak did not just manage campaigns; he built the booth-level volunteer networks and the voter-sentiment mapping systems that allowed AAP to outmanoeuvre traditional giants like the Congress and the Akali Dal.
Without Pathak’s analytical rigour, AAP enters the 2027 election cycle without its primary strategist. The BJP, which has historically struggled to find a footing in Punjab’s rural heartland, has not just acquired seven seats in the Rajya Sabha; it has acquired the very “playbook" that dismantled the party four years ago. For Manish Sisodia and Sanjay Singh, rebuilding this level of institutional intelligence from scratch, while under intense legal and political scrutiny, remains a Herculean task.
Can the party survive the ‘Maliwal and Harbhajan’ signal?
The exodus also carries a heavy symbolic weight. The departure of Swati Maliwal, who cited a culture of “mansion politics" and personal assault, targets the party’s moral core. Simultaneously, the exit of non-politician faces like Harbhajan Singh and Ashok Mittal signals a loss of confidence among the “celebrity" wing that gave AAP its crossover appeal. When the “Aam Aadmi" brand begins to lose its shine among the professionals and sporting icons who once championed its “clean politics" promise, the electoral fallout is rarely far behind.
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First Published:
April 25, 2026, 18:16 IST
News politics Punjab Was AAP’s Biggest Win — Has It Now Triggered The Party's Biggest Collapse?
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