In a seismic shift in Indian politics, Raghav Chadha, the young and articulate Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leader, has quit the party he helped build and joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) along with six other Rajya Sabha members. This defection, announced on April 24, 2026, represents nearly two-thirds of AAP's 10-member strength in the Upper House of Parliament, dealing a body blow to AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal at a time when the party is grappling with multiple challenges.
The move comes weeks after AAP removed Chadha from his position as Deputy Leader in the Rajya Sabha, citing indiscipline and deviation from party lines. Chadha, who was once seen as Kejriwal's protégé, accused the AAP of straying from its founding principles of fighting corruption and prioritizing public service over personal gains. This dramatic realignment not only weakens AAP's parliamentary presence but also raises questions about the future of opposition unity and the BJP's strategy of absorbing disaffected leaders from rival parties.
Raghav Chadha's Meteoric Rise in AAP
Raghav Chadha's political journey began far from the corridors of power. Born into a middle-class family in New Delhi, Chadha qualified as a Chartered Accountant (CA) and initially worked in the corporate world. His entry into politics was sparked by the 2011 India Against Corruption (IAC) movement led by Arvind Kejriwal and Anna Hazare. As a young volunteer, Chadha quickly caught the eye of Kejriwal, who recognized his sharp intellect and communication skills.
By 2012, with the formation of AAP, Chadha became the party's youngest national spokesperson at age 24. His role expanded rapidly: he served as national treasurer after AAP's 2015 Delhi Assembly victory, contributed to the 2013 election manifesto, and was appointed Vice Chairman of the Delhi Jal Board in 2020. In the 2020 Delhi Assembly elections, he won the Rajinder Nagar seat, solidifying his position as a key strategist.
Chadha's big break came in Punjab. Appointed co-in-charge for Punjab affairs in December 2020, he played a pivotal role in AAP's stunning 2022 Assembly win, securing 92 out of 117 seats. Elected to the Rajya Sabha from Punjab in April 2022 at the age of 33—the youngest member ever—Chadha chaired an advisory panel to Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann. His articulate speeches in Parliament, often highlighting everyday issues like samosa pricing at airports, data expiry policies, and middle-class tax burdens, earned him a massive social media following and national recognition.
His personal life also intersected with fame when he married Bollywood actor Parineeti Chopra in September 2023, adding to his celebrity status but also drawing criticism from AAP hardliners who saw it as a shift toward an elitist lifestyle.

Signs of Cracking Foundations: The Brewing Rift
The fault lines in Chadha's relationship with AAP leadership began appearing in 2024. During Arvind Kejriwal's arrest in March 2024 over the alleged Delhi liquor policy scam, Chadha was notably absent from street protests. He cited the need for preventive eye surgery in London to address retina issues, but AAP insiders viewed it as abandonment during a crisis. Upon Kejriwal's release in September 2024, their meeting lacked the earlier warmth.
Throughout 2025 and early 2026, Chadha's parliamentary conduct drew ire. He refrained from opposition walkouts, declined to sign a notice for removing Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar, and focused on 'soft' issues rather than aggressive attacks on the Modi government. AAP accused him of prioritizing public relations stunts over party discipline. Whispers of his perceived proximity to BJP circles, fueled by his Z-category security upgrade and ED raids on ally Ashok Mittal, intensified suspicions.
Chadha countered via social media videos, labeling the accusations 'blatant lies' and a 'scripted campaign' to silence him. He emphasized his consistent raising of public concerns—from Punjab's water issues to Delhi's air pollution, government schools, unemployment, and inflation—questioning if impactful politics meant chaos rather than substance.
The Demotion: A Point of No Return
On April 2, 2026, AAP formally removed Chadha as Rajya Sabha Deputy Leader, replacing him with Ashok Mittal and requesting the House Secretariat deny him party-allotted speaking time. This move, reflected on AAP's website, was defended by Punjab CM Bhagwant Mann as routine for indiscipline. Chadha responded with cryptic posts, including one featuring Robert Greene's 'The 48 Laws of Power,' hinting at power dynamics.
Escalation followed: ED searched Mittal's premises on April 15 amid FEMA probes linked to educational institutions. AAP's Atishi and Saurabh Bharadwaj alleged Chadha orchestrated it, while Sanjay Singh called him a 'foot soldier' gone rogue. In Rajya Sabha on April 17, Chadha subtly jabbed at absent leaders. The stage was set for the April 24 press conference.
The Announcement: 'Right Man in the Wrong Party'
Flanked by Sandeep Pathak and Ashok Mittal, Chadha declared at a New Delhi presser: AAP had deviated from its anti-corruption ethos after 15 years of his service. 'I was the right man in the wrong party,' he said, praising PM Modi's decisive leadership and vowing to continue championing citizens' issues. The group invoked the anti-defection law's merger clause—requiring two-thirds support—to join BJP without disqualification.
At BJP headquarters, party president Nitin Nabin welcomed them with saffron scarves, calling it a 'call of conscience.'
The Defectors: Profiles of the Seven
The seven AAP Rajya Sabha MPs merging with BJP are:
- Raghav Chadha (Punjab): Leader of the pack, term till 2028.
- Sandeep Pathak (Punjab): Former AAP Punjab in-charge, key strategist.
- Ashok Mittal (Punjab): New Deputy Leader, educationist facing ED probe.
- Harbhajan Singh (Punjab): Cricket legend turned politician, joined AAP in 2022.
- Swati Maliwal (Delhi): Former Delhi Commission for Women chief, known for bold stances.
- Rajendra Gupta (Punjab): Businessman and AAP loyalist.
- Vikram Sahney (Punjab): Industrialist, low-profile MP.
Mostly from Punjab (six), reflecting state-level discontent. AAP's remaining three: Sanjay Singh, Imaan Dar, and one other.

AAP's Fury: 'Betrayal of Punjab'
AAP erupted in outrage. Sanjay Singh labeled them 'gaddars' (traitors), betraying Punjab voters who elected them. Atishi highlighted Chadha's London 'flight' during Kejriwal's arrest. Bhagwant Mann called Chadha 'compromised,' questioning his 'samosa politics.' Kejriwal accused BJP's 'Operation Lotus' via agencies. Anurag Dhanda and Saurabh Bharadwaj decried indiscipline and fear of Modi.
The party vowed resilience, emphasizing its Punjab government and Delhi roots, but the loss slashes its RS voice.Frontline analysis notes this fits AAP's pattern of losing stars like Prashant Bhushan.
BJP's Strategic Gain
BJP leaders like Tuhin Sinha dubbed AAP 'the biggest scam,' hailing the merger as ideological alignment. Nalin Kohli called it the 'biggest coup' against Kejriwal. With RS strength rising (BJP+NDPP now over 120), it bolsters legislative muscle ahead of 2027 Delhi polls and 2029 Lok Sabha.
Navigating the Anti-Defection Law
India's 10th Schedule allows merger if two-thirds of a party legislature wing agrees, extended judicially to parliamentary parties. Seven of 10 exceeds threshold, shielding seats till 2028. Legal experts confirm no disqualification risk, unlike individual defections.Mint explains.
Implications for AAP: A Fortress Crumbling?
AAP, riding high post-2022 Punjab win and 2020/2025 Delhi sweeps, faces headwinds: excise scam, electoral losses elsewhere, central probes. Punjab CM Mann's tussles with Delhi add friction. This defection erodes RS influence, questions Kejriwal's control, and may trigger more exits. Punjab bypolls loom risky.
Stakeholders worry for opposition INDIA bloc coordination.
BJP's Momentum in Opposition Harvest
Post-2024 Lok Sabha (BJP 240), such absorptions—from JD(U), TDP alliances to now AAP—signal strategy. Punjab expansion eyes 2027 state polls. Chadha's youth, Punjab connect valuable for BJP's national outreach.
Expert Perspectives and Voter Reactions
Political analysts see AAP's centralization under Kejriwal alienating talent. Social media buzzes: AAP supporters mourn 'betrayal,' BJP fans celebrate. Punjab voters split—some praise Chadha's independence, others decry opportunism.
Timeline: 2011 IAC → 2022 peak → 2026 split.
Looking Ahead: Reshaped Political Landscape
This defection accelerates AAP's decline, fortifies BJP. Watch Delhi MCD, Punjab developments. Chadha may get key RS role, Punjab push. For Indian politics, it underscores fluidity, merger tactics' potency, and anti-corruption narrative's erosion.
As Chadha quoted: 'Ghayal hoon, isliye ghatak hoon'—wounded but dangerous. The battlelines redraw.
Photo by Jose P. Ortiz on Unsplash
