rewrite this content and keep HTML tags
Lesson for AAP and Arvind Kejriwal: You cannot be a full -time political party with a freelance ideology
The results of 2025 Delhi assembly elections took the center stage on 8 February. In this piece for The Indian ExpressThe columnist Akash Joshi questions the political situation of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) which finds himself in a “corresponding prediction”.
Joshi noted how AAP focused on schools and ‘Mohalla Clinic’, which were only partially implemented. He writes, “A party that has been vague on ideological and moral issues is more weak on this front.”
Voice in the forest
In your weekly column for The Indian ExpressCongress leader P Chidambaram said that last week, referring to a one issued by Finance Minister Nirmala Ceitman, there has never been a more politically operated budget. He focuses on how the budget improved to confiscate the opportunity to restructure the economy and, instead, only plans and missions were introduced.
V Anant Najavaran, the Chief Economic Advisor is the ‘Voice in the Jungle’, who gave sensible advice through the Economic Survey (ES) 2024-25. Chidambaram briefly asked four of the 13 chapters in the ES to indicate that the attention should be on de-regulations and commercial reforms.
As Kejriwal’s ‘Delhi Model’, two major questions, two major questions for national politics lose two major questions
What are the implications of this Delhi election in the widespread configuration of party politics in India?
Aseem Ali, a political researcher responds to this in his column The Times of IndiaTalking about the rise of AAP, he said that it is a party that practices the politics of ‘post-salvese’, which means that it is not clear on distributional conflicts between different classes, communities and interests. Is, but a ‘universal’ and ‘universal’ and ‘talk of’ and ‘and’ universal ‘and’ universal ‘and’ universal ‘and’ universal ‘and’ and ‘practical’ politics.
Additionally, he addresses important questions such as: Can parties like AAP regain their location or are they looking at the unavoidable decline? And can the Congress now regain its former place, which has now been vacated by these ‘Central’ regional parties?
In Delhi, it was not an election, but there was a referendum on Kejriwal
In his weekly column The Indian ExpressTawlen Singh argues that Delhi election was more referendum than an election on Arvind Kejriwal. Regarding Kejriwal’s political trajectory, she says that even though she started as a leader who promised Delhi things, which they had been working for a long time, ambition and drug addicts He took the best because he tried to rebuild his image as a national leader.
She also talks about cleanliness and lack of civil facilities in Delhi, squalid markets, dirty roads and new samples of private investment such as hotels and office blocks are now omnipresent in the city.
What is the explanation of big BJP victory in the capital
In her column for Hindustan TimesNeeljan Sarkar believes that Arvind Kejriwal of AAP in 2013 has a wave of wave and high-class dissatisfaction-the primary reason for the defeat of his party because these voters have left it. .
“The growing dissatisfaction of middle and upper classes with AAP was enough for Delhi’s control,” they write.
Despite spending an increase in defense, many challenges have been faced so far
The first head of India’s defense intelligence agency writes in a retired Lieutenant-General, Kamal Davar, Deccan Chronicle About the need for adequate allocation in the country’s defense budget to achieve desired military capabilities.
Additionally, he also indicates many important intervals in our arsenal and this operational zero needs to be filled to the supernaturality that is worthy of it.
India’s voice should resonate in global AI conversations
Congress MP and writer Shashi Tharoor, in this piece HinduEspecially makes a case for India’s engagement with an internationally artificial intelligence (AI). He argues that India is one of the fastest adopters of AI, “is at the forefront of availing AI for transformational changes in areas such as health care, finance, agriculture and logistics.”
He said that India needs to be involved in the discourse on international AI security standards, as India can continuously position itself as a global leader in the AI rule and promote cross -border innovation.
Revolution will not be subsidized
In its piece for Hindustan TimesRoshan Kishore indicated the ideological dissatisfaction of voters with AAP, which increased by the condition of the infrastructure of Delhi.
He also saw, “AAP’s growth in Delhi politics has been marked by welfare schemes, but the lack of ideological challenge for the BJP may support it between transferring voter bases.”
Trump plays the initial role. Will the danger work?
In this column for Deccan HeraldMohammad Zeeshan writes how US President Donald Trump is following the footsteps of Nixon to follow the insane principle.
He writes how in the first week of his office, he threatened Columbia, Canada and Mexico with heavy tariffs and all are going to its peak.
More than quint
-
Delhi Poll: Caste, Gender, Purvanchal, Punjab BJP’s mind because it chooses the next CM
-
Veer Pahariya’s curious case: B-town’s next superstar cannot be constructed
-
The end of the rainbow? Trump’s queue landscape is beyond American politics
-
To save or spend? Why tax breaks for middle class will not go into consumption
-
Living with cancer: Don’t call us ‘brave’, we just have not an option