Arvind Kejriwal alleges poaching attempt ahead of Delhi poll results
National Herald February 07, 2025 04:39 PM

AAP supremo Arvind Kejriwal accused the BJP on Thursday, 6 February, of attempting to poach his party candidates ahead of the Delhi Assembly poll results on 8 February.

The BJP dismissed the allegation and threatened legal action.

In a post on X, Kejriwal claimed that 16 Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) candidates had received offers from the BJP with the promise of ministerial positions and Rs 15 crore each if they switch sides.

"Some agencies are showing that the abusive party (BJP) is getting more than 55 seats. In the last two hours, 16 of our candidates have received calls that if they leave the AAP and join their party, they will be made ministers and given Rs 15 crore each," Kejriwal said in his post in Hindi on the microblogging platform.

"If they are indeed winning more than 55 seats, why are they calling up our candidates? These fake surveys are a conspiracy to create an atmosphere to break AAP candidates. But not a single one of them will switch sides," he asserted.

Echoing Kejriwal's claims, AAP candidate from Sultanpur Majra and Delhi minister Mukesh Ahlawat said he was approached with such a offer.

"I may die, I may be cut into pieces, but I will never abandon Arvind Kejriwal," Ahlawat said in a post on X. "I was told that their government is being formed and they will make me a minister and give me Rs 15 crore if I leave the AAP and join them. But the respect that Kejriwal and the AAP have given me, I will never leave my party till my death," he added.

Earlier in the day, AAP leader Sanjay Singh raised these allegations at a press conference here, claiming that seven party MLAs had received calls or were approached in person with offers from BJP leaders.

"This clearly shows that the BJP has accepted its defeat even before the results and is now resorting to such tactics," the Rajya Sabha MP said.

Delhi BJP president Virendra Sachdeva rejected the allegations, calling them a sign of the AAP's "frustration" over an impending electoral defeat.

"Sanjay Singh should either retract his allegations and tender an apology or face legal action," Sachdeva said in a statement. "He should not forget that his party leader, (former) Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, is already facing a defamation case for making similar false allegations."

Singh, however, maintained that the AAP has advised its candidates to record such calls and use spy cameras to document what transpires in any face-to-face meeting regarding poaching attempts.

Chief minister Atishi, who was the AAP candidate from Kalkaji, also weighed in on the issue. "If the abusive party (BJP) is getting more than 50 seats, then why are they trying to break our candidates by contacting them?" she asked in a post on X.

Atishi claimed that the exit polls predicting a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) victory in Delhi are a "conspiracy" aimed at demoralising AAP candidates.

Polling for all the 70 Assembly seats in Delhi took place on Wednesday, with the votes set to be counted on Saturday. The results will determine whether the AAP secures a third consecutive term in power or if the BJP's 27-year wait to rule the capital comes to an end.

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