Let’s Start With What Actually Happened
It was a Thursday. Routine Supreme Court hearing. Fake law degrees on the docket. Nothing that should have made national news.
And then Chief Justice of India Surya Kant said this:
“There are youngsters like cockroaches, who don’t get any employment and don’t have a place in a profession. Some of them become media, some of them become RTI activists, and they start attacking everyone.”
CJI Surya Kant, Supreme Court of India, May 15, 2026 (as reported; CJI later issued a clarification)
The courtroom probably didn’t even blink. But the internet? The internet absolutely lost it.
By the time most of India had finished their chai the next morning, a political party had been born. Not in some backroom dharna, not after years of organizing but in 24 hours, on X, with zero rupees and no office. Yahi hai 2026 ki rajneeti, yaar.
So What Exactly Is the Cockroach Janta Party?
The Cockroach Janta Party (CJP) is a satirical digital protest movement launched on May 16, 2026 the day after the CJI’s remarks went viral. Its official X handle is @CJP_2029, its website is cockroachjantaparty.org, and its tagline is genuinely one of the best things written in Indian political history:
“Voice of the Lazy & Unemployed.”
The party describes itself as “a political front of the youth, by the youth, for the youth Secular, Socialist, Democratic, and Lazy.”
Its founder is Abhijeet Dipke, a digital content creator and political commentator with 26,000+ followers on X, who now goes by the self-styled title of “Founding President.” There is poetry in that title. He launched with one casual post:
🐦 @AbhijeetDipke · May 16, 2026
Launching a new platform for all the ‘cockroaches’ out there.
If you wish to join, hit the link below.
Eligibility criteria:
- Unemployed
- Lazy
- Chronically online
- Ability to rant professionally
That post kicked off one of India’s fastest-growing political “parties” in recent memory. Membership criteria: no religion check, no caste bar, no gender filter. Bas ek cheez chahiye the audacity to call yourself a cockroach and mean it proudly.
The Numbers Don’t Lie This Grew Faster Than Most Real Parties
Let’s just put the timeline on paper, because it’s kind of insane:
- May 15, 2026 CJI makes the “cockroach” remark during a Supreme Court hearing
- May 16, 2026 Abhijeet Dipke founds CJP; first post goes live; cockroachjantaparty.org goes up
- Within 24 hours 15,000 followers on X; 20,000+ members claimed
- Within 48 hours membership crosses 40,000; an election symbol is unveiled; a Five-Point Agenda drops
- May 17, 2026 TMC MP Mahua Moitra publicly joins; Kirti Azad follows; RTI activist Anjali Bhardwaj adds clauses to the manifesto
- Ongoing Memes, campaign songs, physical protests (with “I am a Cockroach” placards), and a proposed GenZ National Convention
40,000 members. 48 hours. Zero budget. No party office. No primetime debate required. Koi bhi established party yeh sun ke thoda insecure feel kar sakti hai.
The CJP Manifesto: Funnier Than Most Real Party Manifestos, And Sadly More Honest
Here’s the thing about the CJP underneath all the memes and the sarcasm, the Five-Point Agenda is actually pretty serious. RTI activist Anjali Bhardwaj got involved. Users crowdsourced clauses in real-time. The comment section became a policy drafting room.
Here’s what the CJP has promised if it comes to power (buckle up):
1. No Post-Retirement Rajya Sabha Seats for Chief Justices
If CJP comes to power, no Chief Justice of India shall be appointed to the Rajya Sabha as a post-retirement reward. Full stop. The judiciary must not be used as a political revolving door.
2. Delete a Vote, Go to Jail Under UAPA
If any legitimate vote is deleted, whether in a CJP-ruled or opposition-ruled state, the Chief Election Commissioner shall be arrested under UAPA. Because “taking away voting rights of citizens is no less than terrorism.” (Their words. Unhinged. Correct.
3. Women Get 50% Not 33%
50% reservation for women in Parliament and 50% of all cabinet positions without increasing the overall strength of Parliament. No jugaad reservations that quietly disappear.
4. Media Accountability
All Adani and Ambani-owned media outlets to have their licences revoked. Accounts of “Godi media anchors” to be audited. (Satire? Sure. But also imagine.)
5. MLA/MP Defection = Lifetime Ban
Any MLA or MP who defects gets a lifetime ban from public office, plus a 20-year ban from contesting elections. Anti-defection law with actual teeth, basically.
Anjali Bhardwaj’s additions to the manifesto were even sharper: full RTI accountability, no anonymous donations, no electoral bonds, and my personal favourite “No secret Cockroach CARES Fund.”
The CJP’s vision statement also included this line, which I need you to read slowly:
“We are not here to set up another PM CARES, holiday in Davos on the taxpayer’s salary slip, or rebrand corruption as ‘strategic spending’. We are here to ask loudly, repeatedly, in writing where the money went.”
Satire? Yes. Also just… accurate diagnosis?
CJI Said He Was Misquoted. The Party Said Thank You And Kept Registering Members.
The day after the storm broke, CJI Surya Kant issued a clarification. He said the media had misquoted him. His actual target, he explained, were people who had “sneaked into media, social media, and other noble professions” using fake and bogus degrees not unemployed youth in general.
He also added:
“I am proud of the present and future human resources of the country. Every youth of India inspires me. I see them as the pillars of a developed India.”
CJI Surya Kant, clarification, May 16, 2026
Lovely. Heartwarming, even.
The Cockroach Janta Party noted the clarification and continued registering members.
CJP founder Dipke also fired back on X sarcastically pointing out that the PM doesn’t have a legitimate degree, and asking: since when does someone need a formal degree to criticise a system? The Constitution gives every citizen the right to speech. Doesn’t matter if you’re a PhD or a dropout.
The Tweets That Made This Go Viral Collected Here So You Don’t Have To Scroll
Here are the actual posts that shaped this movement, in real-time. Ye sab dekho this is how a meme becomes a movement.
🐦 @CJP_2029 (Official) · May 17, 2026
We want to make it absolutely clear that CJP firmly believes in the Constitution of India and will always work towards protecting its values.
Cockroach Power. 🪳
🐦 @MahuaMoitra · May 17, 2026
I too would like to join the CJP (besides being a card carrying member of the Anti National Party) 🪳
🐦 @CJP_2029 (Official) · May 17, 2026
Those who rig elections and spread communal hatred are the real anti-nationals.
You are the fighter democracy needs, @MahuaMoitra.
Welcome to CJP! 🪳
🐦 @CJP_2029 (Official) · May 17, 2026
We welcome @KirtiAzaad to our Cockroach Janta Party.
Winning the 1983 World Cup is a good enough qualification. 😎🪳
🐦 @AbhijeetDipke · May 17, 2026
Will be launching the election symbol of Cockroach Janta Party and our Five Point Agenda for 2029.
Request to all cockroach journalists to kindly follow the launch.
#CJP2029
And then there was the comment section. Some users thanked the CJI for “uniting the youth.” Others submitted manifesto ideas that were unhinged and oddly sensible:
- “No towel on government babu chairs.”
- “TV channels to not have more than two ‘experts’ on panels.”
- “Kill us and we rise again. From the gutters, from the stain.” an actual Gen Z anthem composed for CJP
Who Is Actually Joining? (Spoiler: It’s Not Just “Cockroaches”)
This is the part that makes the CJP genuinely interesting as a political phenomenon. The membership is not uniform. Within 48 hours you had:
- Unemployed graduates venting their frustration on X
- Opposition politicians (Mahua Moitra, Kirti Azad) lending legitimacy to what began as a joke
- RTI activists (Anjali Bhardwaj) shaping actual policy demands
- Young professionals and “chronically online” millennials sharing memes
- Journalists calling themselves “Cockroach Journalists” and covering their own party
- People cleaning garbage dumps while wearing “I am a Cockroach” placards turning satire into direct action
- And yes, campaign songs good, bad, and viral ones, all composed and shared online
National Herald India, covering the story, noted: “While this may have started out as a gag, it is now turning serious and people are already beginning to see a new political movement possibility driven by Gen Z.”
Kuch logon ne toh isko 2011 ke India Against Corruption movement se compare kiya hai an early-stage mobilisation before something much bigger. Yaar, remember Anna Hazare? Pehle sabko lagta tha joke hai.
Wait Is CJP Actually an AAP Front? Here’s the Controversy
Not everyone is applauding. Some X users pointed out that founder Abhijeet Dipke has previously worked with AAP’s social media machinery including Kejriwal-centred meme campaigns and election war rooms.
OpIndia reported this angle directly: “The so-called party has been launched by Abhijeet Dipke, a self-styled political commentator who has served as part of the Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) social media machinery.”
Some users on X called it “yet another AAP venture to occupy opposition space.” Others drew a sharper comparison to 2011 India Against Corruption, noting that movement also had murky political connections before it went mainstream.
Dipke himself has not publicly confirmed or denied the AAP connection. The CJP’s official account has not aligned with any party and its manifesto takes shots at institutions that cut across party lines (Election Commission, judiciary, Adani-linked media).
The AAP link raises a fair question about whether this is genuine organic youth energy or astroturfed digital activism. The honest answer: probably both. The frustration is real. The organisation may have had a head start.
Why Did This Hit So Hard? Because It Landed on a Live Nerve
The CJP spread so fast not because of any political machinery but because the original remark touched something real.
India’s youth unemployment is not a meme. Competitive government exams are brutally contested by millions of applicants for a handful of seats. The RTI Act has become one of the primary tools through which citizens without institutional standing no lawyer, no lobby, no journalist on speed dial can actually push back against the system.
When the head of India’s highest court reached for the word “cockroach” to describe people who use those tools to demand accountability, to ask questions, to exist as voices without verified degrees millions of young Indians felt personally addressed.
And Gen Z did what Gen Z does: it took the insult, turned it inside out, wore it as a badge, and made it trend.
The Wire noted the chilling historical precedent of dehumanising language being used against civilian populations. Calling people insects has a long and dark history. Whether CJI intended it that way or not, the word landed on a generation already running low on goodwill toward institutions.
Aur phir, theek 48 ghante mein, the cockroaches had a party, a constitution, a website, and a manifesto. History suggests the cockroach outlasts the exterminator. This one is no different.
This Isn’t Happening in Isolation South Asia’s Gen Z Is Awake
Bangladesh 2024. Nepal 2025–26. India 2026. There is a pattern here that political analysts are only beginning to take seriously.
In Bangladesh, Gen Z-led protests over government job quotas forced a sitting Prime Minister from power organised primarily over TikTok and Facebook. In Nepal, youth movements have used Instagram and X to sustain pressure campaigns against entrenched political dynasties.
Times of India cited analyst Manish Tewari observing that “Gen Z protests in three South Asian nations must be studied” not as curiosities or internet trends, but as genuine signals of what happens when young people with digital fluency, economic frustration, and zero patience for legacy institutions decide to act.
The CJP fits squarely in this pattern. It is satirical, yes. But satire has a long tradition in Indian politics from cartoonists to poets to filmmakers who said what journalists couldn’t. The cockroach is the newest avatar of that tradition.
What Happens to CJP Next? (And Why 2029 Is Actually On the Table)
The CJP’s official X handle is @CJP_2029 and the number is not random. 2029 is the next Indian general election.
Now, to be clear: there is no path from a satirical X account to a registered political party contesting Lok Sabha seats without enormous legal, financial, and organizational work. The CJP knows this. Its own members know this.
But the CJP founder, in an interview with The Federal, said something worth sitting with: this movement has already “received support that cannot be created artificially. It is completely organic and unprecedented.” He hadn’t slept in 48 hours. He was responding to thousands of messages. This was not a manufactured moment.
What the CJP has done in under two days, with no money is convert a remark made in a Supreme Court hearing into a national conversation about unemployment, institutional language, democratic accountability, and whose voice counts in India.
The party may not exist on ballot papers in 2029. But the generation it has mobilised? That generation absolutely will be voting.
The Bottom Line
Is the Cockroach Janta Party a real political party? Technically, no not yet.
Is it a meme? Yes but one that grew a constitution, a manifesto, and a formal stance on the RTI Act within 48 hours.
Is it AAP in disguise? Possibly partially. But the emotion behind it is entirely real.
Is it important? Absolutely.
CJI Surya Kant wanted to talk about fake degrees in the legal profession. Instead, he accidentally gave India’s disenchanted youth a mascot, a manifesto, and a meme.
In the annals of Indian judicial history, few remarks have so efficiently organised the opposition. The CJP thanks him for his service.
“India has survived the Mughals, the British, pesticides, demonetisation, and a pandemic. If CJI Surya Kant’s remarks were intended as a judicial insult, history suggests the cockroach will outlast the exterminator.”
The Jan Post
This isn’t just a trend. It’s anger in a party hat. And anger, when it organizes, tends to stick around longer than the people who provoked it.
Want to Follow or Join CJP? Here’s Where to Go
- Official website: cockroachjantaparty.org
- X / Twitter: @CJP_2029
- Founder’s X: @AbhijeetDipke
- Hashtags to follow: #CJP2029 · #CJPProtest · #CockroachJantaParty · #CockroachPower
Note: CJP is a satirical/digital protest movement. It is not a registered political party under the Election Commission of India. All party-related activity is online and non-violent. This article covers it as a cultural and political trend, not as an endorsement.
Sources & Further Reading
All reporting based on verified public sources as of May 18, 2026:
BOOM Live The Cockroach Janta Party: How A CJI Comment Became A Movement
Ground Report Cockroach Janta Party Explained: Who Founded It, Why It’s Going Viral
The South First Cockroach Janta Party crawls out of CJI’s parasitic youth remark
National Herald India Laugh if you want but cockroaches are uniting
The Jan Post India’s Cockroaches Have Formed a Political Party
Sunday Guardian Live Why the Cockroach Janta Party is Trending Online
OpIndia Who started Cockroach Janta Party? AAP link explained
Times of India Gen Z protests in 3 South Asian nations must be studied
Cockroach Janta Party Official Website
© 2026 Digital Politics Desk. This article is for informational and journalistic purposes. CJP is a satirical movement; no political affiliation is endorsed by this publication.










