64. Aam Aadmi Party opens 300
offices across India,
All India | Indo-Asian News
Service | Updated: January 03, 2014 01:56 IST
Aam Aadmi Party opens 300
offices across India, aims to be a national
player
AP photo
File photo of Aam Aadmi
Party chief Arvind Kejriwal.
New Delhi/Ghaziabad:
With over 500,000 new members and 300
offices coming up in all corners of the country
in just around three weeks' time, the Aam Aadmi
Party (AAP), which had a dream debut in the
Delhi polls, has its eyes firmly set on the
coming general elections.
According to party's
political affairs committee member Sanjay Singh,
322 offices have opened up all over the country,
including in places like Sikkim, Assam, Goa,
Daman and Diu and Dadra and Nagar Haveli.
"The party has seen
tremendous growth in its popularity since the
December 8 Delhi results. Before election
results, we had around five lakh members but now
the figure stands at 10 lakh (one million)," Mr
Singh told IANS adding that 200,000 people have
joined online.
AAP formed the government
in Delhi after winning 28 seats in its debut
elections for Delhi's 70-member assembly. It was
promised outside support by the Congress, which
won eight seats in Delhi.
At 60, Uttar Pradesh has
the highest number of party offices followed by
Madhya Pradesh (35), Rajasthan (27), Tamil Nadu
(25), Kerala (14) and Gujarat (10), said Mr
Singh who, along with colleague Pankaj Gupta, is
part of a sub-committee under the party's
parliamentary affairs committee to look after
AAP's Lok Sabha poll preparations.
The duo will also help
party volunteers across the country in preparing
for the 2014 Lok Sabha elections.
"Volunteers are working
overtime to spread the party's message in all
these places," he said.
Agreed 37-year-old Poonam
Parveen, who sits at the help desk at the
party's headquarters in Kaushambi township of
Ghaziabad, adjacent to Delhi, where Arvind
Kejriwal resides, told IANS: "Every day we
receive hundreds of calls and e-mails from all
over the country. People are so eager to join."
Ms Parveen, who was a
full-time housewife before joining the party six
months back, informed that to become a member,
one has to fill a membership form priced at Rs.
10.
"Most of the people are
either college students or activists. Hundreds
are joining everyday," said Ms Parveen, who
claims that she attends a minimum of 150 phone
calls daily from across India.
Jayashree, a member from
the Goa office where over 1,000 volunteers have
been enrolled in the last few days, told IANS
over phone: "After the oath ceremony of
Kejriwal-ji as chief minister of Delhi, people
are thronging our office to join the party."
"The contact numbers, with
the party members' names, have been displayed
outside the party offices in the districts,"
said another volunteer.