Who Are We
About Cockroach Janata Party
The Origin
On May 15, 2026, Chief Justice of India Surya Kant made remarks comparing India's unemployed youth to "cockroaches" who have "no place in society". The statement, made from the highest court in the land, was about 29 million people — graduates who studied, worked hard, and found themselves unemployed in a system that produces 8 million graduates every year and can't employ most of them.
The next day, Abhijeet Dipke — a former AAP social media strategist — launched the Cockroach Janata Party. Not in anger. In humor. In defiance. And in genuine political purpose.
The Growth
CJP became the fastest growing political movement India had ever seen — not through paid campaigns or party machinery, but through a shared feeling of being dismissed, underestimated, and called cockroaches by the very institutions meant to protect them.
Why This Exists
29.1% of India's graduates are unemployed — nine times higher than unemployment among people who never went to school. India produces 8 million graduates every year. It doesn't have enough jobs for them. That's not a personal failure. That's a policy failure.
Meanwhile: NEET papers get leaked, elections get manipulated, media is owned by the same people who own government contracts, and retired judges get nominated to Parliament by the government they just served. CJP exists because the mainstream political discourse doesn't say these things out loud. We do.
Notable Supporters
The Anthem
"Haan Main Hoon Cockroach" — Yes, I Am a Cockroach. The song became an anthem for a generation told they weren't wanted. Cockroaches, after all, survive everything. Every government. Every economic collapse. Every attempt to exterminate them. Maybe that's not an insult. Maybe that's a compliment.