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OPINION | Beyond The Meme: What Cockroach Janata Party Reveals About GenZ’s Political Revolt
Sayantan Ghosh | May 22, 2026 11:41 PM CST

No one could have predicted that a courtroom remark by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant would ignite a digital storm. During a hearing, the CJI observed that some youngsters, unable to secure employment or a foothold in professions, turn to media, social media, or RTI activism and begin “attacking the system,” likening them to “cockroaches.” He later clarified that his comments were misquoted and targeted those entering professions with fake degrees, not unemployed youth broadly. Yet the remark landed like a spark on dry tinder. 

The very next day, Abhijeet Dipke, a former Aam Aadmi Party social media strategist, launched the Cockroach Janta Party (CJP) as a satirical online experiment, a Google Form, a five-point manifesto on youth issues, and an invitation to the “unemployed, lazy, chronically online.” What started as jest exploded: tens of thousands of sign-ups, viral hashtags like #MainBhiCockroach, and an official X handle that was withheld in India, prompting a new one. 

This is not just meme politics. The ferocious support, especially from GenZ, exposes a deeper void. India’s youth, its much-vaunted demographic dividend feel unseen, unheard, and increasingly unwanted by a political establishment that lectures them while failing them. 

Mainstream parties, from the BJP to Congress, DMK, AIADMK, and others, treat youth as vote banks to be managed through welfare or legacy faces rather than empowered agents. Rahul Gandhi remains the default “youth icon” in his mid-50s; Akhilesh Yadav, Tejashwi Yadav, Abhishek Banerjee, and Tejasvi Surya carry family legacies and old ideologies that resonate little with a generation scrolling through global aspirations on their phones. 

The CJP phenomenon signals that symbolic youth wings and calculated demographics,Muslim votes, women votes, Dalit votes,have left an entire cohort politically homeless. Beneath the cockroach costumes and satire lies raw discontent: structural barriers, institutional deflection, and a suffocating sense that no one is listening. 

Satire As Symptom Of Systemic Discontent

The CJP’s rapid traction reveals satire not as escapism but as a diagnostic tool for alienation. Its manifesto, however tongue-in-cheek, echoes demands any honest young Indian has muttered: genuine job creation, education reform, and accountability. Traditional parties offer patronage or freebies that paper over joblessness rather than solving it. Youth wings exist, but they parrot party lines instead of articulating GenZ realities, gig economy precarity, mental health crises, or the aspiration for merit-based mobility untainted by scams or connections.

No party has a authentic youth face that speaks their language. Legacy leaders embody continuity with traditions GenZ views as irrelevant or obstructive. The enthusiasm for CJP underscores that token representation fails; the youth demand platforms where their restlessness translates into power, not just applause. Political calculations ignore this cohort at peril, reducing them to data points while they build parallel digital spaces. 

Youth Power In Recent State Elections

Recent polls prove GenZ is not apathetic but selective and disruptive when offered alternatives. In Tamil Nadu’s 2026 assembly elections, actor Vijay’s Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) stormed to 108 seats in its debut, largely on first-time and 18-39 voters rejecting decades of Dravidian dominance by DMK and AIADMK amid corruption and stagnation. Digital campaigns and fresh messaging cut through entrenched machines. 

In West Bengal, the BJP’s breakthrough drew heavily from GenZ, with targeted outreach on unemployment and aspiration mobilizing the 18-29 demographic and first-timers. Youth addas, reels, and anti-incumbency narratives helped reshape outcomes. These cases show young Indians reshape politics when viable options appear, bypassing legacy parties. CJP channels the same energy into satire because no mainstream force fully satisfies it. 

Root Causes: Unemployment, Exam Scams, And Victim-Blaming

At the core of the Cockroach Janta Party’s explosive appeal lies a toxic blend of structural unemployment, recurrent exam scandals, and institutional victim-blaming that has left GenZ feeling abandoned and accused. India’s youth unemployment crisis is chronic. Millions of graduates enter the job market each year only to find that degrees rarely guarantee dignified work. Successive governments,BJP-led single or double-engine dispensations, Congress, or regional parties have promised transformative job creation in every election cycle. 

Yet delivery has often meant expanded welfare and financial assistance schemes that mask rather than solve joblessness, breeding deep cynicism.

This pain is worsened by repeated collapses in competitive exams. NEET-UG paper leaks, grace-mark scandals, and organised rackets have become routine. Students sacrifice their prime years and families exhaust savings on coaching, only for systemic failures in the National Testing Agency and education bureaucracy to destroy futures. These are not mere lapses but symptoms of entrenched governance rot.

Chief Justice Surya Kant’s remark likening certain frustrated youngsters turning to social media, media or RTI activism to “cockroaches” attacking the system struck a nerve, even after clarification that it targeted fake-degree holders. It reinforced perceptions of victim-blaming: institutions faulting the youth instead of fixing failures.

 If unemployment is a national emergency, why has the Supreme Court not taken strong suo moto cognisance of repeated exam leaks to impose binding national guidelines? Why no decisive intervention holding education ministers, bureaucrats and NTA officials personally accountable? Why no judicial push for measurable job-generation targets every government must meet in its five-year term, with consequences for non-compliance? Why persist with unconditional financial assistance that normalises dependency instead of linking it strictly to skilling and employment outcomes?

Public education infrastructure mirrors the crisis. Government schools stand hollowed out, higher education institutions starved of faculty recruitment and funds, forcing dependence on expensive private players and eroding the right to quality education. The CJP’s satirical demands accountability, opportunity, an end to deflection echo silent questions asked by millions. This is not entitlement. It is a legitimate revolt against a system that preaches demographic dividend while undermining the youth it claims to value. GenZ is not the problem; it is the promise the establishment has failed.

Global Echoes And India’s Wake-Up Call

The Cockroach Janta Party is not an isolated Indian meme. It forms part of a global GenZ awakening that has already toppled governments and reshaped politics. In Bangladesh in 2024, student-led protests against job quotas and authoritarianism swelled into a mass uprising that forced Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to flee after 15 years in power, leaving hundreds dead in the crackdown. Just months later, in September 2025, Nepal’s GenZ erupted against corruption, nepotism, and a sweeping social media ban, burning government buildings and compelling Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli to resign within days. Similar youth surges have shaken Kenya, Madagascar, Indonesia, Morocco, and parts of Europe and Latin America, driven by shared grievances: youth unemployment, crumbling institutions, elite capture, and the stifling of digital voices.

What unites these movements is digital-native organising, leaderless, fast, and relentless. GenZ refuses to wait for legacy parties to grant permission for change. In India, the CJP represents a lighter, non-violent, satirical version of this global impulse: a “first cry” for agency through memes and Google Forms rather than streets and fire. Yet the message is identical,youth will no longer accept being managed as vote banks or lectured into submission.

Mainstream Indian parties, whether the BJP with its development narrative, Congress with its dynastic outreach, or regional outfits like DMK, AIADMK, or others, face a stark choice. They must urgently prioritise verifiable job creation, iron-clad exam integrity, robust public education, and authentic youth representation that speaks GenZ’s language of aspiration and merit. Failure to adapt risks ceding ground to unpredictable digital-native movements that thrive outside traditional structures. This is no fleeting joke. CJP signals an expanding political space that demands genuine inclusion. India’s political class should heed the global echo,or prepare to be disrupted by it. 


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