When well-known Punjabi comedian and film actor Gurpreet Ghuggi joined the Aam Aadmi Party, which is making a serious bid to wrest power in Punjab, it seemed that the party managed to stage a coup of sorts.
Ghuggi, like the party’s MP Bhagwant Mann, is extremely popular in rural Punjab and among the masses. Of late, Mann had been facing brickbats for allegedly getting too fond of the spirits Punjab is infamous for. A couple of months ago, he was forced to leave a religious gathering after he allegedly came drunk to the venue where the Sikh holy book, the Guru Granth Sahib was placed.
Ghuggi enjoys a good clean image and has even made a mark in Bollywood with his latest delightful cameo in Singh is Bling. He had attained popularity after participating in the TV show, “Great Indian Laughter Challenge” and went on to act in several Punjabi films and television serials.
What made the 44-year-old Ghuggi joining the AAP all the more eventful was the fact that he had met former Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh, who was recently made the state Congress president. There were speculations that the film actor/comedian would join the Congress along with some other Punjabi stars. He apparently changed his mind after meeting the national organisation building head of AAP, Durgesh Pathak, who had also approached him to join the party.
Ghuggi, who also enjoys the considerable support of the NRIs, is bound to attract some other Punjabi stars to join AAP. Already, members of his team and several small-time film actors from the state have either joined the party or expressed their support for him and the party.
While Bhagwant Mann had been cagey about his image as a comedian, describing comedy as a serious business, Ghuggi is making no bones about making people laugh. Soon after joining the party he said that while politicians have made people cry, “We want to make people laugh by improving their situation”.
The party has also roped in some other well-known people – Punjab Congress general secretary and an outspoken leader Sukhpal Singh Khaira, former senior bureaucrat Jasbir Singh Bir and half a dozen journalists including former editor Kanwar Sandhu. Sandhu was recently in the news for interviewing dismissed police officer Parminder Singh Pinki, and for the attack on him while visiting the Patiala jail to meet Balwant Singh Rajoana, an accused in the Beant Singh assassination case. He is believed to be preparing the AAP’s manifesto for the forthcoming elections.
Capt Amarinder Singh, who
describes it as a party of outsiders, says that it was attracting those with
leftist leanings and even those who have supported terrorism. SAD
chief Sukhbir Badal dismisses the party as those of the ‘topiwallas’.
Though the party has set up units all across the rural areas and has constituted ward-level committees, which no other party has yet done, it lacks a credible candidate for the post of Chief Minister. Kejriwal continues to be the most prominent face and when asked about the chief ministerial candidate by the media, he dismissed the questions saying, “We shall cross the bridge when we come to it”.
Yet the response that Arvind Kejriwal received at the Maghi Mela, where he attracted larger crowds than Amarinder Singh and Sukhbir, during his recent five-day visit, has been tremendous. He visited families of those killed by militants as well as families of some farmers who had recently committed suicide. The response is bound to make the Congress, SAD and BJP leaders jittery.
(The writer is a Chandigarh-based senior journalist.)
Also read: Punjab Elections: Tensions Between BJP and SAD Rife in the State
(At The Quint, we are answerable only to our audience. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member. Because the truth is worth it.)