AAP to BJP Shock: Raghav Chadha ka ‘I Could Be Wrong But Not All 7’ Statement Viral”

 

New Delhi:

The BJP newest high-profile recruit – Raghav Chadha, formerly of the AAP – released a video statement Monday explaining his controversial switch to those who criticised the Rajya Sabha MP for splitting the AAP.

He said,

“I could be wrong, but not all 7”

clearly referring to the seven leaders who recently left AAP and joined BJP.

Chadha further hinted that

 some leaders may have switched parties due to pressure or temptation, but the truth will eventually come out.
The statement has sparked fresh political reactions and debate across the country.
So far, there has been no major response from BJP leaders on this remark.

Chadha and six AAP leaders quit and joined the BJP Party last week.

The Aam Aadmi party said it had been “betrayed” despite having given Chadha every opportunity, including appointing him to senior posts and making him the youngest ever – at 33 – Rajya Sabha MP.

In an Instagram video Chadha – who sources told NDTV could now become a union minister – said he gave up a “great career” and that he “didn’t come into politics to make my career”.

He quit Arvind Kejriwal’s side, he said, because “this is not the old party” and claimed a “toxic work environment” had been engendered within it, causing him to be “stopped from working”.

 

“For the last three days you have been sending me a lot of messages… most are congratulating me but some want to know the reasons for my decision. Today’s video is for them and for those who didn’t seen my press conference (last week, in which he announced his realignment).”

“Friends, before coming to politics, I was a practicing Chartered Accountant. I had a great career in front of me but I left that and came into politics. I didn’t come to politics to make my career,” Chadha, who helped found the AAP 15 years ago “with blood, sweat, tears” said.

READ | The Bill That Could Have Stopped Raghav Chadha From Splitting The AAP

On his “toxic work environment” claim, he said: “You are stopped from speaking in Parliament”, referring to the party sacking him as its Rajya Sabha deputy leader on April 2 and removing any floor time. Sources close to Chadha told NDTV then the party wanted to ‘silence him’.

“This political party is now in the hands of some corrupt and compromised people,” he said, echoing the BJP’s ‘sheeshmahal‘ corruption allegations in early attacks on his former employers.

READ | AAP vs BJP Over ‘Sheeshmahal‘ 2.0. Raghav Chadha Weighs In

“They don’t work for the country, but for their own personal gain.”

All this, Chadha claimed, left him three options – leave politics, stay and try to fix the AAP, or to “take my energy and experience and do positive politics” – and the proof his actions, he also said was in the fact that six other party leaders had joined him in walking away from Kejriwal.

“That’s why I, not alone, not one, not two, not three, not four, not five, but six other MPs… that is a total of seven… decided to break our relationship with this political party. One person can be wrong. Two people can be wrong. But not all seven people can be wrong,” he said.

Chadha’s jump has triggered a row before the Punjab election next year, as well as over the future relevance of the AAP, a party that dominated Delhi politics for 11 years before being routed by the BJP in 2025, a defeat in large part due to corruption allegations against Kejriwal. The statement made by Raghav Chadha, a prominent member of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), has gone viral, drawing significant attention from political circles. In his remarks, Chadha suggested, I could be wrong, but not all seven, which has sparked reactions from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its supporters. AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal has also weighed in on the matter, emphasizing the importance of accountability and transparency in political discourse. This incident highlights the ongoing tensions between AAP and BJP as they navigate the complexities of the political landscape.

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