Is AAP a one-man party?
Is AAP a one-man party?
AAP is a one-man party and when that one man sinks, he will inevitably take the party down with him. From 2011-15, Kejriwal ran on the basis of promises and kept saying he wanted just one chance to prove himself. Well, no politician can get a better chance than being given 67/70 seats in any Assembly.
Why don’t more people volunteer?
The most regularly cited reasons given for not volunteering are ill health, lack of time, and lack of interest. With an ageing population, ill health is likely to grow as a barrier while at the same time increasing demand for volunteer-provided services such as health or aged care.
How have volunteer roles changed over the past two decades?
Added to these barriers, the ways people choose to volunteer have changed over the past two decades. People are less willing to commit to the ongoing volunteer roles that characterise traditional volunteer organisations such as Meals on Wheels or the local bush fire brigade. Instead, they are more likely to seek varied and short-term roles.
Is volunteering “cool”?
It seems many people who do not volunteer think that volunteering is not “cool”. They imagine a volunteer in a stereotypical manner, as an older woman who volunteers every week for Meals on Wheels or similar.
Is AAP being funded by Khalistanis?
Former founding member Yogendra Yadav said the AAP was no longer transparent in its donor list. Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh claimed they were being funded by Khalistanis. Former Punjab deputy CM openly accused AAP of getting funds from “terrorist organisations having roots in foreign lands”.
Is the writing on the wall for AAP in Delhi?
In the recent New Delhi Assembly by-poll in Rajouri Garden, the AAP candidate not only lost, but also lost his deposit. One struggles to think such a fate befalling the ruling party of any state. The writing has been on the wall for quite some time now.