The Aam Admi effect is visible in many government offices dealing directly with the public. The crowd of touts waiting outside government offices has suddenly vanished.
Attendance :
The clerks manning the counters are reaching office before time for fear of stern action following complaint on the Delhi government helpline. An official said earlier the clerks used to make money from the touts by rejecting applications, but now they are helping the applicants forward their pleas.
Vanishing Brokers :
Every government office used to run with the help of brokers now a days no broker is seen around the office previosly they used to share their booty with the government officers ,,,bye bye
AAP Volunteers :
Every delhities think that its his moral victory they were fe up with the corruption and time consuming procedures of govt offices and now they are feeling vey happy as both the time and money were saved.
INDIA TODAY GROUP CVOTER Mood of the nation survey
THE Aam Aadmi Party ( AAP) made its national ambition very clear after it formed the government in Delhi. That ambition is riding on the fact that there seems to be a wave of support for the party in several areas, especially those contiguous to the national Capital.
But cold numbers, such as these revealed by India Today/ C Voter Mood of the Nation poll, show that the road to fulfil that ambition is a long and tough one.
Done before the dharna by Arvind Kejriwal outside Parliament, the survey projects that AAP will get eight per cent of the vote, translating to about 10 seats, if Lok Sabha seats are held now. But a five per cent vote swinging its way could get the party 30 seats.
A stronger push can get them up to 50, which will make them kingmakers. To be the king, the party needs to swing 25 per cent of the vote, taking them to 300 seats in Parliament, and make Arvind Kejriwal the probable prime minister.
At least 70 per cent of the respondents to the survey in Delhi think that’s possible. But the challenges before the AAP are apparent.
The party doesn’t have a strong organisation in most states. Campaigning is yet to start in earnest, which could test the party.
There could also be a negative ruboff from the unending controversies that continue to hit the party. What it does have going for itself is the image of Kejriwal as an honest politician and its willingness to break political conventions.
courtesy and thanks to mailtoday
http://epaper.mailtoday.in/epaperhome.aspx?issue=2312014