by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Chief International Correspondent
NEW DELHI (Worthy News) – What began as a social media joke among India’s Generation Z, or Gen Z, has evolved into a growing protest movement challenging the country’s political establishment.
The self-styled “Cockroach Janta Party” (CJP), founded less than a month ago by activist Abhijeet Dipke, has attracted over 22 million followers on platform Instagram alone, as young Indians express frustration over unemployment and repeated scandals in the education system, Bloomberg News service reported.
The movement emerged after Indian Supreme Court Justice Surya Kant was reported as referring to some unemployed young people as “parasites” and “cockroaches” during a court hearing, remarks that sparked outrage online.
Dipke, a 30-year-old former communications strategist for the opposition Aam Aadmi Party who was studying in the United States, responded by creating a satirical website describing the CJP as a home for India’s “lazy, unemployed and forgotten.”
Dipke is returning to India to lead a protest in New Delhi calling for the resignation of Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, providing an early test of whether online support can be transformed into political activism.
YOUTH JOB CRISIS
Generation Z generally refers to people born between the late 1990s and early 2010s. In India, where the median age is under 30, young voters represent a powerful political force.
Although India has become the world’s fastest-growing major economy, economists say the country has struggled to create enough jobs for millions of young people entering the labor market each year. Studies suggest youth unemployment remains significantly higher than official figures indicate.
Public anger has also been fueled by examination scandals. Authorities recently canceled a nationwide medical entrance examination taken by more than 2 million students after allegations that questions had been leaked before the test.
While Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party remains politically dominant across much of India, analysts say the rapid rise of the Cockroach Janta Party highlights growing frustration among younger voters who feel left behind by economic growth and increasingly skeptical of traditional political institutions.
The movement has also drawn comparisons with youth-led protest movements elsewhere in South Asia, where younger generations have challenged long-established political elites and demanded greater economic opportunities and government accountability.
MODI FACES PRESSURE
Faced with pressure from a young population, Modi has sought to strengthen India’s global economic and strategic partnerships.
Last month, Modi visited the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, and Italy as part of a broader diplomatic tour aimed at boosting trade, investment, technology cooperation, energy security, and relations with Europe.
During a recent visit to the Netherlands, Modi appeared impressed while touring the Afsluitdijk, the renowned Dutch flood-defense system that protects much of the country from flooding. Video footage showed the Indian leader braving strong winds as officials explained how the project helps manage water levels and safeguard low-lying areas, an issue of growing importance to India as it grapples with recurring floods and droughts.
The nation of more than 1.4 billion people faces recurring water-management crises, as about 40 million hectares, or roughly 12 percent of India’s land area, are considered flood-prone. Experts say rapid urbanization, infrastructure shortcomings, and increasingly erratic monsoon rains are worsening the problem.
Despite impressive economic growth and a rapidly expanding technology sector, hundreds of millions of Indians continue to live in poverty, particularly in rural regions.
POVERTY STILL PERSISTS
Christian groups say many believers remain among the country’s most vulnerable communities, facing economic hardship as well as concerns over discrimination and persecution in several states of the Hindu-majority nation.
Whether the increasingly popular CJP can translate its social-media following into lasting political influence remains unclear.
Yet its rapid rise suggests that many young Indians are seeking answers to challenges ranging from unemployment and education to poverty and opportunity.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
The following code is how the above article is generated with the Worthy Suite WordPress Plugin.
[worthy_plugins_news_story_body]
This is how you display a story with an image.
India’s ‘Cockroach Party’ Gains Millions Of Followers Amid Youth Frustration

by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Chief International Correspondent
NEW DELHI (Worthy News) – What began as a social media joke among India’s Generation Z, or Gen Z, has evolved into a growing protest movement challenging the country’s political establishment.
The self-styled “Cockroach Janta Party” (CJP), founded less than a month ago by activist Abhijeet Dipke, has attracted over 22 million followers on platform Instagram alone, as young Indians express frustration over unemployment and repeated scandals in the education system, Bloomberg News service reported.
The movement emerged after Indian Supreme Court Justice Surya Kant was reported as referring to some unemployed young people as “parasites” and “cockroaches” during a court hearing, remarks that sparked outrage online.
Dipke, a 30-year-old former communications strategist for the opposition Aam Aadmi Party who was studying in the United States, responded by creating a satirical website describing the CJP as a home for India’s “lazy, unemployed and forgotten.”
Dipke is returning to India to lead a protest in New Delhi calling for the resignation of Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, providing an early test of whether online support can be transformed into political activism.
YOUTH JOB CRISIS
Generation Z generally refers to people born between the late 1990s and early 2010s. In India, where the median age is under 30, young voters represent a powerful political force.
Although India has become the world’s fastest-growing major economy, economists say the country has struggled to create enough jobs for millions of young people entering the labor market each year. Studies suggest youth unemployment remains significantly higher than official figures indicate.
Public anger has also been fueled by examination scandals. Authorities recently canceled a nationwide medical entrance examination taken by more than 2 million students after allegations that questions had been leaked before the test.
While Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party remains politically dominant across much of India, analysts say the rapid rise of the Cockroach Janta Party highlights growing frustration among younger voters who feel left behind by economic growth and increasingly skeptical of traditional political institutions.
The movement has also drawn comparisons with youth-led protest movements elsewhere in South Asia, where younger generations have challenged long-established political elites and demanded greater economic opportunities and government accountability.
MODI FACES PRESSURE
Faced with pressure from a young population, Modi has sought to strengthen India’s global economic and strategic partnerships.
Last month, Modi visited the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, and Italy as part of a broader diplomatic tour aimed at boosting trade, investment, technology cooperation, energy security, and relations with Europe.
During a recent visit to the Netherlands, Modi appeared impressed while touring the Afsluitdijk, the renowned Dutch flood-defense system that protects much of the country from flooding. Video footage showed the Indian leader braving strong winds as officials explained how the project helps manage water levels and safeguard low-lying areas, an issue of growing importance to India as it grapples with recurring floods and droughts.
The nation of more than 1.4 billion people faces recurring water-management crises, as about 40 million hectares, or roughly 12 percent of India’s land area, are considered flood-prone. Experts say rapid urbanization, infrastructure shortcomings, and increasingly erratic monsoon rains are worsening the problem.
Despite impressive economic growth and a rapidly expanding technology sector, hundreds of millions of Indians continue to live in poverty, particularly in rural regions.
POVERTY STILL PERSISTS
Christian groups say many believers remain among the country’s most vulnerable communities, facing economic hardship as well as concerns over discrimination and persecution in several states of the Hindu-majority nation.
Whether the increasingly popular CJP can translate its social-media following into lasting political influence remains unclear.
Yet its rapid rise suggests that many young Indians are seeking answers to challenges ranging from unemployment and education to poverty and opportunity.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
[worthy_plugins_news_story_title]
<div style="text-align:right; padding:0px 0px 10px 15px; float:right; width:300px;"><img src="[worthy_plugins_news_story_image name=sm_medium]" alt="" /></div>[worthy_plugins_news_story_body]