Hyderabad: Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) MLA Raghav Chadha is currently the cynosure of all eyes after a Twitter user said she wanted "Raghav, not electricity".
It all began with a user Kirti Thakur aka @bawari_kudi tweeted that there was always power outage at her house. To this, another user, who seemed to be an AAP supporter, replied that she should vote for the Kejriwal-led party in the upcoming Punjab elections. The AAP had recently promised free electricity in Punjab if it assumes power in the state.
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I'm not on the manifesto, but free electricity is.
— Raghav Chadha (@raghav_chadha) July 31, 2021 " class="align-text-top noRightClick twitterSection" data="
Vote for Kejriwal and I promise you’ll get free electricty, 24x7. Can’t commit the same about myself though :) https://t.co/F0tqLLp1FL
">I'm not on the manifesto, but free electricity is.
— Raghav Chadha (@raghav_chadha) July 31, 2021
Vote for Kejriwal and I promise you’ll get free electricty, 24x7. Can’t commit the same about myself though :) https://t.co/F0tqLLp1FLI'm not on the manifesto, but free electricity is.
— Raghav Chadha (@raghav_chadha) July 31, 2021
Vote for Kejriwal and I promise you’ll get free electricty, 24x7. Can’t commit the same about myself though :) https://t.co/F0tqLLp1FL
In response, the woman said, "I want Raghav. Not electricity."
This tweet caught the 32-year-old Rajinder Nagar MLA's attention and he left a quirly reply on her post. He replied, "I'm not on the manifesto, but free electricity is. Vote for Kejriwal and I promise you’ll get free electricty, 24x7. Can’t commit the same about myself though :) (sic)." His tweet has now broken the internet.
Chadha then posted a screenshot of the tweets on his Instagram account and captioned it, “Kejriwal di guarantee”, referring to Delhi Chief Minister and AAP's national convener Arvind Kejriwal. Chadha, a graduate from the London School of Economics and Political Science, is the youngest national spokesperson of the AAP and is also the vice chairman of the Delhi Jal Board.
Punjab is set to go to polls in February next year.