By K Raveendran
Public anger has a strange way of finding symbols. Sometimes it gathers around a saintly figure in a white cap, sometimes around an unlikely political label that sounds almost like a joke until it begins to speak for a generation. The overwhelming response from Gen Z to the Cockroach party carries unmistakable echoes of Anna Hazare’s anti-corruption agitation. Both emerged as vehicles for resentment against a system seen as remote, arrogant and morally exhausted. Both drew energy from people who felt that conventional politics had stopped listening. Both appeared, at least at the beginning, to be spontaneous uprisings rather than carefully manufactured political projects.
That similarity is important because it explains why the Cockroach phenomenon has travelled so fast. It is not merely about one founder, one slogan or one organisational experiment. It is about a mood. Gen Z, like the urban middle class and politically restless citizens who flocked to Anna Hazare’s movement, is searching for a channel through which anger can acquire public meaning. The name Cockroach itself appears to have struck a chord because it mocks the grandeur of established politics. It suggests survival, irreverence and contempt for polite hypocrisy. For a generation brought up amid economic uncertainty, job anxiety, digital exposure and institutional distrust, such a label can become a badge of defiance.
Anna Hazare’s agitation also began as a moral revolt rather than a conventional political campaign. It tapped into a widespread belief that corruption had eaten into public life and that the existing parties had neither the will nor the credibility to cleanse the system. The protest sites became spaces of emotional release. Citizens who had long complained in private suddenly found themselves part of a larger national conversation. The movement’s strength lay in its simplicity. Corruption was the enemy. The people were the victims. The system was guilty. That moral clarity helped the agitation spread, but it also concealed the difficult questions that would follow.
The Cockroach party faces the same danger. Protest movements thrive on shared disgust, but politics demands choices, compromises and accountability. Anger can bring people to the street, to a rally or to a digital platform, but it cannot by itself build a durable political institution. A movement can say what it opposes in one sentence. A party must explain what it will do about taxation, employment, policing, education, health care, federal relations, social conflict, welfare, urban infrastructure and foreign policy. It must select candidates, raise funds, negotiate alliances, discipline ambition and survive the temptations of power. These are not small adjustments. They change the very nature of the project.
Abhijit Dipke’s plan to convert the Cockroach movement into a political party therefore marks the most hazardous point in its journey. Popularity outside the political system can become a burden once it enters the electoral arena. The outsider gains attention by condemning the established order, but the moment he forms a party, he becomes part of the same order he once attacked. He must ask for votes, distribute tickets, manage factions and defend decisions that will disappoint some of his own supporters. Every moral movement believes it can remain pure after entering politics. Very few do.
The lesson from Anna Hazare’s agitation is not that all protest is futile. On the contrary, that movement proved that public anger can shake complacent governments and force questions of accountability into the national conversation. Its failure lay elsewhere. It underestimated the difference between moral pressure and political governance. It assumed that a movement held together by anti-corruption sentiment could naturally produce a clean and coherent political alternative. Instead, the transition from agitation to party politics exposed personal ambition, ideological ambiguity and the fragility of trust. One of Anna’s closest associates later faced serious corruption charges and spent considerable time in jail, a development that badly damaged the moral aura associated with the movement’s political afterlife.
That episode remains a cautionary tale for every new anti-establishment platform. Movements often rise because they are broad enough to contain contradictions. Students, professionals, activists, disillusioned voters, opportunists and idealists can all gather under the same banner when the banner simply says the system has failed. But once a movement becomes a party, those contradictions must be resolved. Is it left, right or neither? Is it anti-capitalist or pro-enterprise? Does it believe in welfare expansion or fiscal restraint? Does it want institutional reform or merely new people in old chairs? Does it seek revolution, renewal or just visibility? These questions cannot be avoided forever.
The Cockroach party’s appeal among Gen Z may also prove double-edged. Young supporters can generate extraordinary momentum, especially in the age of social media, where ridicule, irony and outrage travel faster than manifestos. They can make a movement look larger than life almost overnight. But digital enthusiasm is not the same as electoral machinery. Politics still requires ground workers, booth management, local alliances, caste and community calculations, legal compliance, candidate vetting and constant negotiation with people who may not share the language of online revolt. A viral movement can dominate conversation without winning durable power.
There is also the problem of leadership. Spontaneous movements often claim to be leaderless or people-driven, but political parties inevitably centralise authority. Someone must decide strategy. Someone must speak for the party. Someone must control funds. Someone must settle disputes. The founder who once symbolised rebellion can quickly become the gatekeeper of a new hierarchy. Supporters who joined to escape the arrogance of established politics may then discover familiar patterns inside the organisation they helped build. This is how idealism curdles into cynicism.
Yet it would be wrong to dismiss the Cockroach surge as a passing spectacle. Its rise says something significant about the present political climate. Established parties have failed to convince many young citizens that they understand their frustrations. Formal politics appears scripted, transactional and insulated from everyday anger. The success of an unconventional formation suggests that a vacuum exists. When mainstream institutions do not absorb dissent, dissent invents its own theatre. The Cockroach movement is one such theatre, and its dramatic rise should worry those who mistake public silence for public consent.
The deeper issue is whether the movement can mature without losing the irreverence that made it powerful. To survive, it must move beyond mockery and protest. It must explain its programme with clarity. It must establish internal rules before ambition corrodes its credibility. It must show how candidates will be selected, how money will be handled and how decisions will be scrutinised. It must resist the temptation to believe that popularity is proof of preparedness. The public may forgive inexperience for a while, but it rarely forgives hypocrisy.
Anna Hazare’s agitation became a landmark because it captured a national mood. Its political legacy, however, stands as a warning against assuming that moral energy automatically produces ethical politics. The Cockroach party now stands at a similar crossroads. Its popularity has transcended anything comparable in memory, but that very popularity may push it into a field for which enthusiasm alone is inadequate. Politics is not merely another stage for protest. It is a hard, unforgiving craft in which purity is tested by power and slogans are tested by administration.
The coming challenge for Abhijit Dipke is therefore not whether he can keep the crowd excited. He has already shown that he can. The real question is whether he can build an organisation that survives contact with ambition, compromise and scrutiny. History suggests that movements born from anger often burn brightly and then consume themselves. The Cockroach party may yet prove different, but the burden of proof now rests with those who believe disgust with the system is enough to replace it. (IPA Service)
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