NEW DELHI — In a stunning digital upset, a satirical online movement named the “Cockroach Janta Party” (CJP) has completely eclipsed India’s mainstream political parties on Instagram, rapidly scaling past 16 million followers in less than a week.
The phenomenon ignited on May 16, after public relations graduate Abhijeet Dipke launched a mock political group. The move parodied a courtroom remark by the Chief Justice of India, who compared certain individuals to “cockroaches.” Offering a satirical refuge for the “chronically online,” the page quickly transformed into a lightning rod for Gen-Z discontent over youth unemployment and recent national exam paper leaks.
The account’s algorithmic explosion has left traditional political giants trailing in its dust. With under 60 posts, the CJP’s massive following has thoroughly beaten the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which stands at 8.8 million followers, and has even surged past India’s oldest political party, the Indian National Congress, which sits at 13.3 million.
While the CJP relies on dark humor and a cockroach logo, its underlying tone targets institutional accountability. The group recently published a mock manifesto demanding a ban on retired judges accepting political appointments and a 50% reservation for women in Parliament.
Despite its official account on X being withheld in India, triggering the immediate launch of a fallback “@Cockroachisback” handle, the CJP’s Instagram footprint continues its historic climb. Political analysts note the viral wave underscores a major structural shift in how India’s youth channel dissent, swapping traditional street rallies for hyper-viral meme warfare.




