AAP suspends 3 women MCD councillors over cross-voting in ward polls
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) on Thursday, 16 July suspended three of its serving women councillors in the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) with immediate effect, citing anti-party activities and conduct deemed unbecoming during the recent zonal ward committee elections. The suspension order was signed by Delhi AAP chief Saurabh Bharadwaj.
The Three Councillors Suspended
The three women councillors removed from the party are Nirmala Devi (Sharma), Krishna Devi Raghav, and Sultana Abad. All three held active positions as MCD councillors at the time of their suspension. The AAP leadership has not publicly detailed the specific charges, but party insiders say the action 'became unavoidable' after the three reportedly cross-voted in favour of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) during the MCD ward committee polls.
What Triggered the Action
The suspensions follow closely on the heels of elections held on 15 July at the MCD headquarters, Civic Centre, for Chairpersons and deputy chairpersons of the 12 ward committees, as well as for 6 vacant seats on the 18-member Standing Committee. The results were a significant setback for AAP: the BJP won the Chairperson's post in 10 of 12 ward committees and secured 5 of 6 contested Standing Committee seats. AAP managed to retain only 2 ward committee posts and 1 Standing Committee seat.
This comes amid a broader erosion of AAP's foothold in the MCD. Just ahead of these elections, AAP councillor Vikas Taank of the Civil Lines ward defected to the BJP, further thinning AAP's numbers in the civic body and bolstering the BJP's tally.
Why the Standing Committee Matters
The 18-member Standing Committee is the MCD's apex decision-making authority, holding final power over financial approvals, contracts, civic projects, and policy proposals involving more than ₹5 crore. With the committee now comprising 12 BJP members against 6 AAP members, the ruling party at the Centre effectively controls Delhi's primary civic body — a significant shift in the balance of municipal power.
AAP's Shrinking MCD Presence
AAP had swept the MCD elections in December 2022, ending the BJP's 15-year stranglehold on the corporation. However, a combination of defections and cross-voting has steadily chipped away at that mandate. Critics argue that internal discipline failures and the party's preoccupation with state-level political battles have left its MCD group vulnerable to poaching. The suspension of the three councillors signals that the party leadership is now moving to contain further haemorrhaging, even if the damage from the ward committee elections has already been done.
With the BJP now firmly in command of the MCD's key committees, the coming months will test whether AAP can consolidate its remaining councillors or faces further attrition ahead of the next civic cycle.