From meeting Opposition leaders and chief ministers and holding the fort in Rajya Sabha to taking on the Bharatiya Janata Party and Prime Minister Narendra Modi head-on, Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) Sanjay Singh has been a constant presence next to party chief Arvind Kejriwal since before AAP came into being in 2012. But more so after former deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia was arrested by the CBI and Enforcement Directorate (ED) in the Delhi excise policy case.
On Wednesday, the homes and offices of two of Singh’s closest associates — Ajit Tyagi and Sarvesh Mishra — were raided by the ED in relation to the ongoing excise policy case.
Singh’s name has figured in the supplementary prosecution complaint (akin to a chargesheet) filed by the ED. Earlier this month, the investigating agency said in a response to a legal notice served on it by Singh that it had added his name “inadvertently” in one of the four references to him in the supplementary prosecution complaint. It clarified that this error had crept in in one out of four instances.
Singh, a social activist with roots in Uttar Pradesh, joined the 2011 Anna Hazare anti-corruption movement in Delhi and was among the few leaders to be present on stage at Ramlila Maidan as the protest marched on. When AAP was formed in November 2012, Singh was among the core members.
The most vocal Rajya Sabha member from AAP between 2018 and 2022, Singh is seen as the party’s link with Opposition parties.
“He is a very senior member of the party and has a very astute political understanding. He has, over the past few years, built links with non-BJP parties, including Congress. That he is accompanying Kejriwal ji in his meetings with West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee as well as Uddhav Thackeray is a clear indication of his stature in the party as well as among Opposition leaders,” said a senior party leader.
“His importance in the party can be judged simply on the basis of the positions he holds,” the leader added. Singh is a member of AAP’s political affairs committee as well as the national executive. He is also the national spokesperson and the in-charge of party affairs in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.
However, his place in the party is not limited to these positions, especially after Sisodia’s arrest.
“While there is no one who can replace Manish ji, Sanjay sir has been a big support for the CM since February. It is not surprising that the Centre is focussing their attention on him in relation to the excise policy investigation,” said a party leader.