By leaning heavily into self-deprecation, the founders made it clear that their intent wasn't just to protest a courtroom slip-of-the-tongue, but to humanise the cold, exhausting statistics of youth unemployment by giving it a hilariously un-ignorable platform.
Meghnad, author of the satirical novel Parliamental, views the viral Cockroach Janta Party as a powerful, brilliant piece of digital satire turned into an organic youth movement.
Embracing Resilience: Meghnad highlights that cockroaches are resilient survivors. By owning the label "cockroach," frustrated and chronically online youth are symbolically standing up against the system that failed them.
Protesting Institutional Disconnect: He views the movement as a cry of frustration from citizens who have been ignored by traditional political parties.
Uplifting the Manifesto: Meghnad highly supports the CJP's viral five-point manifesto, which features radical demands such as no post-retirement Rajya Sabha seats for Chief Justices, severe penalties for deleted legitimate votes, a 20-year ban on political defectors, and the cancellation of licenses for media houses owned by corporate monopolies.
There is a profound, albeit hilarious, tragicomedy in seeing a generation embrace the identity of a resilient household pest. In a country where the pressure to succeed is an crushing, lifelong weight, calling oneself a "cockroach" becomes a strange form of psychological armour. If you are already deemed low, you cannot fall any further; if you are treated as an indestructible nuisance, you might as well learn to laugh in the dark. The satirical movement has humanized the cold statistics of economic lack by turning the collective shame of unemployment into a loud, shared joke.