Abhijeet Dipke Explains Why CJP Speaks for the Chronically Online Generation

May 20, 2026 - 18:23
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Abhijeet Dipke's Cockroach Janta Party openly speaks to the chronically online generation, a group often mocked for spending too much time on social media but deeply involved in digital political discussion. In interview-style remarks, CJP's identity appears built around this reality. The party's headquarters, ?Wherever the wifi works,? is a joke, but it also describes how politics travels today. Young people learn about policy, elections, protests and public controversies through online posts, videos and debates. CJP does not reject that; it embraces it. Dipke's movement gives this audience a political language that feels familiar. It uses satire, exaggeration and self-mockery while still pointing toward serious issues. This makes CJP feel closer to meme pages and creator culture than old-style party communication. The chronically online identity also helps explain CJP's viral spread. Users share what feels like them. A party that jokes about unemployment, laziness and professional ranting captures a mood many young people recognise. The interview framing makes clear that CJP is not asking the internet generation to become formal overnight. It is asking whether political discussion can meet them where they already are.

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