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Deepak Bansal, AAP's urban face in Bathinda for Punjab elections

Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) candidate Deepak Bansal's spectacles describe his persona — a studious youngster whose dreams to crack the UPSC were dashed in two attempts. He then accompanied the party cadres to Banaras for his "ideal" Arvind Kejriwal's campaigning in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls. He caught the attention of party brass and was rewarded with the ticket.

Updated on: Jan 16, 2017 02:57 PM IST
Hindustan Times, Bathinda | By , Bathinda
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Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) candidate Deepak Bansal's spectacles describe his persona — a studious youngster whose dreams to crack the UPSC were dashed in two attempts. He then accompanied the party cadres to Banaras for his "ideal" Arvind Kejriwal's campaigning in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls. He caught the attention of party brass and was rewarded with the ticket.

Deepak Bansal (Sanjeev Kumar/HT Photo)
Deepak Bansal (Sanjeev Kumar/HT Photo)

His sober, ordinary physique could be taken as his USP to win over the town's middle-class voters. On mentioning this to him, he was all smiles, finding pride in saying "I am the son of an ordinary employee of NFL (National Fertilizers Ltd) and we lived in a two-room government accommodation". He had been working with a private bank before giving his full time to politics about a year back.

Casually dressed, Deepak's campaign begins at 7am in public parks, and the night hours are dedicated to holding "closed-door secret meetings with those who cannot openly come along".

Unlike his rival, seasoned politician Manpreet Badal of the Congress, who doesn’t miss an opportunity to catch commuters' attention with folded hands while travelling, Deepak prefers to keep the car window closed. "Come yaar, tell me," he says, grabbing the hand of his supporter belonging to the lower strata of society, who had arranged a corner meeting in the suburbs of Bathinda. The ‘samosas’ from a 'rehri' were brought inside the supporter's dingy room in the congested colony of the migrant workers, where Deepak took the day's briefing from him. He agrees with the advice to intensify campaigning in the "line paar areas" (suburbs across the railway crossing).

"You have seen how well our government in Delhi has performed," he begins his late night speech in the narrow lanes. He walks briskly, catching up with people at their doors and shops. A cab driver at a taxi stand reassures him: "Tussi taa apne hi ho, main 20 number gali ch, tuhade lagge hi rehnda si ji" (You are our man only, I used to live near your house in Street Number 20). Most of the drivers at the taxi stand terms him as "saaf suthra banda" (man with a clean image).

"Bhaji dhyan rakheo (borthers kindly take care of me),” he keeps repeating before shopkeepers in the downtown market.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Prabhjit Singh

A special correspondent, Prabhjit Singh is the bureau chief at Bathinda. He specialises in investigative stories, with rural reporting being his passion.

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