Arvind Kejriwal (born 16 August
1968) is an Indian
politician who has been Chief Minister of Delhi since 2013. Born in Haryana,
Kejriwal is a graduate of the Indian Institute of Technology
Kharagpur, where he studied mechanical engineering. He worked for the Indian Revenue Service (IRS) as a Joint Commissioner in the Income Tax Department. He is well-known
for his efforts to bring and implement the Right to Information (RTI) Act at
grassroots level and his role in drafting a proposed Jan Lokpal
Bill.
Kejriwal won the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Emergent
Leadership in 2006 for his contribution to the enactment of the Right to
Information Act. In 2006, after resigning from the IRS, he donated his
Magsaysay award money as a corpus fund to found an NGO, Public Cause Research Foundation.
In 2012, he launched the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), and defeated Sheila Dixit
in the 2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly
election by a margin of 25,864 votes.
Early life
Kejriwal
was born in the village of Siwani, Haryana, on 16 August 1968 to
Gobind Ram Kejriwal and Gita Devi, a well-educated and well-off couple. He has
a younger sister and a brother. His father was an electrical engineer who
graduated from the Birla Institute of
Technology, Mesra,
and whose work led to many changes in the family's residence. Kejriwal spent
most of his childhood in north Indian towns such as Sonepat, Ghaziabad and Hisar. He was educated at Campus School in Hisar.
Kejriwal
studied mechanical engineering at Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur and
then from 1989 he worked for Tata
Steel. He left
that job in 1992, having previously taken leave of absence in order to study
for the Civil Services Examination, and spent some time in Kolkata, at the Ramakrishna Mission in North-East
India and at
Nehru Yuva Kendra.
Kejriwal
joined the Indian Revenue Service in 1995 after qualifying through the Civil
Services Examination. In 2000, he was granted two years' paid leave to pursue
higher education on condition that upon resuming his work he would not resign
from the Service for at least three years. Failure to abide by that condition
would require him to repay the salary given during the leave period. He
rejoined in 2003 and worked for 18 months before taking unpaid leave for 18
months. In February 2006, he resigned from his position as a Joint Commissioner
of Income Tax in New Delhi. The Government of India claimed that Kejriwal had violated
his original agreement by not working for three years. Kejriwal said that his
18 months of work and 18 months of unpaid absence amounted to the stipulated
three year period during which he could not resign and that this was an attempt
to malign him due to his involvement with Team
Anna, a strand
of the Indian anti-corruption movement. The dispute ran for several year until,
in 2011, it was resolved when he paid his way out of the Service with the help
of loans from friends.
Kejriwal
is married to Sunita, who is also an IRS officer and his batchmate from National
Academy of Administration
in Mussoorie and the National Academy of
Direct Taxes
in Nagpur. The couple have a daughter and a son. Kejriwal is a vegetarian. He has been practicing Vipassana for many years.
Activism
Parivartan
Kejriwal believes "Change
begins with small things". In December 1999, while still in service with
the Income Tax Department, he helped found a movement named Parivartan
(which means "change"), focused on assisting citizens in navigating
income tax, electricity and food ration matters in parts of Delhi. The Parivartan
organisation exposed a fake ration card scam in 2008 but, according to a
founder member, did not have a great impact generally and was largely moribund
by 2012.
Right to Information
Together with Manish
Sisodia and Abhinandan Sekhri, Kejriwal established the Public Cause
Research Foundation in December 2006, donating the prize money he had received
from the Ramon Magsaysay Award as a seed fund.
This new body paid the employees of Parivartan.
Kejriwal has used the Right to
Information Act in corruption cases in many government departments including
the Income Tax Department, the Municipal Corporation of Delhi,
the Public Distribution System and the Delhi
Electricity Board.
Jan Lokpal Bill
Main
article: Jan Lokpal Bill
Kejriwal was the civil society
representative member of the committee constituted by the Government of India to draft a Jan Lokpal bill,
following a campaign for introduction
of such legislation that featured Anna Hazare.
He had been arrested for his support of Hazare.
Political career
Kejriwal established the AAP in
November 2012. The party name reflects the phrase Aam Aadmi,
or "common man", whose interests Kejriwal proposed to represent.
He became one of the five most
mentioned Indian politician on social networking sites such as Facebook
and Twitter
in the run-up to the Delhi legislative assembly elections of December 2013
Those elections were the first contested by the AAP and in them Kejriwal
defeated the incumbent Chief Minister, Sheila Dikshit, in her Assembly
constituency of New Delhi. The party as a whole won 28 of the
70 available Assembly seats.
The AAP then announced its
intention to form a minority government in the hung Assembly, with what Dikshit
describes as "not unconditional" support from Indian National Congress. Kejriwal was
sworn in as the second-youngest Chief Minister of Delhi on 28 December 2013,
after Chaudhary Brahm Prakash who became chief
minister at the age of 34. He is in
charge of Home Ministry, Power, Planning, Finance, Vigilance and other non
allotted ministries.
Writing
Kejriwal's book, Swaraj,
was published in 2012.
Awards
- 2004: Ashoka Fellow, Civic Engagement
- 2005: Satyendra K. Dubey Memorial Award, IIT Kanpur for his campaign for bringing transparency in Governance
- 2006: Ramon Magsaysay Award for Emergent Leadership
- 2006: CNN-IBN Indian of the Year in Public Service
- 2009: Distinguished Alumnus Award, IIT Kharagpur for Eminent Leadership
- 2009: Awarded a grant and fellowship by the Association for India's Development.
- 2010: Policy Change Agent of the Year, Economic Times Awards along with Aruna Roy
- 2011: NDTV Indian of the Year along with Anna Hazare
- 2013: CNN-IBN Indian of the Year 2013-Politics