By: Anupreeta Das and Suhasini Raj - Reporting from the site of the protest
in New Delhi June 6, 2026
Published in: *The New York Times*
Date: June 6, 2026
The Cockroach Janta Party started as a joke, but it quickly became a way
for many Indians to express their frustration with the system.

Thousands of protesters gathered in New Delhi on Saturday to support a
nascent Gen Z movement demanding more accountability in government, and
specifically the resignation of India’s education minister, under whose
watch there have been several scandals involving student exams.

The movement, called the Cockroach Janta Party, started as a joke after
Abhijeet Dipke, a recent graduate of Boston University, created a satirical
website
<https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/28/world/asia/cockroach-janta-party-india-movement.html>
 in May for “lazy and unemployed” youth. He was responding to a remark by
India’s chief justice, who compared jobless young Indians who criticize the
authorities to cockroaches.

“How long will we live in fear of this government?” Mr. Dipke asked the
crowd under a sweltering sun. He had come straight to the protest venue
from the airport, after a long flight from Boston.

Mr. Dipke, 30, has become an accidental hero to millions of Indians — Gen Z
and otherwise — who are frustrated with high youth unemployment, frequently
mismanaged student exams and the sense that a heavy-handed government has
eroded their democratic rights and ignored their interests.

“The future of this country is its youth,” said Shakeel Abdul, 35, an
architect who had flown in from Bengaluru with a friend for the protest.
“If we don’t give them support, then I would not call myself a citizen of
this country,” he said.

In his speech, Mr. Dipke said his mother had been “very scared” that the
government would arrest him when he landed. Until the last minute, it had
been unclear whether the Delhi police would permit the demonstration, which
was arranged at short notice.

The streets around the protest site were lined with police officers and
paramilitary forces. But the event, which lasted about six hours, went off
peacefully. Sonam Wangchuk, a well-known education and environmental
activist who has long used civil disobedience, including fasting, as a
means of protest, also spoke.

Many demonstrators were demanding the resignation of Dharmendra Pradhan,
the education minister. His ministry oversees several national entrance
tests, including a highly competitive one for entry into undergraduate
medical school.

More than two million candidates took that test in early May, but soon
afterward, the exam’s overseer said it had discovered that questions had
been leaked. The education ministry canceled the test, meaning that
everyone who took it would have to do so again or forget about medical
school.

Students were even more angered by Chief Justice Surya Kant’s “cockroach”
comment, which he made soon afterward in an unrelated case. Mr. Dipke’s
satirical Cockroach Janta Party (“janta” means “the people” in Hindi) soon
went viral, and then it morphed into a vehicle for the frustrations of
millions of Indians.

“The government has neither jobs nor governance tools to improve
education,” said Ram Sanehi, a 45-year-old teacher who found out about the
protest on social media and traveled more than three hours to join it.

“I want to show solidarity with the Cockroach Janta Party as it is working
toward the good of the country, if they truly mean what they say,” Mr.
Sanehi said.

There was a steady flow of demonstrators at the protest site, even as
temperatures exceeded 100 degrees Fahrenheit. People wore cockroach
T-shirts and masks, and many carried placards calling for Mr. Pradhan to
step down.

Mr. Pradhan has not addressed the demands for his resignation, but in
interviews with news outlets, he has said that the government should not
have allowed recent mistakes to occur. Another major exam, taken by many
12th-graders, was recently thrown into disarray when a newly adopted
digital system botched the results.
Anupreeta Das covers India and South Asia for The Times. She is based in
New Delhi.
Suhasini Raj is a reporter based in New Delhi who has covered India for The
Times since 2014.

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