Decentralized youth politics for India

Bhartiya GenZ Party

Cockroaches will not build an aesthetic country. People with courage, memory, and receipts will.

0 personality cult100% chapter-ledReceipts over reelsAnger with discipline

The break

A movement cannot survive on jokes alone.

Memes can open the door. They cannot run a ward, audit a budget, protect a student, or make power answer questions. BGP is built for the longer work: local chapters, shared leadership, public ledgers, and a politics that treats young Indians as citizens, not content.

Mascot politics

One symbol eats the movement.Many chapters hold the power.

Viral manifestos

Five punchlines, no roots.Open proposals, public votes, working groups.

Face-first marketing

A leader becomes the whole product.Rotating spokespeople, local mandates.

Decentralized by design

No one face. Many rooms. One public record.

Campus cellsWard circlesCreator desksGig worker forumsLegal volunteersData squadsLocal translatorsPolicy labs
No permanent supreme leader
No corporate dark money
No staged poverty tourism
No hate as a growth hack
No slogan without a budget
No post without receipts

Youth agenda

Not vibes. Daily life.

Exam Dignity

Leak-proof exams, fast grievance windows, and real penalties when futures are treated like paperwork.

Work That Pays

Internships, gigs, creator work, apprenticeships, and first jobs deserve contracts, payment clocks, and protection.

Public Money, Public Ledger

Every rupee raised, spent, and promised by the party should be visible before slogans touch a stage.

Internet Freedom

A generation that studies, earns, organizes, and speaks online needs rights that match reality.

Safety Without Sermons

Women, queer citizens, students, workers, and migrants deserve public spaces built for freedom, not fear.

Cities Worth Living In

Clean air, walkable streets, night transport, libraries, sports spaces, and affordable rooms are youth policy.

Operating system

Rage is real. Structure makes it dangerous to corruption.

Local chapter drafts a demand
Members vote in public
Policy lab turns it into action

Who built this

Not a rich NRI logging in from California. Not an American cockroach with a German Shepherd endorsement and a Manhattan zip code. Not a communications strategist recycled from a party that already failed you. BGP was built by a desi GenZ from Bihar — someone who has actually waited in a government queue, sat in a college that leaked its own exam papers, and lived in a country where your follower count means nothing if you cannot pay the auto fare home. No party pedigree. No foreign funding. No PA. Just the belief that this generation deserves a structure, not a mascot.

Bihar, India

Founder, Bhartiya GenZ Party · Est. 2026

Built BGP because the two options available were a personality cult and a meme page. Chose neither. Chose chapters, receipts, and rotating leadership instead.

Desi GenZNo party backgroundNo NRI fundingNo follower-count politicsBihar roots

Build the chapter

Bring your city online.

Start with ten people, one shared document, one public problem, and one promise: no hero worship. BGP grows through people who can organize, research, translate, design, debate, and show up.

Volunteer signal queued for your city