India is, by demographic accident, the most powerful youth electorate on the planet. More than 65% of Indians are under 35. The 18–22 cohort alone is roughly 14 crore. And yet, election after election, this age band has had lower turnout than the 35-plus voters they share households with. The Cockroach Janta Party calls this gap the country's most embarrassing democratic deficit — and makes closing it the fifth and final demand of the CJP manifesto.
The turnout gap, in numbers
The Election Commission's own post-poll surveys, alongside CSDS-Lokniti datasets, have shown a recurring pattern.
- National turnout in 2024 Lok Sabha: roughly 66%.
- Turnout among voters aged 18–22: estimated several percentage points below that average, with the gap widest in urban constituencies and among first-time voters in metropolitan India.
- Turnout among voters aged 35–55: consistently the highest band.
You can argue about exact numbers, but the direction is uncontested: India's youngest voters are the most politically intense on social media and the least politically active at the EVM. A 19-year-old will spend three hours arguing about a Supreme Court verdict on Instagram and ten minutes deciding whether the polling booth is too far to walk to.
Why CJP frames it as a missing infrastructure
"We will channel the energy of the 'lazy, chronically online, cockroach' generation into political awareness, voter turnout, and contesting elections at the panchayat, municipal, and state level — starting with the next cycle."
— CJP Manifesto, point 5
"Infrastructure" is the operative word. India has voter awareness campaigns — the ECI's SVEEP, the BLO door-to-doors before elections, election-day handprint photos on Instagram. What it does not have is a permanent civic education layer that runs whether or not there is an election. The CJP demand is to build that layer.
What "political literacy infrastructure" could actually mean
This is where the manifesto leaves room for specifics. Drawing on civics curricula in jurisdictions that have closed similar gaps — Sweden, Estonia, Taiwan, post-1994 South Africa — the practical list looks like this:
1. A mandatory civics-and-Constitution module in classes 9 to 12
India already has civics in the social science curriculum. It is widely taught as a memorisation exercise. The CJP demand is for a redesigned module that teaches:
- How a bill becomes a law (with a recent real example, not just the textbook diagram).
- How to read the electoral roll and check your own enrolment status — see our vote deletion explainer.
- How to file an RTI.
- How to read a budget speech and a state finance commission report.
- What every constitutional body actually does — Election Commission, NHRC, CAG, RBI, CBI, Lokpal.
2. A national first-vote enrolment drive at age 17.5
Every Indian, six months before their 18th birthday, would automatically receive a pre-filled enrolment form linked to Aadhaar with an opt-out clause for those who don't want to register. The current opt-in system loses millions of eligible voters between turning 18 and the next roll revision.
3. A youth seat reservation in municipal and panchayat bodies
This is the more radical part of the demand. India already reserves panchayat seats by caste, gender, and tribe. The CJP proposal — read alongside our 55% women's reservation piece — is to test a youth quota at the third tier: a fixed share of seats in municipal corporations and panchayat samitis open only to candidates under 30. The objection is obvious; the argument is that without an entry point, the political class will continue to age while the country gets younger.
4. A national budget line for civic-engagement NGOs
Election-watch and civic-education NGOs — ADR, CMS, Lokniti, election-watch volunteer groups — operate on philanthropic funding that is shrinking under tightened FCRA. A statutory allocation, ring-fenced from the political executive, would create stable career paths for civic professionals.
The "chronically online" generation is not the problem
One of the running misreadings of the CJI's "cockroach" remark is that India's young are politically lazy. The data says the opposite — young Indians are over-engaged in political content and under-converted into political action. The bottleneck is structural, not motivational.
Consider:
- India's largest political YouTube channels — Dhruv Rathee, Akash Banerjee, Ranveer Allahbadia in political mode — pull tens of millions of views per video, mostly from under-30s.
- The CJP itself crossed 1 lakh members in 72 hours, almost entirely from the same demographic.
- Yet panchayat candidacy under 30 remains rare; municipal candidacy under 30 even rarer; party-ticket candidacy under 30 vanishingly rare.
If the energy is there and the conversion is failing, the diagnosis is infrastructure — the same infrastructure CJP is asking the state to build.
What this demand is competing against
Political literacy is the least-headline-grabbing of the five CJP demands. It is also, on most days, the one that political strategists agree is most likely to be conceded. There is no constitutional obstacle. There is no entrenched lobby against civics curricula. The reason it does not happen is the same reason most slow-burn democratic reforms do not happen: no minister gets a press conference out of approving a syllabus revision.
The CJP's bet is that loud public demand changes that calculus. The bet is the same bet that powers the rest of the manifesto.
If you are under 30, the demand is about you. Join CJP, get a free membership, and we will see you in the volunteer roll.