Call-Cut Conspiracy? BJP Accuses Kejriwal of Misleading Voters with Hoax Calls in Delhi Polls

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has accused Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) of orchestrating a campaign of hoax phone calls to mislead voters ahead of the upcoming Delhi Assembly elections. The BJP claims that voters received fake calls allegedly suggesting their names had been removed from the electoral list, an attempt they say was meant to confuse and discourage participation.

Call-Cut Conspiracy? BJP Accuses Kejriwal of Misleading Voters with Hoax Calls in Delhi Polls
Arvind Kejriwal addresses the media amid BJP’s allegations of voter hoax calls during the Delhi election campaign.

In a fresh political storm ahead of the Delhi Assembly elections 2025, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has accused Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) of making hoax calls to mislead voters. According to BJP leaders, several Delhi residents received automated calls falsely claiming that their names had been deleted from the voter list. The party alleged that these calls were intended to confuse and discourage people from voting, calling it a deliberate act of misinformation.

The BJP has urged the Election Commission of India to take immediate action against the AAP and investigate the origin of these calls. Senior BJP spokespersons termed it a “call-cut conspiracy” designed to manipulate voter sentiment.

Meanwhile, the AAP has dismissed the allegations as baseless and politically motivated, asserting that the BJP is attempting to divert public attention from key election issues such as governance, inflation, and public welfare.

As both parties trade barbs, the controversy has sparked a wider debate about digital ethics in election campaigning and the urgent need for stricter regulations to protect voters from fake or misleading communications.