Jaipur, January 2, 2026 – After weeks of intense deliberations, internal negotiations, and handling of leaked lists that sparked debate within party ranks, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Thursday night officially announced the composition of its Jaipur City Executive Committee, naming 36 office-bearers to bolster organizational strength across the state capital.
The newly declared executive reflects a mix of local political heavyweights, close associates of sitting MLAs and MPs, and leaders with significant influence in Jaipur’s civic and community circles. Reports indicate that the final list was drawn up with attention to caste balance and political considerations, though some critics argue that several nominees lack strong grassroots organisational backgrounds.
Among the key positions, the committee includes:
- Seven Vice-Presidents
- Three General Secretaries
- Seven Ministers
- One Office Minister and Two Deputy Office Ministers
- Seven Spokespersons
- Coordinators for IT, media, and other strategic cells aimed at strengthening party messaging and outreach.
In a first-of-its-kind initiative highlighted in the list, the party has also created units such as a “Mann Ki Baat Cell”, named after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s flagship communication program, underlining the strategy to integrate central themes into local political engagement.
The announcement comes after a leaked version of the committee list circulated on social media months ago — prompting pushback and calls within the party for reconsideration. The controversy had forced the BJP to withdraw earlier drafts and revisit deliberations before formalising the final roster.
Party city president Amit Goyal, who released the list roughly ten months after assuming the post, stated that the committee aims to strengthen the BJP’s organisational base at the grassroots and improve civic-level political outreach ahead of key electoral challenges in Rajasthan. While senior leaders welcomed the inclusions, some rank-and-file workers expressed reservations about certain appointments, arguing for greater representation of grassroots workers.
The formation of this committee is part of a broader organisational push by the BJP in Rajasthan, where party leadership — including state president Madan Rathore, has been reshuffling units and morcha leadership in recent months to reinforce structure and preparedness ahead of upcoming civic and assembly election cycles.
