CJP Token Crashes 70% — But the Movement Just Crossed Borders?
Something strange is happening right now with the Cockroach Janta Party token—and it tells you everything about how viral politics and crypto collide in 2026.
The token is down nearly 70% from its all-time high. The movement, meanwhile, just crossed national borders. Instagram followers keep climbing past 16 million. A petition launched. Copycat parties appeared in Pakistan. And a new satirical group called Oggy Janta Party just entered the scene. If you own $CJP, are thinking about buying, or just want to understand what's really happening—this is the most complete update available right now.
This is not financial advice.
Let's start with the chart. The numbers from May 23, 2026, are clear.
Metric | Value |
Current Market Cap | $150K |
24hr Change | -$91.6K (-37.88%) |
All‑Time High (ATH) | $506K |
Drop From ATH | ~70% |
6h Volume | 107.36K |
Platform | Pump.fun (Solana) |
The Cockroach Janta Party token peaked at a $506K market cap when the movement was at maximum viral intensity. Since then, it has shed nearly 70% of its value — a textbook meme coin correction pattern.

Source: Pump.fun Chart
But here is the part that confuses most people: why is the token crashing while the Instagram following keeps growing?
The answer is actually simple. These tokens often pump rapidly due to hype and then crash just as quickly. Scammers and speculators use viral political moments to attract inexperienced traders through FOMO and social media manipulation. The token and the movement are two completely separate things. One is a community. The other is a speculative instrument on Pump. fun that anyone can create in minutes around any trending topic.
The $CJP token on Pump.fun is not officially verified or endorsed by Abhijeet Dipke or the CJP movement. Early buyers who entered at the ATH are now sitting on significant losses. The political movement marches on—the token follows its own brutal cycle.
Movement growth ≠ token growth. These two things do not move together.
The Cockroach Janta Party crossed 15 million Instagram followers in five days—overtaking the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party and the Indian National Congress on Instagram. The account was briefly suspended twice, but the followers kept growing regardless—sitting at 11 million even after the suspensions and continuing upward.
So why did the token bleed?
1. Meme coin lifecycle: Pump.fun tokens follow a specific curve—launch, viral pump, early holders exit, price collapses. Retail investors are left with heavy losses when this cycle completes. The $CJP token followed this pattern precisely.
2. No official backing: The movement never officially endorsed the token. Without team buy support or treasury management, there is no price floor.
3. Profit taking: Traders who entered early took profits at the ATH. Low liquidity on Pump.fun means even medium-sized sells crash the price fast. The chart pattern on image confirms this — a sharp spike on May 21, then a consistent bleed.
This is where the CJP story gets politically complex.
Abhijeet Dipke is a 30-year-old Boston University student and political communications strategist who formerly worked with the Aam Aadmi Party.
Former civil servant Ashish Joshi publicly sought clarity from Dipke on X, saying many people had warned him that the movement was linked to the AAP. He said he was politically neutral and did not want to be associated with any party-backed initiative. When no response came, Joshi withdrew his support — saying he did not want to be part of a movement that was not genuinely independent. Educationist Sandeep Manudhane had also warned people to "beware" of the CJP, calling it "an AAP venture" and comparing it to the India Against Corruption movement of 2011.
Old photographs and social media posts showing Dipke alongside senior AAP leader Manish Sisodia have resurfaced online, fuelling speculation about possible connections. Despite the allegations, Dipke has denied any present association with the party led by Arvind Kejriwal. Supporters insist the movement is independent and driven by youth dissatisfaction with mainstream political narratives.
The AAP angle has done real damage to CJP's credibility among politically neutral observers. Whether the allegations are true or not, the perception of political backing—from any party—weakens the "independent youth movement" narrative that made CJP powerful in the first place. For the token, this credibility erosion is another bearish signal.
The movement's biggest proof of cultural impact is not in India. It's in Pakistan.
As ABP News reported—which now has 13,700 likes on the post—India's viral Cockroach Janta Party movement inspired the creation of "Cockroach Awami Party" and "Cockroach Awami League" across Pakistan's social media. These pages position themselves as the voice of Pakistan's Gen Z—mocking their own traditional political establishment using the same cockroach symbolism.
The irony is striking. An insult from India's chief justice became a South Asian Gen Z movement in under two weeks. The swarm crossed borders.
For crypto traders, this matters: a movement that spreads internationally keeps its narrative alive longer than one that stays local. Pakistan's copycat parties mean more search volume, more content, more international attention—and potentially more new buyers who discover the $CJP token through the cultural story rather than the price chart.
Beyond the memes and the token, CJP has taken a concrete political step most satirical movements never do.
The official CJP petition at petition.cockroachjanpajarty.org directly demands the removal of Chief Justice Surya Kant, with specific accountability demands around his "cockroach" remarks and broader judicial conduct. This is not social media noise. It is a documented, signed public petition — the kind of political action that gives a movement institutional weight.
The petition's existence also signals something important: CJP is trying to graduate from meme to movement. That transition is exactly what determines whether a political crypto token survives long-term or fades with the hype cycle.
And then there is the newest entrant: Oggy Janta Party.
Inspired directly by CJP's viral model, the Oggy Janta Party—visible on Instagram at @oggy.janata.partyy—has launched with a similar satirical political identity. Currently a very small account with limited followers, it is riding the wave of CJP's cultural moment to build its own community.
For crypto markets, this is the key signal to watch: every new satirical party that launches using this template is a potential new meme coin. The pattern is now established in India — viral political moment → satirical party → Pump.fun token → community pump. Oggy Janta Party, Cockroach Awami Party, and any future copycat movements could each spawn their own tokens.
This creates both opportunity and risk. More meme coins in this theme means more dilution. But it also means the satirical political meme coin category in India is becoming a repeatable market structure—not a one-time event.
Scenario 1 — Recovery Rally: CJP contests Bihar's Bankipur by-election. The political news drives a fresh wave of attention. New buyers enter the token at $150K market cap, seeing value versus the $506K ATH. Volume picks up. Token rebounds toward $300K–$400K range on election news.
Scenario 2 — Slow Bleed: AAP connection allegations intensify. Credibility takes further damage. Token liquidity dries up. Movement continues, but the token fades below $100K and becomes inactive on Pump. fun. The story survives as cultural history — the token does not.
Scenario 3—New Coin Replaces It: An official CJP team — or a competitor like Oggy Janta Party—launches a new, properly structured token with team backing, tokenomics, and exchange listings. The original $CJP Pump.fun token becomes irrelevant. New coin captures all the liquidity. This is the most likely outcome if CJP registers as a formal political entity.
The Cockroach Janata Party token is down 70% from its ATH. The movement is crossing borders. The petition is live. Pakistan has its own version. Oggy Janta Party is building. The AAP controversy is unresolved. And more meme coins from this cultural wave are coming.
The swarm survives. The token has to prove it can too.
Watch the Bihar election news. Watch for any official token announcement from Dipke's team. And always — check the liquidity before you buy anything on Pump.fun.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. The $CJP token is not listed on any regulated exchange and is not officially endorsed by the Cockroach Janta Party movement or its founder Abhijeet Dipke. Meme tokens on Pump.fun carry extreme financial risk including total and permanent loss of capital. All token data referenced is sourced from Pump.fun and public market trackers as of May 23, 2026. Political claims regarding AAP connections are based on publicly reported allegations—not verified facts. The CJP founder has denied these allegations. This is not financial advice. Never invest money you cannot afford to lose completely. Always conduct independent research before making any financial decision.