YEAH JANTA PARTY · EST. 2026 · SATIRE WITH PURPOSE · ZERO SPONSORS · INFINITE FRUSTRATION · YEAH JANTA PARTY · EST. 2026 · SATIRE WITH PURPOSE
Est. 2026 · Satire with purpose
They said
"Yeah"
was the
problem.
While NEET papers were leaking and youth were unemployed, a judge went viral for scolding a lawyer over the word "yeah". We said: yeah, enough.
Officially unofficial · 0 sponsors · frustration
45%
Youth unemployment
age 20–24
24L+
Students affected
by NEET leak
8s
Length of the viral
"Yeah" video
0
Officials jailed for
exam fraud

Why we exist


In May 2026, a judge dressed in colonial black robes went viral — not for a landmark ruling on NEET exam fraud, not for holding the powerful accountable, but for scolding a young lawyer for saying "yeah" in court.

While lakhs of students were robbed of their futures by an exam leak that reached the highest levels of the education establishment — while millions of young Indians couldn't find work — the country's institutions found time to debate informal vocabulary.

We took the word they weaponised against us. We built a party around it. Not to contest elections. But to contest priorities.

"If you say ya again, we will close your file and return it to you. You are not sitting in a cafe or on a coffee table here."
— A judge, while NEET scam accused walked free

Our 3 demands


01

Full accountability for the NEET exam leak

Criminal prosecution from the top. No transfers, no settlements. Every student who lost a year deserves justice — not a re-exam notice.

Education justice
02

A real national jobs policy for youth

Not a scheme. Not a slogan. A transparent, funded, time-bound policy that treats youth unemployment as the national emergency it is.

Youth employment
03

Institutions must focus on real problems

Courts and media must direct energy toward issues that affect millions — not the vocabulary of a generation raised on the internet.

Real priorities