Revolutionary Goans Party
The Revolutionary Goans Party (RGP) is a regional nativist political party in the Indian state of Goa, formed to defend the rights, land, jobs, and cultural identity of native Goans, known as Niz Goenkars, against demographic shifts driven by migration and economic policies favoring outsiders.[1] Emerging from a 2016 youth-led movement amid grievances over local marginalization, it registered as a political entity in November 2021 under the leadership of Manoj Parab, emphasizing empowerment through tools like Right to Information requests and advocacy for restrictive measures such as the Person of Goan Origin (POGO) Bill, which seeks reservations in employment and land ownership for descendants of pre-1961 Portuguese-era residents.[1] In its electoral debut during the 2022 Goa Legislative Assembly elections, RGP fielded candidates in 38 of 40 constituencies, capturing a 9.96 percent vote share—outpacing national parties like the Aam Aadmi Party (6.77 percent) and Trinamool Congress (5.21 percent)—and securing one seat in St. Andre, where 28-year-old Viresh Borkar narrowly defeated the incumbent Bharatiya Janata Party candidate by 76 votes, marking him as Goa's youngest legislator at the time.[1] The party's platform, drawing parallels to Maharashtra's Shiv Sena in its focus on sons-of-the-soil priorities without endorsing violence, has channeled frustrations over illegal businesses, housing shortages, and job competition, leading to protests on issues like market preservation and mining regulations.[2] RGP's rise reflects broader nativist sentiments in Goa, where rapid development has exacerbated perceptions of native disenfranchisement, though its uncompromising stance on migration controls has drawn comparisons to regionalist outfits while distinguishing itself through disciplined grassroots mobilization rather than populist agitation.[3] As of 2025, under Parab's presidency, the party maintains its sole MLA seat, engages in opposition alliances, and prepares for the 2027 assembly polls, continuing to prioritize Goan-centric policies amid ongoing debates over state identity preservation.[4]History
Founding as a non-governmental organization
The Revolutionary Goans was established on 3 March 2017 as a non-governmental, non-political organization by activist Manoj Parab, a former geologist and Aam Aadmi Party member who had contested the 2017 Goa Legislative Assembly election, along with seven founding members including Viresh Borkar and Vishwesh Naik.[3] [2] The initiative emerged from Parab's dissatisfaction with established parties' handling of Goan-specific grievances, particularly after his exit from AAP, positioning the group as a platform for grassroots activism rather than electoral politics.[2] The organization's stated purpose was to rally native Goans—termed Niz Goenkars—across caste and religious lines to safeguard the state's cultural identity, land resources, and demographic composition against perceived threats from unregulated external migration, land acquisitions by non-Goans, and environmental degradation.[5] Early activities centered on public demonstrations, protests against land deals favoring outsiders, and advocacy for policies prioritizing local employment and resource allocation, drawing parallels to nativist movements elsewhere in India but emphasizing Goa's unique post-colonial context.[2] [3] As a registered non-governmental entity, Revolutionary Goans operated without formal political affiliation, focusing on building public awareness and mobilizing support through social media, street campaigns, and community outreach in northern Goa constituencies like Pernem and Mandrem, where demographic shifts were most acute.[5] This foundational phase laid the groundwork for its later evolution, amassing a dedicated base by highlighting empirical data on land sales—such as over 10,000 acres transferred to non-Goans between 2012 and 2017—and calling for legislative curbs on such transactions.[3]Transition to political party and early campaigns
The Revolutionary Goans originated as a grassroots social movement around 2016, initiated by young activists including Tukaram Parab (also known as Manoj Parab), Viresh Borkar, and Vishwesh Naik, to address concerns over the erosion of native Goan identity and rights through community-level actions such as Right to Information (RTI) filings, participation in Gram Sabha meetings, and Panchayat governance advocacy.[1][6] The group also campaigned against perceived illegalities, including unauthorized vending and land encroachments, while promoting local empowerment initiatives like regulated roadside fish stalls for Goan vendors.[6] This movement formalized as a political entity with the registration of the Revolutionary Goans Party (RGP) in November 2021, enabling it to contest elections under the Election Commission of India, with the football as its assigned symbol.[1][6] The transition was driven by frustrations with established parties' handling of demographic and economic issues, including advocacy for the 2019 Persons of Goan Origin (POGO) Bill to reserve government jobs preferentially for those of Goan descent.[1][6] The RGP's inaugural electoral campaign occurred in the 2022 Goa Legislative Assembly election on February 14, 2022, where it fielded candidates across 38 of the state's 40 constituencies despite its nascent status.[1][6] Led by Parab as president, the party emphasized nativist platforms, securing a 9.96% vote share—outperforming national entrants like the Aam Aadmi Party (6.77%) and Trinamool Congress (5.21%)—and clinching one seat, with founding member Viresh Borkar elected as MLA after defeating the Bharatiya Janata Party incumbent by 76 votes.[1]Expansion and organizational growth
Following its debut in the 2022 Goa Legislative Assembly election, where it secured one seat and garnered votes exceeding those of national parties like the Aam Aadmi Party and Trinamool Congress, the Revolutionary Goans Party (RGP) pursued organizational consolidation through grassroots strengthening and infrastructural development.[1] The party's quiet pre-electoral buildup as a homegrown entity transitioned into visible expansion, including the establishment of district committees to enhance local engagement and strategize for the 2027 assembly polls, with party president Manoj Parab and MLA Viresh Borkar leading such initiatives.[7] In January 2024, the Election Commission of India granted RGP recognition as a state-level political party, a status that reserved its election symbol and facilitated expanded campaigning capabilities ahead of the Lok Sabha elections.[8] This formal acknowledgment underscored the party's maturing structure, enabling collective decision-making on matters like potential alliances, as affirmed by its leadership.[9] To accelerate membership recruitment, RGP lowered its annual fee to ₹20 in early 2025, promoting accessibility under a renewed "Uzzo" (rise) campaign to bolster its base among native Goans.[10] Complementing this, the party inaugurated a dedicated office in the Siolim constituency on October 1, 2025, marking physical outreach into additional areas beyond its initial strongholds.[11] These steps reflected a deliberate shift toward scalable operations, though precise membership figures remain undisclosed in public records.Ideology and positions
Protection of native Goan identity and demographics
The Revolutionary Goans Party (RGP) prioritizes the preservation of native Goan identity, defined by the party as belonging to "Niz Goenkars"—individuals with ancestral domicile in Goa spanning at least three generations—to counter what it describes as existential threats from demographic shifts driven by external migration and land acquisition.[1][12] The party asserts that unchecked influxes of non-Goans, particularly from northern India, have altered the state's population balance, marginalized original inhabitants in employment and housing, and eroded cultural heritage preserved over centuries by native communities irrespective of caste or religion.[13][14] A cornerstone policy is the Person of Goan Origin (POGO) Bill, drafted by RGP legislator Viresh Borkar and proposed for tabling in the Goa Legislative Assembly in July 2022, which sought to legally delineate natives for exclusive access to state benefits, jobs in government and private sectors, and land rights, while excluding recent migrants lacking generational ties.[15][16] Although the state government declined to introduce the bill, citing constitutional flaws including potential violations of equal rights under the Indian Constitution, RGP maintains its necessity to halt the "takeover" of Goan resources and identity, arguing that without such definitions, natives face displacement in their homeland.[16][17] In manifestos for elections including the 2024 Lok Sabha polls, RGP demands stricter migration controls, reservation of jobs and educational quotas for Niz Goenkars, and bans on land sales to non-natives to stabilize demographics and sustain Goa's distinct socio-cultural fabric.[18][13] Party founder Manoj Parab has framed these positions as a "revolution to protect Goa and its people," emphasizing empirical concerns over migration's causal role in rising unemployment among locals and cultural dilution, rather than blanket opposition to all outsiders.[14][19] Critics, including state legal experts, contend the proposals risk fostering division and unconstitutionality, but RGP counters that prior governments' inaction has enabled the very demographic imbalances now requiring remedial action.[17]Opposition to land sales and external migration
The Revolutionary Goans Party (RGP) has consistently opposed the sale of Goan land to non-residents, arguing that such transactions contribute to demographic shifts and erode native control over the state's resources. Party leaders, including MLA Viresh Borkar, have highlighted instances of rampant land purchases by individuals from other states, particularly from northern India like Delhi, which they claim exacerbate environmental degradation and housing shortages for locals.[20][12] In March 2025, Borkar publicly demanded that all assembly members clarify their positions on curbing these sales, emphasizing the need for legislative safeguards similar to those in Uttarakhand to restrict outsider acquisitions.[21] RGP advocates for policies encouraging Goans to retain ownership of ancestral properties rather than selling to outsiders, proposing alternative income models such as cooperatives or tourism ventures tied to native stewardship.[14] The party has criticized government actions, including land conversions under ministers like Vishwajit Rane, which they allege enable over 4 lakh square meters of land to be made available for non-Goan buyers, framing this as a deliberate undermining of local interests.[22] This stance aligns with their broader push for the Person of Goan Origin (POGO) Bill, which seeks to prioritize natives in land rights and benefits, preventing dilution through external ownership.[23] Regarding external migration, RGP positions unchecked influx from other Indian states as a primary threat to Goan identity, employment, and social order, often describing migrants as displacing "Niz Goenkar" (original Goans) in jobs and public resources.[13] In their 2022 assembly election vision document and subsequent campaigns, the party has warned of rising crime and lawlessness attributed to migrant populations, rejecting alliances with those they view as encroachers or illegal settlers while asserting that ethical migrants who respect Goa should support their platform.[14][24] Leaders like Manoj Parab have clarified that their "revolution" targets systemic failures allowing migrants priority access to housing and benefits over natives, rather than migrants individually, but have faced accusations of nativism for prioritizing demographic preservation through stricter residency definitions.[13][14]Stances on governance, environment, and corruption
The Revolutionary Goans Party (RGP) promotes transparent and accountable governance through initiatives like MLA Viresh Borkar's June 18, 2025, launch of a public platform for disclosing political decisions and expenditures, marking a first in Goa's legislative history for real-time oversight. The party critiques centralized power structures, advocating for devolution to local bodies such as panchayats and municipalities to enhance grassroots participation and reduce bureaucratic inefficiencies. RGP leaders, including president Manoj Parab, have demanded stricter enforcement of government assurances and accountability mechanisms, as seen in assembly queries on policy implementation delays.[25] RGP maintains a staunch environmental protectionist stance, attributing ecological strain to unregulated land conversions and outsider-driven development, which they argue erodes Goa's biodiversity and coastal integrity.[12] The party has led protests against projects lacking environmental clearances, such as the April 2025 agitation at Bambolim that prompted a Goa State Environment Impact Assessment Authority stop-work order for a resort development.[26][27] Similarly, RGP highlighted beach erosion at Anjuna in October 2025, urging immediate action against pollution and habitat loss, while opposing Town and Country Planning amendments perceived to favor commercial exploitation over ecological safeguards.[28][29] Their involvement in the House Committee on River Mhadei issues underscores a focus on water resource preservation.[25] In combating corruption, RGP positions itself as an anti-graft force, routinely slamming executive lapses such as the May 2025 criticism of Chief Minister Pramod Sawant over retaining a allegedly corrupt tribal department official, Govind Gaude.[30] The party has raised alarms on institutional vacancies hindering probes, including the Goa Lokayukta post's eight-month emptiness as of August 2025, with 16 pending cases, demanding swift appointments to bolster independent oversight.[31] Anti-corruption featured prominently in their 2022 electoral campaigns, where candidates like Ryan D'Souza defeated incumbents by emphasizing graft-free administration over patronage politics.[32] RGP ties these efforts to broader transparency drives, viewing corruption as intertwined with demographic shifts and land scams that undermine native interests.Leadership and organization
Key figures and roles
Manoj Parab is the founder and current president of the Revolutionary Goans Party (RGP), having established the organization initially as a non-governmental entity before its transition to a political party.[33] [34] In this role, he directs the party's strategic direction, including advocacy for Goan identity preservation and participation in electoral campaigns.[35] Viresh Borkar, a founding member of RGP, previously served as its president during the NGO phase and was elected as a Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) for the St. Andre constituency in the 2022 Goa Legislative Assembly election, becoming the party's sole representative in the house.[1] [35] As MLA, Borkar focuses on constituency issues while aligning with RGP's core positions on nativism and governance.[25] Other notable roles include joint secretaries such as Licio Joseph Roncon for North Goa, who contributes to regional organizational efforts.[36] Srikrishna Parab, a co-founder, departed the party in May 2025 to join the Aam Aadmi Party.[37]Party structure and grassroots activities
The Revolutionary Goans Party (RGP) operates with a centralized leadership structure overseen by a president, supported by district-level committees responsible for coordinating local operations and election strategies. District committees convene regularly to enhance grassroots engagement, as demonstrated by a high-energy meeting held to bolster organizational strength and prepare for the 2027 Goa Assembly elections, attended by party president Manoj Parab and MLAs.[7] This hierarchical setup allows for decision-making on alliances and policy directions to be handled collectively at the organizational level, reflecting its status as a state-recognized political party with formalized internal processes.[9] At the constituency level, the party maintains physical offices to foster direct community connections, such as the inauguration of a new office in Shiroda on August 15, 2025, explicitly aimed at strengthening grassroots ties.[38] Similarly, the Siolim constituency office was opened on October 1, 2025, through a ceremonial event to expand local presence.[11] These initiatives support membership drives and voter outreach, emphasizing door-to-door campaigns and public consultations on issues like land protection and demographic preservation. Grassroots activities focus on mobilizing native Goans through protests, policy advocacy, and educational events against external influences on Goa's resources, often coordinated from the party's head office at 312, Third Floor, Gera Imperium Grande, Patto.[39] The party's approach prioritizes building a network of committed local volunteers, with district committees playing a key role in recruiting and training members for sustained activism ahead of electoral contests.[7]Electoral history
2022 Goa Legislative Assembly election
The Revolutionary Goans Party contested the 2022 Goa Legislative Assembly election, held on 14 February 2022 to elect 40 members, as its electoral debut following registration as a political entity.[40] The party fielded candidates in 18 constituencies, concentrating efforts in North Goa while contesting select seats in South Goa, with a platform centered on safeguarding native Goan demographics, restricting land sales to non-Goans, and curbing unregulated migration.[41][42] Results were declared on 10 March 2022, revealing the Bharatiya Janata Party as the largest party with 20 seats, followed by the Indian National Congress with 11.[40] RGP won no seats and received approximately 47,000 votes across its contests, representing about 5% of the statewide valid votes polled (totaling 939,816).[41][43] Its best result came in Valpoi constituency (North Goa), where Tukaram Bharat Parab secured 6,377 votes and placed second behind the Congress winner.[44] In South Goa contests, RGP achieved a 12% vote share, drawing attention to its appeals on local identity preservation amid concerns over external demographic shifts.[42] The party's intervention fragmented opposition votes, particularly eroding Congress support in North Goa seats where nativist sentiments resonated, as evidenced by narrower Congress margins and losses compared to 2017.[45] This debut underscored RGP's potential as a regional force prioritizing empirical demographic data—such as Goa's native population declining relative to migrants—over broader national alliances, though its limited organizational reach constrained wider gains.[41]2024 Lok Sabha election
The Revolutionary Goans Party (RGP) participated in the 2024 Indian general election by fielding candidates in both of Goa's Lok Sabha constituencies—North Goa and South Goa—on May 7, 2024. Party president Tukaram Bharat Parab, also known as Manoj Parab, contested from North Goa, while Rubert Pereira, a 39-year-old candidate with a 12th-grade education, represented the party in South Goa.[46][47] The RGP positioned itself as the sole regional party challenging the dominance of national parties like the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Indian National Congress (INC), emphasizing nativist issues such as protecting Goan identity amid external migration.[48] In North Goa, Parab garnered 45,693 votes, accounting for approximately 10% of valid votes polled, securing third place behind the BJP's Shripad Yesso Naik (257,326 votes) and the INC's Ramakant Khalap.[49][50] In South Goa, Pereira obtained 18,885 votes, finishing behind the INC's Viriato Fernandes (217,836 votes), the BJP's Pallavi Shrinivas Dempo (204,301 votes), and an independent candidate, with the RGP's performance reflecting limited appeal in the southern constituency.[51] Overall, the RGP's combined vote share across both seats hovered around 5-6% of Goa's total polled votes (906,538 out of 1,179,344 electors), failing to win any seats or influence outcomes significantly, though it drew attention for splitting anti-incumbent votes in North Goa.[48][52]| Constituency | RGP Candidate | Votes Received | Position | Winner (Party) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North Goa | Tukaram Bharat Parab | 45,693 | 3rd | Shripad Yesso Naik (BJP) |
| South Goa | Rubert Pereira | 18,885 | 4th | Viriato Fernandes (INC) |