Some party leaders admit that unless AAP gets a credible face — a leader having political grounding and understanding of state issues — the party will end up with zero seats like what happened in Uttarakhand. Even for the elections of four municipal corporations — Mandi, Solan, Palampur and Dharamshala, the party had drawn a blank. Former BJP minister and Kangra MP, Dr Rajan Sushant, was the first prominent face to join AAP in 2014 at the behest of CM Kejriwal, but quit the party when he found the affairs not to his liking and ended up floating his own political outfit. Currently, the party’s state unit head, lawyer Anup Kesri, is at the forefront holding rallies, party meetings and interactive sessions with youth, women and retired government employees, to bring them to the party fold. “We are geared up for contesting the Shimla Municipal Corporation poll, slated in May-June 2022. It will be a good parameter to measure our strength. Thereafter, we will prepare for the state assembly,” he says.