The complete guide to All India Political Parties Meet procedure — from Bills and Chits to Zero Hour and the Whip System. Master the art of political representation in India's most dynamic MUN committee format. See the full MUN RoP hub or compare with UNA-USA procedure.
The most fundamental difference between AIPPM and any UN committee is what you represent. In a UNA-USA committee, you represent a country and its foreign policy interests. In AIPPM, you represent an Indian political party — BJP, INC, AAP, SP, TMC, or another — and their domestic ideological position on a national policy issue. This shifts everything: your frame of reference, your speaking style, and the nature of your alliances.
AIPPM is classified as an Un-Conventional Indian Model Committee (IMC), meaning its Rules of Procedure are not drawn from a fixed constitutional script. Instead, the Executive Board defines and adapts the RoP to fit the simulation's objectives. This gives AIPPM a fluid, politically charged energy that conventional committees lack. There is no fixed "right procedure" — the EB's ruling is final.
The mindset shift required is from diplomatic to political. In UN committees, you negotiate with other countries toward a multilateral consensus. In AIPPM, you navigate ideological constraints, whip systems, coalition arithmetic, and the very real possibility that your party line and your personal analysis are in tension. The best AIPPM delegates find original solutions within their ideological framework — not outside it.
Your identity in committee is your party — BJP, INC, AAP, SP, TMC, or another. Your speeches, votes, and alliances must be consistent with your party's manifesto and ideological constraints.
The Executive Board defines the procedural rules for each AIPPM simulation. Unlike fixed UN procedure, the EB can adapt rules to the simulation's objectives. Their ruling is final and cannot be appealed.
AIPPM mirrors Indian parliamentary arithmetic — passing Bills requires building coalitions, not just winning arguments. You need to understand which parties can be allies and on which issues.
The EB is not looking for copy-paste party positions or diplomatic hedging. They want original analysis within ideological constraints — delegates who know their party's limits and push beyond them.
Every rule, point, and tool you need to operate in an AIPPM committee — from opening statements to Bill passage and the Whip System.
The All India Political Parties Meet (AIPPM) is an Un-Conventional Indian Model Committee (IMC) — its Rules of Procedure are defined by the Executive Board, not a fixed script. Unlike Conventional committees (Lok Sabha, Rajya Sabha, State Legislative Assembly) which follow constitutionally prescribed procedure, AIPPM and similar bodies (Niti Aayog, NCW, Stakeholders Meet, Citizens Dialog) adapt their RoP to the simulation's objectives. Delegates represent major national parties — BJP, INC, AAP, SP, TMC and others — debating domestic policy with political intellect and strategic thinking. The EB is NOT looking for copy-paste party positions; they want delegates who know their ideological limits and push beyond them with out-of-the-box solutions.
Before you research the agenda topic, research your party. Read the party manifesto, key speeches from leadership, and recent policy statements. Understand the underlying ideology — where does your party sit on the spectrum of state intervention vs market freedom? On centralisation vs federalism? On welfare vs growth-first? These are the constraints you must work within.
Once you know the ideology, identify exactly where your party stands on the specific agenda topic. Check parliamentary debates (Rajya Sabha, Lok Sabha transcripts), official party communications, and statements from senior leaders. Your position must be defensible on ideological grounds — not just factually accurate.
The best AIPPM delegates are not mouthpieces — they are original thinkers within an ideological framework. If you see a more effective solution that slightly diverges from party orthodoxy, you may argue for it — but you must explain the ideological logic to the EB. Breaking the whip without a principled justification is scored negatively; breaking it with one is scored as exceptional leadership.
The EB can immediately identify delegates who have memorised party talking points and are reciting them verbatim. They cannot identify — and will reward — delegates who have internalised the ideology and then formed original opinions on the specific agenda. The test: could another party's delegate give the exact same speech? If yes, it is not good enough.
Four proven structures for AIPPM speeches, each demonstrated on a sample topic: Urban Employment Policy. Use the framework that best suits your argument — but always fill it with original analysis, not recited facts.
State your party's core premise on the issue, analyse why it holds in the current context, and ground it in a real example.
Example: Urban Employment Policy
"Our party's premise is that urban employment cannot grow without addressing the skills gap that separates our workforce from the jobs the new economy demands. Analysis: schemes that redistribute employment without upskilling will create jobs that last one policy cycle, not one generation. Example: the ITI revamp under Skill India increased certified manufacturing placements in tier-2 cities by 22% in three years — proof that structured investment in human capital, not wage subsidies, is the path forward."
Identify a specific, quantified problem. Propose a concrete policy solution. Articulate who benefits and how.
Example: Urban Employment Policy
"The problem: 43% of urban informal workers — roughly 120 million people — have no access to portable social security benefits when they change employers, creating a poverty trap at the heart of our urban economy. Our solution: a universal portable benefit number linked to Aadhaar, mandatory for all employers above five workers. Benefits: workers gain continuity, employers gain formalisation incentives, and the state gains a tax base — three compounding wins from one structural intervention."
Use historical precedent to frame the present failure, then project a policy direction into the future.
Example: Urban Employment Policy
"In the past, urban employment policy in this country was synonymous with public sector expansion — a legacy that created bloated wage bills and crowded out private investment. Today, we face a paradox: the private sector employs 80% of urban workers, yet our policy architecture is still designed around the 20% in public jobs. If we continue on this trajectory, we will spend the next decade applying 1980s tools to a 2026 economy. The future requires us to build employment policy around incentivising private sector formalisation — not subsidising informal survival."
Define the issue precisely (what), establish why it matters beyond the surface level (so what), and drive toward a clear call to action (now what).
Example: Urban Employment Policy
"What: Urban youth unemployment in the 18–25 cohort sits at 23% — more than double the overall unemployment rate. So what: this is not a statistics problem; it is a social stability problem. A generation that finds no formal economic entry point does not wait patiently — it either migrates, falls into informal precarity, or organises against the system. Now what: this committee must pass a Bill that mandates first-employment placement programmes for every public institution with more than 50 employees — creating 1.2 million entry points for urban youth within 24 months."
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