Captain Gopinath had earlier contested and lost as an independent candidate from the Bangalore South constituency in 2009. <br /><br />

Looks like several India Inc members are taking a leap of faith in the Aam Aadmi Party. Just days after former Infosys executive V Balakrishnan and Meera Sanyal, former chairman of Royal Bank of Scotland joined AAP, a report in the Economic Times states thatCaptain Gopinath, who pioneered the low-cost airline business in India, too has been taken on board by the party.

"I expressed my interest in joining the AAP three weeks back. I was always part of Anna movement when Kejriwal-Anna were together," Captain Gopinath told ET NOW. He, however, said his role in the party is not yet clear.

Captain Gopinath had earlier contested and lost as an independent candidate from the Bangalore South constituency in 2009.

So is the zeal to fight corruption head on and bring in a global perspective to change things locally prompting leaders from India Inc to join the AAP?

"AAP a wants clean candidates with good track record to come to power," Balakirshnan told CNBC-TV18 in an interview while Sanyal feels AAP has done a lot of homework, certainly for Delhi and is now putting in place is a national economic manifesto.

"They have a lot of good people round the table, some very fine minds, people from corporate world, from finance, from IT, sitting around the table and debating this issue. This I can tell you as a banker, diversity of opinion is good. If you want the right outcomes, have the right process, have the right people involved and you will have the right answers," she told CNBC-TV18.

Just a few days ago, Adarsh Shastri, the grandson of former PM Lal Bahadur Shastri, quit his job at Apple to join AAP.