Fourth, if Kejriwal’s brand of anti-corruption crusading has run its course, his brand revision as an environmentalist is also failing to take off. The firman that cars with odd-numbered registration plates would be allowed to ply on odd dates and the even-numbered ones would be permitted on even dates makes him nothing short of a mediaeval era Muhammad bin Tughlaq. Delhi Police Commissioner BS Bassi has added to his woes by declaring illegal Delhi Transport Minister Gopal Rai’s proposal that his party’s volunteers would pitch in as traffic regulators. Dikshit has resurfaced on the scene by questioning how the police can man six-to-eight lanes on busy roads. The media has reported that fake registration plate makers will make a killing in the days for which the Tughlaq-esque edict will be in force. This means that the leader once hailed as a crusader against corruption is now pushing his city towards corruption.