In early 1919, Adav, now a shrewd nineteen-year-old, decided it was time. He summoned Subhas Chandra Bose to Bombay. "The time is ripe," Adav stated, displaying Codex projections of public dissatisfaction and the waning influence of the existing nationalist bodies. "The Congress is a rotting limb. We will replace it."
Together, Adav and Bose formally launched the Swarajya Party. It was unlike any political party India had ever seen. Organized like a ruthlessly efficient corporation, it had clear, quantifiable goals: Economic self-sufficiency, achieved through industrialization and control of resources; technological development, building India's own scientific base; and phased independence, negotiated not through moral appeals, but from a position of undeniable strength.
Adav meticulously crafted the party's manifesto, translating his economic vision into accessible political slogans. He remained entirely in the shadows, the party's silent founder and primary financier, his name never appearing on any official document. Bose, charismatic, brilliant, and now armed with a coherent, power-focused vision, became its public face. He traversed the country, his powerful oratory electrifying audiences, offering a tangible path to freedom that resonated far more deeply than the Congress's increasingly tired pleas.
The Swarajya Party was funded by Bharat Corporation, but structured to appear as a widespread, grassroots movement. Adav's "Ghadar agents," now operating as highly disciplined party organizers, established branches in every major city and district, mapping local power structures and identifying potential recruits. The party offered practical solutions to local problems, using Bharat Corporation's resources to fund schools, dispensaries, and agricultural improvements, quietly building a loyal base among the populace.