He also admitted to have made "mistakes" in Punjab, where the AAP was tipped to do well but lost badly to the Congress. He insisted that its defeat was due to the electronic voting machines (EVMs), which he alleged were tampered with.
"If there is a need for such an alliance in the country, all the good people should come forward (to join hands)," the Delhi Chief Minister told PTI.
His remarks came in the back drop of his recent meeting with Kerala counterpart, Pinarayi Vijayan.
Kejriwal had called on Vijayan at the Kerala House here and discussed "a range of issues".
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The AAP chief had in the past shared dais with Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.
He said that the results in the recent polls in Goa were "not surprising" but in Punjab it was not as per the party's expectation.
"The results of Goa Assembly polls were not surprising for me, but in Punjab the results were not what we had expected. The energy in Punjab was a very high. I had seen that.
Kejriwal had been raking up the issue of alleged tampering of the EVMs, despite the Election Commission's assertion that the machines are robust and tamper-proof.
He had raised the issue of faulty EVMs used during the bypoll in Rajasthan's Dholpur.
The Delhi High Court today dismissed the Aam Aadmi Party's (AAP) plea for use of the voter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) voting machines in the April 23 municipal polls.
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