The bitterness between the AAP and the Centre got worse after Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal made remarks allegedly defamatory concerning affairs of Delhi and District Cricket Association against Finance Minister Arun Jaitley who sued him and his senior party colleagues for Rs 10 crore damages.
Apart from the Congress leaders, AAP also faced several embarrassing moments in the high court due to the alleged fake degrees of its then Law Minister Jitender Singh Tomar, Surender Singh and domestic violence case against former Law Minister Somanth Bharti. Other two MLAs, Jarnail Singh and Gulab Singh sought anticipatory bail in cases of assault.
However, there were some cheers for the party as despite severe opposition to the odd-even scheme, the high court did not stay the AAP government's move, saying its just a 15-day trial run.
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The high court from time to time, passed several orders
against cab companies, including Internet-based taxi service firms like Uber and Ola, directing them to operate only CNG vehicles.
As the Kejriwal government was facing its ups and downs, the Narendra Modi regime also got a setback over the issue of off-loading Greenpeace activist Priya Pillai, which the high court held as "illegal".
The central government also had tough time to defend its various policy decisions including 2014 coal auction ordinance with the high court saying that "it lacked clarity" and faced searching questions on recent call drops compensation regulation which were challenged by the corporate sector.
Amid all these developments, the horrific December 16, 2012 gangrape-cum-murder case continued to remain in the limelight as the high court refused to stay the release of the juvenile offender who has now turned adult and the midnight effort of Delhi Commission for Women to seek the Supreme Court's intervention also failed.
Former Haryana Chief Minister O P Chautala and his son Ajay Chautala were awarded 10 year jail term in the teachers' recruitment scam case by the high court.
Controversial Uttar Pradesh politician D P Yadav's son Vikas and his cousin Vishal's conviction in the Nitish Katara murder case was upheld by the high court which enhanced the sentence of life imprisonment to 25 years without remission and extra five year imprisonment for destruction of evidence along with penalty of Rs 50 lakh each.