Emboldened with a nod from the Delhi High Court, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Friday said he will continue with his television and print advertisements as long as the media does not show his "good" work.

"If TV channels starting running the good deeds of our government, then we will immediately shut this publicity budget. A government needs to publicise its work," the 47-year-old leader told India Today Consulting Editor Rajdeep Sardesai in an exclusive interview for Aaj Tak on Friday.

On Wednesday, the Delhi High Court refused to restrain the Delhi government from running a publicity campaign and airing advertisements allegedly glorifying Kejriwal and his party, the Aam Aadmi Party. The campaign was challenged by senior Congress leader, Ajay Maken.

Maken had dragged the Kejriwal-led government to court for alleged misuse of public funds to promote the chief minister and alleged violation of Supreme Court guidelines. The Congress leader sought a direction from the court restraining the government from publishing advertisement, including audio-visual and the ones on television.

Maken had alleged that the AAP government has increased its publicity budget by a whopping 2119 per cent by allotting Rs 526 crore as against Rs 23.7 crore in 2014. The Congress leader also made the Centre the second respondent citing the reason that it was yet to constitute the three-member body to oversee the implementation of the guidelines.