First Legislative Assembly of Delhi

The First Legislative Assembly of Delhi was constituted in Nov 1993 after the Council of Minister was replaced by the Delhi Legislative Assembly through the Constitution Act 1991 and by the Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi Act, 1991 the Sixty-ninth Amendment to the Indian constitution. The amendment declared the Union Territory of Delhi to be formally known as National Capital Territory of Delhi, subsequently Delhi holding the 1st state elections.[1][2]

Legislative Assembly of Delhi
(Vidhan Sabha of Delhi)
Type
Type
Term limits
Nov 1993 - Nov 1998
Leadership
Chief Minister
Speaker of the Assembly
Structure
Seats70
Political groups
BJP (49)
INC (14)
JD (04)
IND (03)
Elections
FPTP
Last election
Nov 1993
Meeting place
Old Secretariat , Delhi, India
Website
www.delhiassembly.nic.in

Total six national parties, three state parties, forty-one registered (unrecognised) parties and other independent candidates contested for 70 assembly seats. With 49 seats, BJP got the majority and formed government.[2]

Electors

MaleFemaleOthersTotal
Electors3,237,0482,613,497-5,850,545
Electors who voted2,089,7631,522,950-3,612,713
Polling percentage64.56%58.27%-61.75%

Candidates

MaleFemaleOthersTotal
Candidates1,25759-1,316
Elected673-70
Forfeited deposits1,10946-1,155

Important members

#FromToPositionNameParty
0119931996Chief MinisterMadan Lal KhuranaBJP
0219961998Chief MinisterSahib Singh VermaBJP
0319981998Chief MinisterSushma SwarajBJP
0419931998SpeakerCharti Lal GoelBJP
0519931998Deputy Speakern/an/a
0619931998Leader of the Housen/an/a
0719931998Leader of the Oppositionn/an/a

List of members

Default sort, in ascending order of constituency

#Assembly constituencyNameParty
01Adarsh NagarJai Parkash YadavBJP
02Ambedkar NagarPrem SinghINC
03BabarpurNaresh GaurBJP
04BadarpurRamvir Singh BidhuriJD
05BadliJai BhagwanBJP
06Baljit NagarKrishna TirathINC
07BallimaranHaroon YusufINC
08BawanaChand RamBJP
09Bhalswa JahangirpurJitendra KumarIND
10Chandni ChowkVasdev KaptainBJP
11Delhi CantonmentKaran Singh TanwarBJP
12Gandhi NagarDarshan Kumar BahlBJP
13Geeta ColonyAshok Kumar WaliaINC
14GhondaLal Behari TiwariBJP
15Gole MarketKirti AzadBJP
16Hari NagarHarsaran Singh BalliBJP
17HastsalMukesh SharmaINC
18Hauz KhasRajesh SharmaBJP
19JanakpuriJagdish MukhiBJP
20Jangpura JagParvesh ChandraINC
21KalkajiPurnima SethiBJP
22Kamla NagarP.K. ChandlaBJP
23Karol BaghS.P. RatwalBJP
24Kasturba NagarJagdish Lal BatraBJP
25Krishna NagarHarsh VardhanBJP
26MadipurSwarup Chand RajanBJP
27MahipalpurSat Parkash RanaBJP
28Malviya NagarRajendra GuptaBJP
29MandawaliM.S. PanwarBJP
30Mangol PuriRaj Kumar ChauhanINC
31Matia MahalShoaib IqbalJD
32MehrauliBrahm Singh TanwarBJP
33Minto RoadTajdar BabarINC
34Model TownChatri Lal GoelBJP
35Moti NagarMadan Lal KhuranaBJP
36NajafgarhSuraj ParshadIND
37Nand NagariFateh SinghBJP
38Nangloi JatDavinder SinghBJP
39NarelaInder Raj SinghBJP
40NasirpurVinod Kumar SharmaBJP
41OkhlaParvejJD
42Pahar GanjSatish Chandra KhandelwalBJP
43PalamDharam Dev SolankiBJP
44Patel NagarM.R AryaBJP
45PatparganjGyan ChandBJP
46Qarawal NagarRam PalBJP
47R K PuramBodh RajBJP
48Rajinder NagarPuran Chand YogiBJP
49Rajouri GardenAjay MakanINC
50Ram NagarMoti Lal SoddiBJP
51Rohtas NagarAlok KumarBJP
52Sadar BazarHari KrishanBJP
53Sahibabad DaulatpurJet Ram SolankiBJP
54SaketTek ChandINC
55Sarojini NagarRam BhajBJP
56SeelampurMatin AhmedJD
57SeemapuriBalbir SinghBJP
58ShahdaraRam Niwas GoelBJP
59Shakur BastiGauri Shankar BhardwajBJP
60Shalimar BaghSahib Singh VermaBJP
61Sultan Pur MajraJai KishanINC
62Tilak NagarO.P BabbarBJP
63TimarpurRajender GuptaBJP
64Tri NagarNand Kishore GargBJP
65TrilokpuriBrahm PalINC
66TughlakabadShish PalIND
67Vishnu GardenMahinder Singh SaathiINC
68Vishwas NagarMadan Lal GawaBJP
69WazirpurDeep Chand Bandhu TewatiyaINC
70Yamuna ViharSahab Singh ChauhanBJP
gollark: Maybe add stuff for ÏØ.
gollark: Do you know whether this is turing-complete?
gollark: You can rewrite the laws of maths in Python too!
gollark: I think -127 to 128 with other numbers between -127 and 128.
gollark: Fun fact: in Python, with *creative* mucking around with ctypes, you can actually replace all instances of 3 with 4.

References

  1. "Sixty-ninth amendment". Delhi Assembly official website. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  2. "Election Results". Election Commission of India official website. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
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