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 | Madan Lal Khurana, BJP |
Speaker of the Assembly | Charti Lal Goel, BJP |
Structure | |
Seats | 70 |
Political groups | BJP (49) INC (14) JD (04) IND (03) |
Elections | |
FPTP | |
Last election | Nov 1993 |
Meeting place | |
Old Secretariat , Delhi, India | |
Website | |
www |
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
Male | Female | Others | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Electors | 3,237,048 | 2,613,497 | - | 5,850,545 |
Electors who voted | 2,089,763 | 1,522,950 | - | 3,612,713 |
Polling percentage | 64.56% | 58.27% | - | 61.75% |
Candidates
Male | Female | Others | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Candidates | 1,257 | 59 | - | 1,316 |
Elected | 67 | 3 | - | 70 |
Forfeited deposits | 1,109 | 46 | - | 1,155 |
Important members
# | From | To | Position | Name | Party |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
01 | 1993 | 1996 | Chief Minister | Madan Lal Khurana | BJP |
02 | 1996 | 1998 | Chief Minister | Sahib Singh Verma | BJP |
03 | 1998 | 1998 | Chief Minister | Sushma Swaraj | BJP |
04 | 1993 | 1998 | Speaker | Charti Lal Goel | BJP |
05 | 1993 | 1998 | Deputy Speaker | n/a | n/a |
06 | 1993 | 1998 | Leader of the House | n/a | n/a |
07 | 1993 | 1998 | Leader of the Opposition | n/a | n/a |
List of members
Default sort, in ascending order of constituency
# | Assembly constituency | Name | Party |
---|---|---|---|
01 | Adarsh Nagar | Jai Parkash Yadav | BJP |
02 | Ambedkar Nagar | Prem Singh | INC |
03 | Babarpur | Naresh Gaur | BJP |
04 | Badarpur | Ramvir Singh Bidhuri | JD |
05 | Badli | Jai Bhagwan | BJP |
06 | Baljit Nagar | Krishna Tirath | INC |
07 | Ballimaran | Haroon Yusuf | INC |
08 | Bawana | Chand Ram | BJP |
09 | Bhalswa Jahangirpur | Jitendra Kumar | IND |
10 | Chandni Chowk | Vasdev Kaptain | BJP |
11 | Delhi Cantonment | Karan Singh Tanwar | BJP |
12 | Gandhi Nagar | Darshan Kumar Bahl | BJP |
13 | Geeta Colony | Ashok Kumar Walia | INC |
14 | Ghonda | Lal Behari Tiwari | BJP |
15 | Gole Market | Kirti Azad | BJP |
16 | Hari Nagar | Harsaran Singh Balli | BJP |
17 | Hastsal | Mukesh Sharma | INC |
18 | Hauz Khas | Rajesh Sharma | BJP |
19 | Janakpuri | Jagdish Mukhi | BJP |
20 | Jangpura Jag | Parvesh Chandra | INC |
21 | Kalkaji | Purnima Sethi | BJP |
22 | Kamla Nagar | P.K. Chandla | BJP |
23 | Karol Bagh | S.P. Ratwal | BJP |
24 | Kasturba Nagar | Jagdish Lal Batra | BJP |
25 | Krishna Nagar | Harsh Vardhan | BJP |
26 | Madipur | Swarup Chand Rajan | BJP |
27 | Mahipalpur | Sat Parkash Rana | BJP |
28 | Malviya Nagar | Rajendra Gupta | BJP |
29 | Mandawali | M.S. Panwar | BJP |
30 | Mangol Puri | Raj Kumar Chauhan | INC |
31 | Matia Mahal | Shoaib Iqbal | JD |
32 | Mehrauli | Brahm Singh Tanwar | BJP |
33 | Minto Road | Tajdar Babar | INC |
34 | Model Town | Chatri Lal Goel | BJP |
35 | Moti Nagar | Madan Lal Khurana | BJP |
36 | Najafgarh | Suraj Parshad | IND |
37 | Nand Nagari | Fateh Singh | BJP |
38 | Nangloi Jat | Davinder Singh | BJP |
39 | Narela | Inder Raj Singh | BJP |
40 | Nasirpur | Vinod Kumar Sharma | BJP |
41 | Okhla | Parvej | JD |
42 | Pahar Ganj | Satish Chandra Khandelwal | BJP |
43 | Palam | Dharam Dev Solanki | BJP |
44 | Patel Nagar | M.R Arya | BJP |
45 | Patparganj | Gyan Chand | BJP |
46 | Qarawal Nagar | Ram Pal | BJP |
47 | R K Puram | Bodh Raj | BJP |
48 | Rajinder Nagar | Puran Chand Yogi | BJP |
49 | Rajouri Garden | Ajay Makan | INC |
50 | Ram Nagar | Moti Lal Soddi | BJP |
51 | Rohtas Nagar | Alok Kumar | BJP |
52 | Sadar Bazar | Hari Krishan | BJP |
53 | Sahibabad Daulatpur | Jet Ram Solanki | BJP |
54 | Saket | Tek Chand | INC |
55 | Sarojini Nagar | Ram Bhaj | BJP |
56 | Seelampur | Matin Ahmed | JD |
57 | Seemapuri | Balbir Singh | BJP |
58 | Shahdara | Ram Niwas Goel | BJP |
59 | Shakur Basti | Gauri Shankar Bhardwaj | BJP |
60 | Shalimar Bagh | Sahib Singh Verma | BJP |
61 | Sultan Pur Majra | Jai Kishan | INC |
62 | Tilak Nagar | O.P Babbar | BJP |
63 | Timarpur | Rajender Gupta | BJP |
64 | Tri Nagar | Nand Kishore Garg | BJP |
65 | Trilokpuri | Brahm Pal | INC |
66 | Tughlakabad | Shish Pal | IND |
67 | Vishnu Garden | Mahinder Singh Saathi | INC |
68 | Vishwas Nagar | Madan Lal Gawa | BJP |
69 | Wazirpur | Deep Chand Bandhu Tewatiya | INC |
70 | Yamuna Vihar | Sahab Singh Chauhan | BJP |
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
- "Sixty-ninth amendment". Delhi Assembly official website. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
- "Election Results". Election Commission of India official website. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.