Kerala Congress (M)
Kerala Congress (M) is a state-level political party in the Indian state of Kerala. It was formed in 1979, after a split from the Kerala Congress. Its founder is K. M. Mani.The chairman post is currently in dispute. Its current chairman is P J Joseph.
Kerala Congress (M) | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | KC(M) |
Leader | C. F. Thomas |
Parliamentary Chairperson | P J Joseph |
Lok Sabha leader | Thomas Chazhikadan |
Rajya Sabha leader | Jose K. Mani |
Founder | K. M. Mani |
Founded | 1979 |
Split from | Kerala Congress |
Headquarters | State Committee Office, Near Fire Station, Kottayam, India.[1] |
Newspaper | Prathichaya weekly |
Student wing | Kerala Students Congress (M) |
Youth wing | Kerala Youth Front (M) |
Women's wing | Kerala Vanitha Congress (M) |
Labour wing | Kerala Trade Union Congress (M) |
Colours | White and Red |
ECI Status | State Party[2] |
Alliance | United Progressive Alliance, United Democratic Front (Kerala) |
Seats in Lok Sabha | 1 / 543
|
Seats in Rajya Sabha | 1 / 245
|
Seats in Kerala Legislative Assembly | 5 / 140
|
Election symbol | |
The party has five MLA in the Kerala Legislative Assembly and two MP; Jose K. Mani (Rajya Sabha) and Thomas Chazhikadan (Lok Sabha). It is one of the main party in UDF.It is also part in UPA (National level ).[3]. This party was a part of many UDF led Governments. Its founder K. M. Mani was the MLA of Pala (State Assembly constituency) from 1965 to 2019 without a break and the only person who was elected to Pala (State Assembly constituency) till 2019 after the formation of the constituency
In 2019 Indian general election Kerala Congress (M) won a seat ( Kottayam (Lok Sabha constituency) )
History
Kerala Congress (M) was formed in 1979 after a split with the parent some Kerala Congress party.[3] Just before the general election held on 2011, Kerala Congress fraction of P. J. Joseph merged with KC(M). The earlier Kerala Congress (Secular), which split from P. J. Joseph group and was led by Eapen Varghese, merged with KC(M).
On 30 April 2010, another Kerala Congress faction led by P. J. Joseph, which was a constituent of Left Democratic Front (LDF), decided to break away and join the KC(M) to form a single united Kerala Congress.[4] It split again and some leaders including Francis George, Dr. K. C. Joseph, Antony Raju, P. C. Joseph resigned from Kerala Congress (M) and started talking with LDF.
For the Kerala Assembly election, the united groups would be contesting under the banner and symbol of Kerala Congress (M), as directed by the Election Commission. The name Kerala Congress and its bicycle symbol have been claimed by the united group.[3]
Minister | Ministry |
---|---|
K. M. Mani | Minister for Finance, State Treasury, Taxes & Duties, Law and Housing (May 2011-November 2015) |
P. J. Joseph | Minister for Water Resources, Irrigation and Inland Navigation |
Thomas Unniyadan | Chief Whip (June-November 2015) |
Minister | Ministry |
---|---|
K. M. Mani | Minister for Law & Revenue |
C. F. Thomas | Minister for Rural Development |
Minister | Ministry |
---|---|
K. M. Mani | Minister for Law & Revenue |
Narayana Kurup | Deputy Speaker |
Kerala Congress (M) broke its alliance from UDF in 2016.[5] In June 2018 it again joined with the UDF.[6]
Main Leaders
The following are the main leaders of the party:
Jose K Mani Faction
Jose K Mani faction has been expelled from UDF on June 29, 2020
- Jose K. Mani
- Joy Abraham
- N. Jayaraj
- Thomas Chazhikadan
- Roshy Augustine
- Joseph M. Puthussery
- Arakkal Balakrishna Pillai
- Kottarakkara Ponnachen
- Stephen George
- P. M. Mathew
- Adv.Varghese Mammen
- E J Agasthi
- Saji Manjakadambil
- Job Micheal
- Adv.Mohammed Iqbal
- Tom Jose Pulikunnel
- P. T. Jose
- Alex Kozhimala
- Benny Kakkad
- Jacob Thomas Arikupuram
- Elizabeth Mammen Mathai
- Alex Vattakunnel
- K. A. Antony
- M. S. Jose
- V. K. Joseph
PJ Joseph Faction
- P. J. Joseph
- C. F. Thomas
- K. Francis George
- Joy Abraham
- Thomas Unniyadan
- Monce Joseph
- T. U. Kuruvila
- Johnny Nellore
- E. J. Augusthy
- Victor T. Thomas
- Vakkachen Mattaththil
- Arakkal Balakrishna Pillai
- Kottarakkara Ponnachen
- Saji Manjakadampil
References
- "List of Political Parties and Election Symbols main Notification Dated 17.09.2010" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2012.
- "List of Political Parties and Election Symbols main Notification Dated 18.01.2013" (PDF). India: Election Commission of India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
- "Kerala Congress (M) (KEC(M))". Elections.in. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
- "Kerala Congress(J) pulls out of LDF". The Hindu. 30 April 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
- "Kerala Congress (Mani) ends 35-year alliance with United Democratic Front". scroll.in. 3 January 2017. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
- Minu Ittyipe (24 May 2018). "March Of K.M. Mani: Left, Right, Left, Right". Outlook.
- G. Gopa Kumar. “Kerala: Verdict against Non-Performance and Congress Factionalism.” Economic and Political Weekly, vol. 39, no. 51, 2004, pp. 5498–5501. JSTOR 4415940.