Sixth Legislative Assembly of Delhi

The Sixth Legislative Assembly of Delhi was constituted on 14th Feb 2015 after the 2015 Delhi Legislative Assembly elections were concluded earlier that month.[1]

Legislative Assembly of Delhi
(Vidhan Sabha of Delhi)
Type
Type
Term limits
Feb 2015 - Jan 2020
Leadership
Speaker of the Assembly
Dy. Speaker
Chief Minister
Leader of the House
Leader of the Opposition
Secretary
P. N. Mishra
Structure
Seats70
Political groups
  AAP: 62 seats
  BJP: 4 seats
  Vacant 4 seats
Length of term
5 years
Elections
First-past-the-post
Last election
7 February 2015
Meeting place
Old Secretariat , Delhi, India
Website
www.delhiassembly.nic.in

Election and Government formation

Elections for 70 assembly seats in Delhi were concluded on 07th Feb 2015 and results were announced on 10th Feb 2015. The Aam Aadmi Party got a sweeping majority by winning 67 out of 70 seats. The Bharatiya Janata Party managed only 3 seats and all other parties, including the Indian National Congress could not manage to win any seats. AAP got 54.3% (4,879,127), BJP got 32.2% (2,891,510) and INC got 9.7% (867,027) of total votes polled. A total of 6 national parties, 10 state parties, 55 registered (unrecognised) parties and 1 independent candidate contested for the 70 assembly seats.[2][1][3]

On 14th Feb 2015, Arvind Kejriwal was sworn in as the eighth Chief Minister of Delhi. Along with Kejriwal, six ministers were also sworn in.[4][5]

In April, 2015, the speaker of the house recognized Vijender Gupta as the leader of opposition in the house.[6]

As on 28 August 2017, AAP had 66 MLA, 4 belongs to BJP.

BJP won the Rajouri Garden assembly constituency in Feb 2017 By Poll Election.

AAP won the Bawana assembly constituency in Aug 2017 By Poll Election.

Electors

MaleFemaleOthersTotal
Electors73,89,08959,19,1275,9991,33,09,078
Electors who voted----
Polling percentage---67.08%

[7]Candidates

MaleFemaleOthersTotal
Candidates607660673
Elected646070
Forfeited deposits----

Important members

#FromToPositionNameParty
012015IncumbentChief MinisterArvind KejriwalAAP
022015IncumbentSpeakerRam Niwas GoelAAP
032015IncumbentDeputy SpeakerRakhi BirlaAAP
042015IncumbentLeader of the HouseArvind KejriwalAAP
052015IncumbentLeader of the OppositionVijender GuptaBJP

Ministry

#FromToNamePosition / Portfolio / ministry
012015IncumbentArvind KejriwalChief Minister, Water
022015IncumbentManish Sisodia

Deputy Chief Minister, Tourism, education, finance, planning, land & building, vigilance, services, women & child, art, culture & languages, and all other departments not specifically allotted to any minister

032015IncumbentSatyendra Kumar Jain

Health, industries, public work department, power, home, urban development

042015IncumbentGopal Rai

Employment, development, labour, general administration department, irrigation & flood control

052015IncumbentImran Hussain

Food & supply, environment & forest, election

062015IncumbentRajendra Pal Gautam

Gurudwara elections, SC & ST, social welfare, cooperative

072015IncumbentKailash Gahlot

Administrative reforms, information & technology, law, justice & legislative affairs, transport, revenue

[5][8]

List of members

Keys:   AAP (61)   BJP (3)   Shiromani Akali Dal (1)

No. Constituency Name of elected MLA Party affiliation
#Assembly constituencyNameParty
01Adarsh NagarPawan Kumar SharmaAAP
02Ambedkar NagarAjay DuttAAP
03BabarpurGopal RaiAAP
04BadarpurNarayan Dutt SharmaAAP
05BadliAjesh YadavAAP
06BallimaranImran HussainAAP
07BawanaRam ChanderAAP
08BijwasanVacantNone
09BurariSanjeev JhaAAP
10Chandni ChowkVacantNone
11ChhatarpurKartar Singh TanwarAAP
12Delhi CanttSurinder SinghAAP
13DeoliPrakash JarwalAAP
14DwarkaAdarsh ShastriAAP
15Gandhi NagarVacantNone
16GhondaShri Dutt SharmaAAP
17GokalpurFateh SinghAAP
18Greater KailashSaurabh BharadwajAAP
19Hari NagarJagdeep SinghAAP
20JanakpuriRajesh RishiAAP
21JangpuraPraveen KumarAAP
22KalkajiAvtar SinghAAP
23Karawal NagarVacantNone
24Karol BaghVishesh RaviAAP
25Kasturba NagarMadan LalAAP
26KirariRituraj GovindAAP
27KondliManoj KumarAAP
28Krishna NagarS.K. BaggaAAP
29Laxmi NagarNitin TyagiAAP
30MadipurGirish SoniAAP
31Malviya NagarSomnath BhartiAAP
32Mangol PuriRakhi BirlaAAP
33Matia MahalAsim Ahmed KhanAAP
34MatialaGulab SinghAAP
35MehrauliNaresh YadavAAP
36Model TownAkhilesh Pati TripathiAAP
37Moti NagarShiv Charan GoelAAP
38MundkaSukhvir SinghAAP
39MustafabadJagdish PradhanBJP
40NajafgarhKailash GahlotAAP
41Nangloi JatRaghuvinder ShokeenAAP
42NerelaSharad KumarAAP
43New DelhiArvind KejriwalAAP
44OkhlaAmanatullah KhanAAP
45PalamBhavna GaurAAP
46Patel NagarHazari Lal ChauhanAAP
47PatparganjManish SisodiaAAP
48R.K. PuramParmila TokasAAP
49Rajinder NagarVijender Garg VijayAAP
50Rajouri GardenManjinder Singh SirsaShiromani Akali Dal
51RithalaMohinder GoyalAAP
52RohiniVijender GuptaBJP
53Rohtas NagarSarita SinghAAP
54Sadar BazarSom DuttAAP
55Sangam ViharDinesh MohaniyaAAP
56SeelampurMohammad IshraqueAAP
57SeemapuriRajendra Pal GautamAAP
58ShahdaraRam Niwas GoelAAP
59Shakur BastiSatyendra Kumar JainAAP
60Shalimar BaghBandana KumariAAP
61Sultan Pur MajraVacantNone
62Tilak NagarJarnail SinghAAP
63TimarpurPankaj PushkarAAP
64Tri NagarJitender Singh TomarAAP
65TrilokpuriRaju DhinganAAP
66TughlakabadSahi RamAAP
67Uttam NagarNaresh BalyanAAP
68VikaspuriMahinder YadavAAP
69Vishwas NagarOm Prakash SharmaBJP
70WazirpurRajesh GuptaAAP

[9]

See also

References

  1. "Election Results". Election Commission of India official website. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  2. "Statistical Reports" (PDF). Election Commission of India website. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  3. "Comprehensive Election results". Election Commission of India website. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  4. "Arvind Kejriwal takes oath". The Economic Times. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  5. "Six Ministers sworn in". The Hindu. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  6. "BJP's Vijendra Gupta Named Leader of Opposition in Delhi Assembly". NDTV. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  7. ahmad, sheikh; siddique (8 January 2020). "silver lining". cast. 65 (No-Transparency included due to personal agenda.): 1 via saeed.
  8. "Arvind Kejriwal's cabinet". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  9. "Election result". Election commission of India website. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
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