Fifth Legislative Assembly of Delhi

Legislative Assembly of Delhi
(Vidhan Sabha of Delhi)
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Term limits
Dec 2013 - Feb 2014
Leadership
Chief Minister
Speaker of the Assembly
Leader of the Opposition
Structure
Seats 70
Political groups
BJP (31)
AAP (28)
INC (8)
IND (1)
JD (U) (1)
SAD (1)
Elections
FPTP
Last election
Dec 2013
Meeting place
Old Secretariat , Delhi, India
Website

Legislative Assembly of Delhi

The Fifth Legislative Assembly of Delhi was constituted on 28 December 2013 after the Delhi Legislative Assembly elections on 4 December 2013.[1]

Election and Government formation

Total six national parties, eleven state parties, sixty registered (unrecognised) parties and other independent candidates contested for 70 assembly seats. With 31 seats, BJP emerged as the single largest party but fell short of the half way mark. BJP was closely followed by AAP. In absence of clear majority, Legislative Assembly of Delhi was hung. Being the single largest party, BJP approached the Lieutenant Governor of Delhi Najeeb Jung and refused to form a government. Thereafter, Indian National Congress offered "unconditional" support to the AAP. AAP initially rejected INC's support but later accepted it and formed the government with Arvind Kejriwal as the Chief Minister.[1][2][3]

Electors

MaleFemaleOthersTotal
Electors6,614,2385,321,57255011,936,360
Electors who voted4,367,5273,466,2481447,833,919
Polling percentage66.03%65.14%26%65.53%

Candidates

MaleFemaleOthersTotal
Candidates739710810
Elected673070
Forfeited deposits555570612

Important members

#FromToPositionNameParty
0120132014Chief MinisterArvind KejriwalAAP
0220132014SpeakerManinder Singh DhirAAP
0320132014Deputy Speaker--
0420132014Leader of the House--
0520132014Leader of the OppositionDr. Harsh VardhanBJP

List of members

Default sort, in ascending order of constituency.[4]

#Assembly constituencyNamePartyComments
01Adarsh NagarRam Kishan SinghalBJP
02Ambedkar NagarAshok Kumar ChauhanAAPJoined BJP
03BabarpurNaresh GaurBJP
04BadarpurRamvir Singh BidhuriBJP
05BadliDevender YadavINC
06BallimaranHaroon YusufINC
07BawanaGugan SinghBJP
08BijwasanSat Prakash RanaBJP
09BurariSanjeev JhaAAP
10Chandni ChowkParlad Singh SawhneyINC
11ChhatarpurBrahm Singh TanwarBJP
12Delhi CanttSurinder Singh (commando)AAP
13DeoliPrakash JarwalAAP
14DwarkaParduymn RajputBJP
15Gandhi NagarArvinder Singh LovelyINC
16GhondaSahab Singh ChauhanBJP
17GokalpurRanjeet SinghBJP
18Greater KailashSaurabh BharadwajAAP
19Hari NagarJagdeep SinghAAP
20JanakpuriProf. Jagdish MukhiBJP
21JangpuraManinder Singh DhirAAP
22KalkajiHarmeet SinghBJP
23Karawal NagarMohan Singh BishtBJP
24Karol BaghVishesh RaviAAP
25Kasturba NagarMadan LalAAP
26KirariAnil JhaBJP
27KondliManoj KumarAAP
28Krishna NagarDr. Harsh VardhanBJP
29Laxmi NagarVinod Kumar BinnyAAPExpelled from AAP
30MadipurGirish SoniAAP
31Malviya NagarSomnath BhartiAAP
32Mangol PuriRakhi BirlaAAP
33Matia MahalShoaib IqbalJD (U)
34MatialaRajesh GahlotBJP
35MehrauliParvesh Sahib SinghBJP
36Model TownAkhilesh Pati TripathiAAP
37Moti NagarSubhash SachdevaBJP
38MundkaRambir ShokeenIND
39MustafabadHasan AhmedINC
40NajafgarhAjeet Singh KharkhariBJP
41Nangloi JatManoj Kumar ShokeenBJP
42NerelaNeel Daman KhatriBJP
43New DelhiArvind KejriwalAAP
44OkhlaAsif Muhammad KhanINC
45PalamDharm Dev SolankiBJP
46Patel NagarVeena AnandAAP
47PatparganjManish SisodiaAAP
48R. K. PuramAnil Kumar SharmaBJP
49Rajinder NagarR.P.SinghBJP
50Rajouri GardenManjinder Singh SirsaSAD
51RithalaKulwant RanaBJP
52RohiniRajesh GargAAP
53Rohtas NagarJitender KumarBJP
54Sadar BazarSom DuttAAP
55Sangam ViharDinesh MohaniyaAAP
56SeelampurChaudhary Mateen AhmadINC
57SeemapuriDharmender SinghAAP
58ShahdaraJitender Singh ShuntyBJP
59Shakur BastiSatyendra Kumar JainAAP
60Shalimar BaghBandana KumariAAP
61SultanpurJai KishanINC
62Tilak NagarJarnail SinghAAP
63TimarpurHarish KhannaAAP
64Tri NagarNand Kishore GargBJP
65TrilokpuriRajuAAP
66TughlakabadRamesh BidhuriBJP
67Uttam NagarPawan SharmaBJP
68VikaspuriMahinder YadavAAP
69Vishwas NagarOm Prakash SharmaBJP
70WazirpurDr. Mahander NagpalBJP

Resignation and dissolution

On 14th Feb 2014, Arvind Kejriwal, after 49 days as Chief Minister resigned alleging that INC and BJP obstructed the Jan Lokpal Bill. Both, the INC and BJP refuted the allegations made by Kejriwal. The outgoing Chief Minister, vide a letter to President of India Pranab Mukherjee and Lieutenant Governor of Delhi Najeeb Jung recommended immediate dissolution of the State Assembly and to conduct elections immediately.[5]

The Legislative Assembly of Delhi was finally dissolved on 04 Nov 2014 and subsequently elections were announced by Election Commission of India.[6]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Election Results". Election Commission of India official website. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  2. "AAP rejects support". Daily Mail. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  3. "AAP accepts support". NDTV. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  4. "Delimitation of Parliamentary and Assembly Constituencies Order, 2008" (PDF). Election Commission of India official website. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  5. "Kejriwal resigns". The Hindu. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  6. "Assembly dissolved". First post. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
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