Fourth Legislative Assembly of Delhi

Legislative Assembly of Delhi
(Vidhan Sabha of Delhi)
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Term limits
October 2008 – November 2013
Leadership
Chief Minister
Structure
Seats 70
Political groups
INC (43)
BJP (23)
BSP (02)
LJP (01)
IND (01)
Elections
FPTP
Last election
October 2008
Meeting place
Old Secretariat, Delhi, India
Website
Legislative Assembly of Delhi

The Fourth Legislative Assembly of Delhi was constituted in October 2008 after the 2008 Delhi Legislative Assembly elections.[1]

Election and government formation

In all, 7 national parties, 8 state parties, 53 registered (unrecognised) parties and other independent candidates contested for the 70 assembly seats of the Assembly.

With 43 seats, INC emerged as the single largest party, much ahead of the required half way mark to form the government. Congress was followed by BJP with 23 seats. Being the single largest party, INC approached the Lieutenant Governor of Delhi Tejendra Khanna and made claim to form a government. INC hence formed the government with Sheila Dikshit as the Chief Minister.[1][2]

Electors

MaleFemaleOthersTotal
Electors5,966,8954,759,678-10,726,573
Electors who voted3,481,1182,694,957-6,176,075
Polling percentage58.34%56.62%-57.58%

[1]

Candidates

MaleFemaleOthersTotal
Candidates79481-875
Elected673-70
Forfeited deposits64170-711

[1]

Important members

#FromToPositionNameParty
0120082013Chief MinisterSheila DikshitINC
0220082013Speaker--
0320082013Deputy SpeakerAmrish Singh GautamIndian National Congress
0420082013Leader of the House--
0520082013Leader of the OppositionVijay Kumar MalhotraBharatiya Janata Party

[3]

List of members

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

#Assembly constituencyNamePartyComment
01Adarsh NagarMangat RamINC
02Ambedkar Nagar Chaudhary Prem Singh INC
03BabarpurNaresh GaurBJP
04BadarpurRam Singh NetajiBSP
05BadliDevender YadavINC
06BallimaranHaroon YusufINC
07Bawana Surender KumarINC
08BijwasanSat Prakash RanaBJP
09BurariShri KrishanBJP
10Chandni ChowkParlad Singh SawhneyINC
11ChhatarpurBalram TanwarINC
12Delhi CanttKaran Singh TanwarBJP
13Deoli Arvinder SinghINC
14DwarkaMahabal MishraINC
15Gandhi NagarArvinder Singh LovelyINC
16GhondaSahab Singh ChauhanBJP
17Gokalpur Surendra KumarBSP
18Greater KailashVijay Kumar MalhotraBJP
19Hari NagarHarsharan Singh BalliBJP
20JanakpuriJagdish MukhiBJP
21JangpuraTarvinder Singh MarwahINC
22KalkajiSubhash ChopraINC
23Karawal NagarMohan Singh BishtBJP
24Karol Bagh Surender Pal RatawalBJP
25Kasturba NagarNeeraj BasoyaINC
26KirariAnil JhaBJP
27Kondli Amrish Singh GautamINC
28Krishna NagarHarsh VardhanBJP
29Laxmi NagarDr. Ashok Kumar WaliaINC
30Madipur Mala Ram GangwalINC
31Malviya NagarKiran WaliaINC
32Mangol Puri Raj Kumar ChauhanINC
33Matia MahalShoaib IqbalLJP
34MatialaSumeshINC
35MehrauliYoganand ShastriINC
36Model TownKanwar Karan SinghINC
37Moti NagarSubhash SachdevaBJP
38MundkaManoj KumarBJP
39MustafabadHasan AhmedINC
40NajafgarhBharat SinghIND
41Nangloi JatBijender SinghINC
42NerelaJaswant SinghINC
43New DelhiSheila DikshitINC
44OkhlaParvez HashmiINC
45PalamDharam Dev SolankiBJP
46Patel Nagar Rajesh LilothiaINC
47PatparganjAnil KumarINC
48R.K. PuramBarkha SinghINC
49Rajinder NagarRamakant GoswamiINC
50Rajouri GardenDyanand ChandilaINC
51RithalaKulwant RanaBJP
52RohiniJai Bhagwan AggarwalBJP
53Rohtas NagarRam Babu SharmaINC
54Sadar BazarRajesh JainINC
55Sangam ViharDr. S.C.L.GuptaBJP
56SeelampurChaudhary Mateen AhmedINC
57Seemapuri Veer Singh DhinganINC
58ShahdaraDr. Narender NathINC
59Shakur BastiShyam Lal GargBJP
60Shalimar BaghRavinder Nath BansalBJP
61Sultan Pur Majra Jai KishanINC
62Tilak NagarO.P. BabbarBJP
63TimarpurSurinder Pal SinghINC
64Tri NagarAnil BhardwajINC
65Trilokpuri Sunil KumarBJP
66TughlakabadRamesh BidhuriBJP
67Uttam NagarMukesh SharmaINC
68VikaspuriNand KishoreINC
69Vishwas NagarNaseeb SinghINC
70WazirpurHari Shanker GuptaINC


References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Election Results". Election Commission of India official website. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  2. "Sheila Dixit Delhi CM for 3rd term". Rediff.com. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  3. "Deputy Speaker & LOP". The Hindu. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  4. "Delimitation of Parliamentary and Assembly Constituencies Order, 2008" (PDF). Election Commission of India official website. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
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