O. Rajagopal

Olanchery Rajagopal (born 15 September 1929) is an Indian politician, former Union Minister of State and currently a MLA and the first ever BJP floor leader in the Legislative Assembly of Kerala state. One of the major leaders of the Bharatiya Janata Party from Kerala, he has held various ministerial portfolios like Defence, Parliamentary Affairs, Urban Development, Law, Justice, Company Affairs, and Railways, in the past.[1] Rajagopal was a 2 times MP from Kerala in Rajya Sabha the upper house of Indian Parliament (1992–2004).[2][3] He is the first BJP Central Minister of Kerala.O Rajagopal was also the BJP parliamentary party deputy leader in the Rajyasabha. He became the First BJP candidate to win an assembly seat in. 2016 Kerala assembly election from Nemom seat.[4]

Dr. O Rajagopal
ഒ രാജഗോപാൽ
Member of Kerala Legislative Assembly
Assumed office
2 June 2016
Preceded byV Sivankutty
ConstituencyNemom
Minister of State for Defence and Parliamentary Affairs, Urban Development, Law, Justice and Company Affairs, Railways
In office
13 October 1999  22 May 2004
Prime MinisterAtal Bihari Vajpayee
Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha)
In office
1992–2004
ConstituencyElected from Kerala via Madhya Pradesh
Personal details
Born (1929-09-15) 15 September 1929
Palakkad, Madras Presidency, British India
Political partyBharatiya Janata Party
Spouse(s)Dr Shantha Kumari
RelationsVishnu, Shivakamy, Amrita Vivekanandan (grandchildren)
ChildrenVivekanand, Shyamaprasad
ResidenceThiruvananthapuram, Kerala

Early life

He was born on 15 September 1929 to Madhavan Nair and O Konhikkavu Amma of Olanchery Veedu at Pudukkode Panchayath in Palakkad. His early education took place in Kanakkannoor elementary school and Manjapra Upper Primary school and later went to Government Victoria College, Palakkad.

His Law education was undertaken in Madras and after he completed his studies in law, he began practicing law in 1956 at the Palakkad District Court. He has a close family relative in Nashik, Maharashtra[5]

Jana Sangh work

He was inspired by Deendayal Upadhyaya and began working in the Jana Sangh shortly after completing his studies. The death of Upadhyaya in 1968 spurred Rajagopal to pursue his public career more deeply. He was the State General Secretary of Jana Sangh until 1974. That same year, he was promoted to the post of President, a post he held until 1977.[5][6]

During the Emergency period he was jailed with Mr V Velankutty Master (Palakkad District President of Jansangh) in Viyyur Central Jail. After the Indian emergency the Jana Sangh merged with the Janata Party. During this period of time Rajagopal served as the State General Secretary for the Jana Sangh.

BJP work

In 1980, the Janata Party split and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was formed. Rajagopal then served as its Kerala president until 1985. After 1985 he occupied a number of positions, including the All India Secretary, General Secretary, and the Vice-President of BJP.[5] In 1989 he ran for a Lok Sabha from Manjeri but failed. Two years later, he attempted to run for the Thiruvananthapuram (Lok Sabha constituency) seat but failed again. His next run took place in the state of Madhya Pradesh. He was elected in 1992 and 1998 to the Rajya Sabha. In 1999 he attempted a second run from Thiruvananthapuram but failed again.[1] However, he got a total of 1,58,221 votes (20.9%) and came second in one assembly segment out of seven.[7] The total number of votes he secured was much higher than that for the BJP candidate in 1998 (94,303 votes, 12.3%) [8] and 1996 (74,904, 10.4%) Loksabha elections.[9] In 2004 Loksabha election, he again contested from Thiruvananthapuram parliament constituency and finished third, behind congress candidate V S Shivakumar (second position) and CPI candidate P K Vasudevan Nair (Winner). Even though, he was in the third position, he secured a total of 2,28,052 votes (29.9%) which was the highest votes secured by a BJP candidate in Kerala.

In the 2011 Assembly elections he contested from the Nemom constituency in Thiruvananthapuram, but eventually lost by a margin of 6,400 votes. He lost the by-election from Neyyattinkara constituency, which was held on 2 June 2012. However, he increased the BJP votes from 6,730 (2011 Assembly Election) to 30,507; an almost five-fold increase within a short span of one year.[10] The BJP vote share also significantly increased from 6.0% (2011 Assembly Election) to 23.2%. He contested Loksabha election 2014 from Thiruvananthapuram constituency and finished second position after a neck-to-neck fight against the Congress candidate Dr Shashi Tharoor who was former UPA Minister at the central government.[11] He secured a total of 2,82,336 votes (32.3%) and lost the election battle by a sizeable margin of 15,470 votes (1.8%) against Dr Shashi Tharoor who secured a total of 2,97,806 votes.[11] The CPI candidate Dr Bennet Abraham got 2,48,941 votes (28.5%).

In 2015 June he contested Aruvikkara by-election and lost by ending third, although his personal influence ensured that in the contest BJP increased votes from 7,694 to 34,145 causing division of anti-incumbency vote resulting in the victory of UDF. In the 2016 Assembly elections he again contested from Nemom, but this time, he entered the Kerala Legislative Assembly for the first time at the age of 87, defeating sitting MLA V. Sivankutty, by a Margin of 8,671 votes.

Lok Sabha Elections

2014 Lok Sabha Election

2014 Indian general elections: Thiruvananthapuram
Party Candidate Votes % ±
INC Shashi Tharoor 2,97,806 37.45 +1.45
BJP O Rajagopal 2,82,336 33.53 +22.13
CPI Dr Bennet Abraham 2,48,202 29.53 -1.2

2004 Lok Sabha Election

2004 Indian general elections: Thiruvananthapuram
Party Candidate Votes % ±
CPI P K Vasudevan Nair 2,86,057 37.45 +1.45
INC V S Sivakumar 2,31,454 30.30 -7.85
BJP O Rajagopal 2,28,052 29.86 +8.93

1999 Lok Sabha Election

1999 Indian general election: Thiruvananthapuram [12]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
INC V.S.Sivakumar 288,390 38.15 -14.53
CPI Kaniyapuram Ramachandran 273,905 36.23 -14.94
BJP O. Rajagopal 158,221 20.93 +67.78

Kerala Assembly Elections[13]

Assembly election 2016

Nemom Assembly constituency
Party Candidate Votes % ±
BJP O Rajagopal 67,813 47.46% +10.02
CPI (M) V Sivan Kutty 59,142 41.39% -1.55
JD(U) V Surendran Pillai 13,860 9.70% -7.66

Aruvikkara by-election 2015

Aruvikkara by-election 2015:
Party Candidate Votes % ±
INC Sabarinathan 56,448 39.61 -10.47
CPI (M) M Vijayakumar 46,320 32.50 -7.11
BJP O Rajagopal 34,145 23.90 +17.29

Neyyattinkara By-Election 2012

Neyyattinkara By Election 2012
Party Candidate Votes % ±
INC R Selvaraj 52,528
CPI (M) F Lawrence 46,194
BJP O Rajagopal 30,507

Assembly election 2011

Nemom Assembly constituency
Party Candidate Votes % ±
CPI (M) V Sivan Kutty 50,076 42.94%
BJP O Rajagopal 43,661 37.44%
SJ(D) Charupara Ravi 20,248 17.36%

References

  1. Candidate Watch - 'O. Rajagopal, BJP candidate, Thiruvananthapuram Lok Sabha seat' The Hindu - 28 April 2004
  2. Diluting MLAs’ rights The Tribune, Chandigarh - 31 October 2001
  3. 18 outsiders in Rajya Sabha The Hindu - 10 June 2004
  4. "Kerala Assembly Results 2016: As it happened | Zee News". zeenews.india.com. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  5. Life & Career - Keral.com
  6. Positions Held - Keral.com
  7. "IndiaVotes PC: Trivandrum 1999". indiavotes.com. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  8. "IndiaVotes PC: Trivandrum 1998". indiavotes.com. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  9. "IndiaVotes PC: Trivandrum 1996". indiavotes.com. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  10. "Result of by-election from Neyyattinkara Assemblyconstiutency, Kerala". keralaassembly.org. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  11. "IndiaVotes AC Wise Candidates information for PC: Thiruvananthapuram 2014". indiavotes.com. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  12. "Indian Parliament Election Results- Kerala 1999". Keralaassembly.org. Retrieved 20 October 2013.
  13. National Informatics Centre - Kerala State Unit - 5461. "Kerala Election Results 2016 - Trend of counting by Election Department". trend.kerala.gov.in. Archived from the original on 13 May 2014. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
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