5th Delhi Assembly

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Legislative Assembly of Delhi
(Vidhan Sabha of Delhi)
FPTP
Last election
Dec 2013
Meeting place
Old Secretariat , Delhi, India
Website
www.delhiassembly.nic.in

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,

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]

Electors

Male Female Others Total
Electors 6,614,238 5,321,572 550 11,936,360
Electors who voted 4,367,527 3,466,248 144 7,833,919
Polling percentage 66.03% 65.14% 26% 65.53%

Candidates

Male Female Others Total
Candidates 739 71 0 810
Elected 67 3 0 70
Forfeited deposits 555 57 0 612

Important members

# From To Position Name Party
01 2013 2014 Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal AAP
02 2013 2014 Speaker Maninder Singh Dhir AAP
03 2013 2014 Deputy Speaker - -
04 2013 2014 Leader of the House - -
05 2013 2014 Leader of the Opposition Dr. Harsh Vardhan BJP

List of members

Default sort, in ascending order of constituency.[3]

# Assembly constituency Name Party Comments
01
Adarsh Nagar
Ram Kishan Singhal BJP
02
Ambedkar Nagar
Ashok Kumar Chauhan AAP Joined BJP
03
Babarpur
Naresh Gaur BJP
04 Badarpur Ramvir Singh Bidhuri BJP
05
Badli
Devender Yadav INC
06
Ballimaran
Haroon Yusuf INC
07
Bawana
Gugan Singh
BJP
08
Bijwasan
Sat Prakash Rana BJP
09
Burari
Sanjeev Jha AAP
10
Chandni Chowk
Parlad Singh Sawhney INC
11
Chhatarpur
Brahm Singh Tanwar BJP
12
Delhi Cantt
Surinder Singh (commando) AAP
13
Deoli
Prakash Jarwal AAP
14
Dwarka
Parduymn Rajput BJP
15
Gandhi Nagar
Arvinder Singh Lovely INC
16
Ghonda
Sahab Singh Chauhan BJP
17
Gokalpur
Ranjeet Singh BJP
18
Greater Kailash
Saurabh Bharadwaj
AAP
19
Hari Nagar
Jagdeep Singh AAP
20
Janakpuri
Prof. Jagdish Mukhi BJP
21
Jangpura
Maninder Singh Dhir AAP
22
Kalkaji
Harmeet Singh Kalka BJP
23
Karawal Nagar
Mohan Singh Bisht BJP
24
Karol Bagh
Vishesh Ravi AAP
25
Kasturba Nagar
Madan Lal AAP
26
Kirari
Anil Jha Vats BJP
27
Kondli
Manoj Kumar AAP
28
Krishna Nagar
Dr. Harsh Vardhan
BJP
29
Laxmi Nagar
Vinod Kumar Binny AAP Expelled from AAP
30
Madipur
Girish Soni AAP
31
Malviya Nagar
Somnath Bharti AAP
32
Mangol Puri
Rakhi Birla AAP
33
Matia Mahal
Shoaib Iqbal JD (U)
34
Matiala
Rajesh Gahlot BJP
35
Mehrauli
Parvesh Sahib Singh
BJP
36
Model Town
Akhilesh Pati Tripathi AAP
37
Moti Nagar
Subhash Sachdeva BJP
38
Mundka
Rambir Shokeen IND
39
Mustafabad
Hasan Ahmed INC
40
Najafgarh
Ajeet Singh Kharkhari BJP
41
Nangloi Jat
Manoj Kumar Shokeen BJP
42
Nerela
Neel Daman Khatri
BJP
43
New Delhi
Arvind Kejriwal AAP
44
Okhla
Asif Muhammad Khan INC
45
Palam
Dharm Dev Solanki
BJP
46
Patel Nagar
Veena Anand AAP
47
Patparganj
Manish Sisodia AAP
48
R. K. Puram
Anil Kumar Sharma BJP
49
Rajinder Nagar
R. P. Singh BJP
50
Rajouri Garden
Manjinder Singh Sirsa SAD
51
Rithala
Kulwant Rana BJP
52
Rohini
Rajesh Garg AAP
53
Rohtas Nagar
Jitender Mahajan BJP
54
Sadar Bazar
Som Dutt AAP
55
Sangam Vihar
Dinesh Mohaniya AAP
56
Seelampur
Mateen Ahmad INC
57
Seemapuri
Dharmender Singh
AAP
58
Shahdara
Jitender Singh Shunty BJP
59
Shakur Basti
Satyendra Kumar Jain AAP
60
Shalimar Bagh
Bandana Kumari AAP
61
Sultanpur
Jai Kishan INC
62
Tilak Nagar
Jarnail Singh
AAP
63
Timarpur
Harish Khanna AAP
64
Tri Nagar
Nand Kishore Garg BJP
65
Trilokpuri
Raju Dhingan AAP
66
Tughlakabad
Ramesh Bidhuri BJP
67
Uttam Nagar
Pawan Sharma BJP
68
Vikaspuri
Mahinder Yadav AAP
69
Vishwas Nagar
Om Prakash Sharma BJP
70
Wazirpur
Dr. Mahander Nagpal BJP

Resignation and dissolution

On 14th Feb 2014,

Lieutenant Governor of Delhi Najeeb Jung recommended immediate dissolution of the State Assembly and to conduct elections immediately.[4]

The

Legislative Assembly of Delhi was finally dissolved on 04 Nov 2014 and subsequently elections were announced by Election Commission of India.[5]

See also

References

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