Fourth Nijalingappa ministry
Fourth Nijalingappa ministry | |
---|---|
9th Council of Ministers of Mysore State | |
Second Siddaramaiah ministry | |
S. Nijalingappa | |
Date formed | 15 March 1967 |
Date dissolved | 28 May 1968 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | V. V. Giri (2 April 1965 – 13 May 1967) Gopal Swarup Pathak (13 May 1967 – 30 August 1969) |
Head of government | S. Nijalingappa |
Member parties | Indian National Congress |
Status in legislature | Majority |
Opposition party | Praja Socialist Party |
Opposition leader | S. Shivappa (assembly) |
History | |
Election | 1967 |
Outgoing election | 1972 (After First Veerendra Patil ministry) |
Legislature terms | 6 years (Council) 5 years (Assembly) |
Predecessor | Third Nijalingappa ministry |
Successor | First Veerendra Patil ministry |
Fourth S. Nijalingappa Ministry was the Council of Ministers in Mysore, a state in South India headed by S. Nijalingappa[1] of the Indian National Congress.
The ministry had multiple ministers including the Chief Minister.[2] All ministers belonged to the Indian National Congress.
S. Nijalingappa became Chief Minister of Mysore after Indian National Congress emerged victorious 1967 Mysore elections.[3]
Chief Minister & Cabinet Ministers
S.No | Portfolio | Name | Portrait | Constituency | Term of Office | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Chief Minister[4] *Other departments not allocated to any Minister. | S. Nijalingappa [5] | Bagalkot[6] | 15 March 1967 | 28 May 1968 | Indian National Congress | ||
2 |
| Kalastavadi Puttaswamy[7] | Mysore | 15 March 1967 | 28 May 1968 | Indian National Congress | ||
3 | Ramakrishna Hegde | Haliyal | 15 March 1967 | 28 May 1968 | Indian National Congress | |||
4 |
| D. Devaraj Urs | Hunasuru | 15 March 1967 | 28 May 1968 | Indian National Congress | ||
5 |
| Veerendra Patil | Chincholi | 15 March 1967 | 28 May 1968 | Indian National Congress | ||
6 |
| S. R. Kanthi[8] | Hungund | 15 March 1967 | 28 May 1968 | Indian National Congress |
Minister of State
See also
References
- ^ "येदियुरप्पा मंत्रिमंडल में 17 विधायक शामिल, एक पूर्व सीएम और दो पूर्व डिप्टी सीएम बने मंत्री". Amar Ujala (in Hindi).
- ^ "Karnataka BJP cabinet expansion Updates: Governor Vajubhai Vala administers oath to 17 MLAs as ministers". Firstpost. 20 August 2019.
- ^ "S.R. Bommai passes away". The Hindu. 11 October 2007. Archived from the original on 11 October 2007.
- ^ Rajappa, Sam (26 November 2013). "Census work in Belgaum threatened by language controversy". India Today. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
- ^ "Language issue in Karnataka explodes into a violent agitation". indiatoday.
- ^ Pratap, Anita (21 November 2013). "Problems for Karnataka CM Ramakrishna Hegde after five years in power". India Today. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
- ^ http://www.kla.kar.nic.in/assembly/elib/pdf/eresources/K%20Puttaswami.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ Baligar, Manu. "ಪ್ರತಿಭಾವಂತ ಸಂಸದೀಯ ಪಟುಗಳ ಬದುಕು ಬರಹಮಾಲಿಕ: ಎಸ್. ಆರ್. ಕಂಠಿ" (PDF). Karnataka Legislative Assembly. kla.kar.nic.in. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
- v
- t
- e
- Reddy
- Hanumanthaiah
- Manjappa
- Nijalingappa I
- Nijalingappa II
- Jatti
- Kanthi
- Nijalingappa III
- Nijalingappa IV
- Patil I
- Urs I
12 Urs II 13 Rao 14 Hegde I 15 Hegde II 16 Hegde III 17 S. R. Bommai 18 Patil II 19 Bangarappa 20 Moily 21 Deve Gowda 22 Patel 23 Krishna 24 Singh 25 Kumaraswamy I 26 Yediyurappa I 27 Yediyurappa II 28 Sadananda Gowda 29 Shettar 30 Siddaramaiah I 31 Yediyurappa III 32 Kumaraswamy II 33 Yediyurappa IV 34 Basavaraj Bommai
35 Siddaramaiah II