Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly

Arunachal Pradesh Vidhan Sabha
(Legislative Assembly)
Type
Type
Leadership
Leader of the House
Norbu Thongdok
Structure
Seats 60
Political groups

Government (42)

Opposition parties (18)

Elections
First past the post
Last election
April 2014
Meeting place
Vidhan Bhavan, Itanagar, Arunachal Pradesh
Website
arunachalassembly.gov.in

The Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly is the unicameral state legislature of Arunachal Pradesh state in north-eastern India. The seat of the Legislative Assembly is at Itanagar, the capital of the state. The Legislative Assembly comprises 60 Members of Legislative Assembly[1] directly elected from single-seat constituencies.

History

On 29 December 1969, the Agency Council, an apex advisory body for the governance of the North-East Frontier Agency (present-day Arunachal Pradesh), came into existence, with the Governor of Assam as its chairman. The Agency Council was replaced by the Pradesh Council on 2 October 1972. On 15 August 1975 the Pradesh Council was converted to the Provisional Legislative Assembly. Initially, the Legislative Assembly comprised 33 members, of which, 30 members were directly elected from single-seat constituencies and 3 members were nominated by the Union government. On attainment of the statehood on 20 February 1987, the number was raised to 60.[2]

Present assembly

Assembly elections were held in 2014. The Indian National Congress emerged as the single largest party with 42 seats in the 60-seat legislature and Nabam Tuki became the Chief Minister.[3] The assembly was suspended and the government was dissolved by the President Pranab Mukherjee on 26 January 2016.[4]

Party Seats
Indian National Congress 42
Bharatiya Janta Party 11
People's Party of Arunachal 5
Independents 2
Total 60

References

  1. "Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly". Legislative Bodies in India website. Retrieved 29 January 2011.
  2. "Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly-Introduction" (PDF). Legislative Bodies in India website. Retrieved 29 January 2011.
  3. "Arunachal Aseembly". Government of Arunachal Pradesh.
  4. "Arunachal Pradesh crisis: CM Nabam Tuki, ministers dismissed following President's Rule imposition". DNA. 27 January 2016.

External links

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