2004 Indian Rajya Sabha elections

Rajya Sabha elections were held in 2004, to elect members of the Rajya Sabha, Indian Parliament's upper chamber. The elections were held to elect respectively 13 members from six states,[1] 49 members from 12 states,[2] six members from Andhra Pradesh,[3] and two members from Haryana,[4] for the Council of States, the Rajya Sabha.[5][6]

Elections

Elections were held in 2004 to elect members from various states. The list is incomplete.

Members elected

The following members are elected in the elections held in 2004. They are members for the term 2004–2010 and retire in year 2010, except in case of the resignation or death before the term.

State – Member – Party

Rajya Sabha members for term 2004–2010
StateMember NamePartyRemark
AS[1]Silvius CondpanINCR
ASSyeda Anwara TaimurINC
HP[1]Anand SharmaINC
KL[1]P. V. Abdul WahabINC
KLA. K. AntonyINC
KLA. Vijayaraghavan CPM
NG[1]Khekiho Zhimomi INC
TR[1]Matilal SarkarCPM
PB[1]Ashwani KumarINC
PBNaresh Gujral SAD
PBDharam PalINC
PB Varinder Singh SAD
PBM S GillINC
CG[2]Nand Kumar SaiBJP
CGMohsina KidwaiINC
MP[2]Anil Madhav DaveBJP
MPPyarelal KhandelwalBJPDea 6.10.2009
MPSu. ThirunavukkarasarBJPRes.11.2009
TN[2]Anbumani RamadossPMK
TNS. AnbalaganADMK
TNN. R. Govindarajar ADMK
TNT. T. V. DhinakaranADMK
TNK. MalaisamyADMK
TNE. M. Sudarsana NatchiappanINC
KA[2]Oscar FernandesINC
KAM. Venkaiah NaiduBJP
KAM. A. M. RamaswamyJDS
KAB. K. HariprasadINC
OR[2]Bhagirathi MajhiBJP
ORPyarimohan MohapatraBJD
ORRadhakant NayakINC
MH[2]Tariq AnwarNCP
MHSharad JoshiSBP
MHShivraj PatilINCRes 21.01.2010
MHVijay J. DardaINC
MHSanjay RautSS
MHRahul BajajIND
MHPramod MahajanBJPdea 03/05/2006
PB[2]Ambika SoniINC
PBRaj Mohinder SinghSAD
RJ[2]Lalit Kishore ChaturvediBJP
RJNajma HeptullaBJP
RJSantosh BagrodiaINC
RJNarendra BudaniaINCBye 2009
RJJaswant SinghBJPres 16/05/2009 LS
UP[2]Arun ShourieBJP
UPKamal AkhtarSP
UP Nand KishoreSP
UPJaya BachchanSP
UPBhagwati SinghSP
UPRam Narayan SahuSP
UPAmir Alam KhanSP
UPBrij BhushanSP
UPMurli Manohar JoshiBJPres 23/04/2009 LS
UPShriram PalBSPele 19/06/2009
UPSatish Chandra MishraBSP
UPAmbeth RajanBSP
UK[2]Satish SharmaINC
BR[2]George FernandesJDU
BREjaz AliJDU
BRYashwant SinhaBJP16/05/2009 LS
BRRajiv Pratap RudyBJP
BRSubhash Prasad YadavRJD
BRR K DhawanINC
JH[2]Dhiraj Prasad SahuINC
JHHemant SorenJMMres 4.1.2010
AP[3]Jairam RameshINC
APN. Janardhana Reddy INC
APJesudasu Seelam INC
APV. Hanumantha RaoINC
APGireesh Kumar SanghiINC
APPenumalli MadhuCPM
HR[4]Ajay Singh ChautalaINLDRes 03.11.2009
HRTarlochan_SinghIND

Bye-elections

The following bye elections were held in the year 2004.

State – Member – Party

  • Bye-elections were held on 21/06/2004 for vacancy from Andhra and Punjab due to death of seating members K. M. Khan on 16/10/2003 with term ending on 02/04/2006 and Gurcharan Singh on 01/04/2004, with term ending on 09/04/2008.[7]
  • Bye-elections were held on 21/06/2004 for vacancy from Rajasthan due to death of seating member Dr Abrar Ahmed on 04/05/2004 with term ending on 09/04/2008.[7]
  • Bye-elections were held on 28/06/2004 for vacancy from Bihar due to election to Lok Sabha of seating members Rajiv Ranjan Singh on 13/05/2004 with term ending on 02/04/2006 and Lalu Prasad on 13/05/2004 with term ending on 09/04/2008.[8]
  • Bye-elections were held on 28/06/2004 for vacancy from Madhya pradesh and West Bengal due to election to Lok Sabha of seating members Kailash Chandra on 13/05/2004 with term ending on 02/04/2006 and Pranab Mukherjee on 13/05/2004 with term ending on 18/08/2005.[8]
  • Bye-elections were held on 28/06/2004 for vacancy from Orissa due to election to Lok Sabha of seating members Manamohan Samal on 13/05/2004 with term ending on 03/04/2006.[8]
  • Bye-elections were held on 28/06/2004 for vacancy from Delhi due to resignation of seating members Ambika Soni on 10 June 2004 with term ending on 27 January 2006 and Dr A R Kidwai on 7 July 2004 with term ending on 27 January 2006.[9]
  • Bye-elections were held on 06/01/2005 for vacancy from Kerala due to death of seating members V. V. Raghavan on 27/10/2004 with term ending on 01/07/2006.[10]

References

  1. "Biennial Elections to the Council of States to fill the seats of members retiring in April, 2010" (PDF). Election Commission of India, New Delhi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 May 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  2. "Biennial and Bye-Elections to the Council of States" (PDF). Election Commission of India, New Delhi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 May 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  3. "Biennial Election to the Council of States from the State of Andhra Pradesh" (PDF). Election Commission of India, New Delhi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 May 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  4. "Biennial Election to the Council of States from the State of Haryana" (PDF). Election Commission of India, New Delhi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 May 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  5. "Alphabetical List Of Former Members Of Rajya Sabha Since 1952". Rajya Sabha Secretariat, New Delhi. Retrieved 13 September 2017.
  6. "RAJYA SABHA – RETIREMENTS – ABSTRACT As on 1 st November, 2006" (PDF). eci.nic.in. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 October 2010. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
  7. "Biennial and Bye -Elections to the Council of States and State Legislative Councils by Members of Legislative Assembly" (PDF). ECI, New Delhi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 May 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  8. "Biennial and Bye -Elections to the Council of States and State Legislative Councils by Members of Legislative Assembly" (PDF). ECI, New Delhi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 May 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  9. "Bye-elections to the Council of States from the National Capital Territory of Delhi" (PDF). ECI, New Delhi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 May 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  10. "Bye-election to the Council of States from Kerala to fill up the vacancy occurring due to the death of sitting member of the Shri V. V. Raghavan" (PDF). ECI, New Delhi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 May 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.