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Tripura Legislative Assembly

The Tripura Legislative Assembly or Tripura Vidhan Sabha is the unicameral legislature of the Indian state of Tripura, with 60 Members of the Legislative Assembly. The present Assembly is located in Gurkhabasti. Ujjayanta Palace in Agartala served as the previous meeting place. The tenure of the Assembly is five years unless sooner dissolved. The present Assembly is the 12th Legislative Assembly, where Ratan Chakraborty is the current speaker of the House.

Tripura Legislative Assembly
12th Tripura Assembly
Type
Type
Term limits
5 years
Established1963
Leadership
Speaker
Deputy Speaker
Leader of the House
(Chief Minister)
Manik Saha, BJP
since 14 May 2022
Deputy Leader of the House
(Deputy Chief Minister)
Leader of the Opposition
Structure
Seats60
Political groups
Government (37)
NDA (37)
  •   BJP (33)
  •   IPFT (4)

Opposition (16)

Others (1)

Vacant (7)

  •   Vacant (7)
Elections
First past the post
Last election
18 February 2018
Next election
February 2023
Meeting place
Tripura Vidhan Sabha, Agartala
Website
www.tripuraassembly.nic.in

History

On 1 November 1956, Tripura became a Union territory, and an Advisory Committee was formed to advise the Chief commissioner.[2] On 15 August 1957, a Territorial Council was formed with 30 elected members and two members nominated by the Government of India.

Previous Assemblies

The assemblies constituted so far are listed below:[3]

Assembly Period
1st Assembly 1 July 1963 to 12 January 1967
2nd Assembly 1 March 1967 to 1 November 1971
3rd Assembly 20 March 1972 to 5 November 1977
4th Assembly 5 January 1978 to 7 January 1983
5th Assembly 10 January 1983 to 5 February 1988
6th Assembly 5 February 1988 to 28 February 1993
7th Assembly 10 April 1993 to 10 March 1998
8th Assembly 10 March 1998 to 28 February 2003
9th Assembly 4 March 2003 to 3 March 2008
10th Assembly 10 March 2008 to 1 March 2013
11th Assembly 2 March 2013 to 3 March 2018
12th Assembly 4 March 2018 to

Members of Legislative Assembly

The 12th Tripura Legislative Assembly was constituted after the Tripura Legislative Assembly elections in 2018. Polling was held on 18 February[4][5] for the 60-member assembly with 89.8% voter turnout being reported.[6] Counting of votes and results were declared on 3 March.[5]

No. Constituency Name Party Remarks
1 Simna Vacant Resignation by Brishaketu Debbarma[7]
2 Mohanpur Ratan Lal Nath Bharatiya Janata Party
3 Bamutia Krishnadhan Das Bharatiya Janata Party
4 Barjala Dilip Kumar Das Bharatiya Janata Party
5 Khayerpur Ratan Chakraborty Bharatiya Janata Party Speaker
6 Agartala Sudip Roy Barman Indian National Congress Won in 2022 bypoll necessitated after resignation by Sudip Roy Barman
7 Ramnagar Surajit Datta Bharatiya Janata Party
8 Town Bordowali Manik Saha Bharatiya Janata Party Won in 2022 bypoll necessitated after resignation by Ashish Kumar Saha
9 Banamalipur Vacant Resignation by Biplab Kumar Deb[8]
10 Majlishpur Sushanta Choudhury Bharatiya Janata Party
11 Mandai Bazar Dhirendra Debbarma Indigenous People's Front of Tripura
12 Takarjala Vacant Death of N. C. Debbarma[9]
13 Pratapgarh Rebati Mohan Das Bharatiya Janata Party
14 Badharghat Mimi Majumder Bharatiya Janata Party Won in 2019 bypoll necessitated after the death of Dilip Sarkar
15 Kamalasagar Narayan Chandra Choudhury Communist Party of India
16 Bishalgarh Bhanu Lal Saha Communist Party of India
17 Golaghati Birendra Kishore Debbarma Bharatiya Janata Party
18 Surjamaninagar Ram Prasad Paul Bharatiya Janata Party
19 Charilam Jishnu Dev Varma Bharatiya Janata Party Deputy Chief Minister
20 Boxanagar Sahid Choudhury Communist Party of India
21 Nalchar Subhash Chandra Das Bharatiya Janata Party
22 Sonamura Shyamal Chakraborty Communist Party of India
23 Dhanpur Manik Sarkar Communist Party of India Leader of Opposition
24 Ramchandraghat Prasanta Debbarma Indigenous People's Front of Tripura
25 Khowai Nirmal Biswas Communist Party of India
26 Asharambari Vacant Resignation by Mevar Kumar Jamatia[10]
27 Kalyanpur–Pramodnagar Pinaki Das Chowdhury Bharatiya Janata Party
28 Teliamura Kalyani Roy Bharatiya Janata Party
29 Krishnapur Atul Debbarma Bharatiya Janata Party
30 Bagma Ram Pada Jamatia Bharatiya Janata Party
31 Radhakishorpur Pranjit Singha Roy Bharatiya Janata Party
32 Matarbari Biplab Kumar Ghosh Bharatiya Janata Party
33 Kakraban-Salgarh Ratan Bhowmik Communist Party of India
34 Rajnagar Sudhan Das Communist Party of India
35 Belonia Arun Chandra Bhowmik Bharatiya Janata Party
36 Santirbazar Pramod Reang Bharatiya Janata Party
37 Hrishyamukh Badal Choudhury Communist Party of India
38 Jolaibari Jashabir Tripura Communist Party of India
39 Manu Pravat Chowdhury Communist Party of India
40 Sabroom Sankar Roy Bharatiya Janata Party
41 Ampinagar Sindhu Chandra Jamatia Indigenous People's Front of Tripura
42 Amarpur Ranjit Das Bharatiya Janata Party
43 Karbook Vacant Resignation by Burba Mohan Tripura[11]
44 Raima Valley Vacant Resignation by Dhananjoy Tripura[12]
45 Kamalpur Manoj Kanti Deb Bharatiya Janata Party
46 Surma Swapna Das Paul Bharatiya Janata Party Won in 2022 bypoll necessitated after disqualification of Asish Das
47 Ambassa Parimal Debbarma Bharatiya Janata Party
48 Karmachhara Vacant Resignation by Diba Chandra Hrangkhawl[13]
49 Chawamanu Sambhu Lal Chakma Bharatiya Janata Party
50 Pabiachhara Bhagaban Das Bharatiya Janata Party
51 Fatikroy Sudhangshu Das Bharatiya Janata Party
52 Chandipur Tapan Chakraborty Communist Party of India
53 Kailashahar Moboshar Ali Communist Party of India
54 Kadamtala-Kurti Islam Uddin Communist Party of India
55 Bagbassa Bijita Nath Communist Party of India
56 Dharmanagar Biswa Bandhu Sen Bharatiya Janata Party Deputy Speaker
57 Jubarajnagar Malina Debnath Bharatiya Janata Party Won in 2022 bypoll necessitated after the death of Ramendra Chandra Debnath
58 Panisagar Binay Bhushan Das Bharatiya Janata Party
59 Pencharthal Santana Chakma Bharatiya Janata Party
60 Kanchanpur Prem Kumar Reang Indigenous People's Front of Tripura

References

  1. ^ "BJP's Ratan Chakraborty elected Speaker of Tripura Assembly". EastMojo. 24 September 2021. Retrieved 11 October 2021.
  2. ^ "Tripura to celebrate 50 years of assembly". The Times of India. 1 July 2013. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  3. ^ . legislativebodiesinindia.nic.in. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.
  4. ^ "Tripura Election 2018 Date announced by EC: Check all details here". The Financial Express. 18 January 2018. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  5. ^ a b "EC announces election dates for 3 NE states: Tripura to vote on 18 Feb, Meghalaya, Nagaland on 27 Feb; results for all states on 3 March-Politics News , Firstpost". Firstpost. 18 January 2018. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  6. ^ PTI (19 February 2018). "Tripura records 89.8% voter turnout in assembly elections: EC". Mint. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  7. ^ "Tripura: IPFT MLA Brishaketu Debbarma resigns; Speaker and CM to meet him today". The Indian Express. 1 July 2021. Retrieved 2 February 2022.
  8. ^ "Former Tripura chief minister Biplab Kumar Deb elected as Rajya Sabha MP". Hindustan Times. 22 September 2022. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  9. ^ "Tripura revenue minister and IPFT chief N C Debbarma passes away at 84". Hindustan Times. 1 January 2023. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  10. ^ "Tripura: IPFT's Mevar Kumar Jamatia resigns as MLA, likely to join TIPRA". Northeast Now. 8 November 2022. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
  11. ^ "Setback for BJP in Tripura as MLA quits party on Day 1 of assembly session". Hindustan Times. 23 September 2022. Retrieved 23 September 2022.
  12. ^ "MLA from Tripura BJP ally resigns ahead of 2023 assembly elections". Hindustan Times. 14 October 2022. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  13. ^ "Tripura BJP MLA Diba Chandra Hrankhawl quits ahead of assembly polls". Hindustan Times. 28 December 2022. Retrieved 28 December 2022.

External links

  • Tripura Lok Sabha Election 2019 Result Website
  • Official government website of Tripura

tripura, legislative, assembly, tripura, vidhan, sabha, unicameral, legislature, indian, state, tripura, with, members, legislative, assembly, present, assembly, located, gurkhabasti, ujjayanta, palace, agartala, served, previous, meeting, place, tenure, assem. The Tripura Legislative Assembly or Tripura Vidhan Sabha is the unicameral legislature of the Indian state of Tripura with 60 Members of the Legislative Assembly The present Assembly is located in Gurkhabasti Ujjayanta Palace in Agartala served as the previous meeting place The tenure of the Assembly is five years unless sooner dissolved The present Assembly is the 12th Legislative Assembly where Ratan Chakraborty is the current speaker of the House Tripura Legislative Assembly12th Tripura AssemblyTypeTypeUnicameralTerm limits5 yearsEstablished1963LeadershipSpeakerRatan Chakraborty BJP 1 since 24 September 2021Deputy SpeakerBiswa Bandhu Sen BJP since 21 June 2018Leader of the House Chief Minister Manik Saha BJP since 14 May 2022Deputy Leader of the House Deputy Chief Minister Jishnu Dev Varma BJP since 9 March 2018Leader of the OppositionManik Sarkar CPI M since 9 March 2018StructureSeats60Political groupsGovernment 37 NDA 37 BJP 33 IPFT 4 Opposition 16 CPI M 15 Others 1 INC 1 Vacant 7 Vacant 7 ElectionsVoting systemFirst past the postLast election18 February 2018Next electionFebruary 2023Meeting placeTripura Vidhan Sabha AgartalaWebsitewww wbr tripuraassembly wbr nic wbr in Contents 1 History 2 Previous Assemblies 3 Members of Legislative Assembly 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditOn 1 November 1956 Tripura became a Union territory and an Advisory Committee was formed to advise the Chief commissioner 2 On 15 August 1957 a Territorial Council was formed with 30 elected members and two members nominated by the Government of India Previous Assemblies EditThe assemblies constituted so far are listed below 3 Assembly Period1st Assembly 1 July 1963 to 12 January 19672nd Assembly 1 March 1967 to 1 November 19713rd Assembly 20 March 1972 to 5 November 19774th Assembly 5 January 1978 to 7 January 19835th Assembly 10 January 1983 to 5 February 19886th Assembly 5 February 1988 to 28 February 19937th Assembly 10 April 1993 to 10 March 19988th Assembly 10 March 1998 to 28 February 20039th Assembly 4 March 2003 to 3 March 200810th Assembly 10 March 2008 to 1 March 201311th Assembly 2 March 2013 to 3 March 201812th Assembly 4 March 2018 toMembers of Legislative Assembly EditThe 12th Tripura Legislative Assembly was constituted after the Tripura Legislative Assembly elections in 2018 Polling was held on 18 February 4 5 for the 60 member assembly with 89 8 voter turnout being reported 6 Counting of votes and results were declared on 3 March 5 No Constituency Name Party Remarks1 Simna Vacant Resignation by Brishaketu Debbarma 7 2 Mohanpur Ratan Lal Nath Bharatiya Janata Party3 Bamutia Krishnadhan Das Bharatiya Janata Party4 Barjala Dilip Kumar Das Bharatiya Janata Party5 Khayerpur Ratan Chakraborty Bharatiya Janata Party Speaker6 Agartala Sudip Roy Barman Indian National Congress Won in 2022 bypoll necessitated after resignation by Sudip Roy Barman7 Ramnagar Surajit Datta Bharatiya Janata Party8 Town Bordowali Manik Saha Bharatiya Janata Party Won in 2022 bypoll necessitated after resignation by Ashish Kumar Saha9 Banamalipur Vacant Resignation by Biplab Kumar Deb 8 10 Majlishpur Sushanta Choudhury Bharatiya Janata Party11 Mandai Bazar Dhirendra Debbarma Indigenous People s Front of Tripura12 Takarjala Vacant Death of N C Debbarma 9 13 Pratapgarh Rebati Mohan Das Bharatiya Janata Party14 Badharghat Mimi Majumder Bharatiya Janata Party Won in 2019 bypoll necessitated after the death of Dilip Sarkar15 Kamalasagar Narayan Chandra Choudhury Communist Party of India16 Bishalgarh Bhanu Lal Saha Communist Party of India17 Golaghati Birendra Kishore Debbarma Bharatiya Janata Party18 Surjamaninagar Ram Prasad Paul Bharatiya Janata Party19 Charilam Jishnu Dev Varma Bharatiya Janata Party Deputy Chief Minister20 Boxanagar Sahid Choudhury Communist Party of India21 Nalchar Subhash Chandra Das Bharatiya Janata Party22 Sonamura Shyamal Chakraborty Communist Party of India23 Dhanpur Manik Sarkar Communist Party of India Leader of Opposition24 Ramchandraghat Prasanta Debbarma Indigenous People s Front of Tripura25 Khowai Nirmal Biswas Communist Party of India26 Asharambari Vacant Resignation by Mevar Kumar Jamatia 10 27 Kalyanpur Pramodnagar Pinaki Das Chowdhury Bharatiya Janata Party28 Teliamura Kalyani Roy Bharatiya Janata Party29 Krishnapur Atul Debbarma Bharatiya Janata Party30 Bagma Ram Pada Jamatia Bharatiya Janata Party31 Radhakishorpur Pranjit Singha Roy Bharatiya Janata Party32 Matarbari Biplab Kumar Ghosh Bharatiya Janata Party33 Kakraban Salgarh Ratan Bhowmik Communist Party of India34 Rajnagar Sudhan Das Communist Party of India35 Belonia Arun Chandra Bhowmik Bharatiya Janata Party36 Santirbazar Pramod Reang Bharatiya Janata Party37 Hrishyamukh Badal Choudhury Communist Party of India38 Jolaibari Jashabir Tripura Communist Party of India39 Manu Pravat Chowdhury Communist Party of India40 Sabroom Sankar Roy Bharatiya Janata Party41 Ampinagar Sindhu Chandra Jamatia Indigenous People s Front of Tripura42 Amarpur Ranjit Das Bharatiya Janata Party43 Karbook Vacant Resignation by Burba Mohan Tripura 11 44 Raima Valley Vacant Resignation by Dhananjoy Tripura 12 45 Kamalpur Manoj Kanti Deb Bharatiya Janata Party46 Surma Swapna Das Paul Bharatiya Janata Party Won in 2022 bypoll necessitated after disqualification of Asish Das47 Ambassa Parimal Debbarma Bharatiya Janata Party48 Karmachhara Vacant Resignation by Diba Chandra Hrangkhawl 13 49 Chawamanu Sambhu Lal Chakma Bharatiya Janata Party50 Pabiachhara Bhagaban Das Bharatiya Janata Party51 Fatikroy Sudhangshu Das Bharatiya Janata Party52 Chandipur Tapan Chakraborty Communist Party of India53 Kailashahar Moboshar Ali Communist Party of India54 Kadamtala Kurti Islam Uddin Communist Party of India55 Bagbassa Bijita Nath Communist Party of India56 Dharmanagar Biswa Bandhu Sen Bharatiya Janata Party Deputy Speaker57 Jubarajnagar Malina Debnath Bharatiya Janata Party Won in 2022 bypoll necessitated after the death of Ramendra Chandra Debnath58 Panisagar Binay Bhushan Das Bharatiya Janata Party59 Pencharthal Santana Chakma Bharatiya Janata Party60 Kanchanpur Prem Kumar Reang Indigenous People s Front of TripuraReferences Edit BJP s Ratan Chakraborty elected Speaker of Tripura Assembly EastMojo 24 September 2021 Retrieved 11 October 2021 Tripura to celebrate 50 years of assembly The Times of India 1 July 2013 Retrieved 31 January 2021 Tripura Legislative Assembly at a glance legislativebodiesinindia nic in Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Tripura Election 2018 Date announced by EC Check all details here The Financial Express 18 January 2018 Retrieved 22 February 2022 a b EC announces election dates for 3 NE states Tripura to vote on 18 Feb Meghalaya Nagaland on 27 Feb results for all states on 3 March Politics News Firstpost Firstpost 18 January 2018 Retrieved 22 February 2022 PTI 19 February 2018 Tripura records 89 8 voter turnout in assembly elections EC Mint Retrieved 22 February 2022 Tripura IPFT MLA Brishaketu Debbarma resigns Speaker and CM to meet him today The Indian Express 1 July 2021 Retrieved 2 February 2022 Former Tripura chief minister Biplab Kumar Deb elected as Rajya Sabha MP Hindustan Times 22 September 2022 Retrieved 7 November 2022 Tripura revenue minister and IPFT chief N C Debbarma passes away at 84 Hindustan Times 1 January 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Tripura IPFT s Mevar Kumar Jamatia resigns as MLA likely to join TIPRA Northeast Now 8 November 2022 Retrieved 10 November 2022 Setback for BJP in Tripura as MLA quits party on Day 1 of assembly session Hindustan Times 23 September 2022 Retrieved 23 September 2022 MLA from Tripura BJP ally resigns ahead of 2023 assembly elections Hindustan Times 14 October 2022 Retrieved 14 October 2022 Tripura BJP MLA Diba Chandra Hrankhawl quits ahead of assembly polls Hindustan Times 28 December 2022 Retrieved 28 December 2022 External links EditTripura Lok Sabha Election 2019 Result Website Official government website of Tripura Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tripura Legislative Assembly amp oldid 1132350424, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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