Tarun Gogoi constituted his first ministry and became the 13th Chief Minister of Assam on 17 May 2001.[1][2] Following the 2001 Assam Legislative Assembly election, Gogoi became Chief Minister succeeding AGP chief minister Prafulla Kumar Mahanta. There were 12 cabinet ministers and 4 ministers of state in the ministry.
First Tarun Gogoi ministry | |
---|---|
Date formed | 17 May 2001 |
Date dissolved | 21 May 2006 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Srinivas Kumar Sinha Arvind Dave Ajai Singh |
Head of government | Tarun Gogoi |
Member party | |
Opposition party | |
History | |
Election | 2001 |
Outgoing election | 2006 |
Legislature term | 5 years |
Predecessor | Second Mahanta Ministry |
Successor | Tarun Gogoi Ministry (2006-2011) |
Gogoi along with his cabinet was sworn in by governor Srinivas Kumar Sinha, succeeding Prafulla Kumar Mahanta as Chief Minister of Assam on 18 May 2001.[3] The hour-long ceremony took place at Raj Bhavan at 14:00. Prafulla Kumar Mahanta and Bhubaneswar Kalita, who challenged Gogoi's claim to become Chief Minister in the wake of the election results, both did not attend the ceremony. No BJP or AGP legislators attended the ceremony either.[1] Among those who attended were Congress General Secretary in charge of Assam Kamal Nath, AICC member Jagdish Tytler and several congress MPs from Assam.
The cabinet had two female ministers, including Hemoprova Saikia who was the wife of former Chief Minister Hiteswar Saikia. The cabinet also included former Chief Minister of Assam Bhumidhar Barman. 10 of the 17 ministers were ministers in previous congress governments in Assam. Gogoi stated that he held out hope for the newly elected MLAs, and stated that he would carry out an expansion of the ministry in a month. The expansion took place on 7 June 2002.[1][2] The expansion included several newly elected MLAs including Robin Bordoloi, son of the first Chief Minister of Assam Gopinath Bordoloi, and Himanta Biswa Sarma who is the current Chief Minister of Assam.
During the ministry self employment schemes to counter terrorism, the Police Commission for smooth functioning of administration of State, the Chief Vigilance Commission to prevent corruption and the right to information bill were all established.[2]
Cabinet Ministers
editName | Constituency | Portfolio | Party |
---|---|---|---|
Tarun Gogoi | Titabar | Chief Minister | INC |
Cabinet Ministers | |||
Bhumidhar Barman | Barkhetry |
|
INC |
Sarat Barkotoky | Sonari |
|
INC |
Ardhendhu Kumar Dey | Hojai |
|
INC |
Rameswar Dhanowar | Digboi |
|
INC |
Dinesh Prasad Goala | Lakhipur |
|
INC |
Ismail Hussain | Barpeta |
|
INC |
Devanand Konwar | Thowra |
|
INC |
Gobinda Chandra Langthasa | Haflong |
|
INC |
Bharat Chandra Narah | Dhakuakhana |
|
INC |
Hemprakash Narayan | Dergaon |
|
INC |
Gautam Roy | Katlicherra |
|
INC |
Hemoprova Saikia | Nazira |
|
INC |
Name | Constituency | Party |
---|---|---|
Ministers of State | ||
Anjan Dutta | Amguri | INC |
Pradyut Bordoloi | Margherita | INC |
Rupam Kurmi | Mariani | INC |
Nazibul Umar | Dhubri | INC |
2002 Expansion
editOn 7 June 2002, Gogoi expanded his ministry by including some new ministers. The previous ministers stayed as ministers apart from some ministers of state who were promoted.[2]
Name | Constituency | Party |
---|---|---|
Tarun Gogoi | Titabar | INC |
Cabinet Ministers | ||
Mithius Tudu | Gossaigaon | INC |
Bhubaneswar Kalita | Rangiya | INC |
Rupam Kurmi | Mariani | INC |
Anjan Dutta | Amguri | INC |
Nurjamal Sarkar | Biswanath | INC |
Nazrul Islam | Mankachar | INC |
Pankaj Bora | Gauhati East | INC |
Ministers of State (Independent charge) | ||
Ripun Bora | Gohpur | INC |
Misbahul Islam Laskar | Barkhola | INC |
Robin Bordoloi | Dispur | INC |
Wazed Ali Choudhury | Salmara South | INC |
Pradyut Bordoloi | Margherita | INC |
Ministers of State | ||
Himanta Biswa Sarma | Jalukabri | INC |
Atuwa Munda | Tingkhong | INC |
Pranati Phukan | Naharkatia | INC |
Rakibul Hussain | Samaguri | INC |
Ruponsing Ronghang | Baithalangso | INC |
Sukur Ali Ahmed | Chenga | INC |
Nilamani Sen Deka | Dharmapur | INC |
References
edit- ^ a b c "rediff.com: Gogoi heads 17-member government in Assam". www.rediff.com. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Gogoi ministry" (PDF). shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/. Retrieved 5 November 2018.
- ^ The Journal of Parliamentary Information. Lok Sabha Secretariat. 2001.