Second Nijalingappa ministry

Summary

Second S. Nijalingappa Ministry was the Council of Ministers in Mysore, a state in South India headed by S. Nijalingappa[2] of the Indian National Congress.

Second Nijalingappa ministry
5th Council of Ministers of Mysore State
Second Siddaramaiah ministry
S. Nijalingappa
Date formed19 April 1957[1]
Date dissolved16 May 1958
People and organisations
Head of stateJayachamarajendra Wadiyar
1 November 1956 – 4 May 1963
(As Governor of Mysore)
Head of governmentS. Nijalingappa
Member partiesIndian National Congress
Status in legislatureMajority
History
Election(s)1957
Outgoing election1962 (After Jatti ministry)
Legislature term(s)6 years (Council)
5 years (Assembly)
PredecessorFirst Nijalingappa ministry
SuccessorJatti ministry

The ministry had multiple ministers including the Chief Minister of Mysore.[3] All ministers belonged to the Indian National Congress.

S. Nijalingappa became Chief minister of Mysore after Indian National Congress emerged victorious 1957 Mysore elections.[4]

Chief Minister & Cabinet Ministers edit

S.No Portfolio Name Portrait Constituency Term of Office Party
1 Chief Minister[5]

*Other departments not allocated to any Minister.

S. Nijalingappa
[6]
  Molakalmuru[7] 19 April 1957 16 May 1958 Indian National Congress
2
  • Finance
T. Mariappa   Nagamangala 19 April 1957 16 May 1958 Indian National Congress
3
  • Sericulture
T. Mariappa   Nagamangala 19 April 1957 16 May 1958 Indian National Congress

Minister of State / Deputy Ministers edit

S.No Portfolio Name Portrait Constituency Term of Office Party
1
  • Home
  • Industries
Veerendra Patil Chincholi 19 April 1957 16 May 1958 Indian National Congress

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ https://eparlib.nic.in/bitstream/123456789/761265/1/jpi_October_1957.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ "येदियुरप्पा मंत्रिमंडल में 17 विधायक शामिल, एक पूर्व सीएम और दो पूर्व डिप्टी सीएम बने मंत्री". Amar Ujala (in Hindi).
  3. ^ "Karnataka BJP cabinet expansion Updates: Governor Vajubhai Vala administers oath to 17 MLAs as ministers". Firstpost. 20 August 2019.
  4. ^ "S.R. Bommai passes away". The Hindu. 11 October 2007. Archived from the original on 11 October 2007.
  5. ^ Sam Rajappa (26 November 2013). "Census work in Belgaum threatened by language controversy". India Today. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  6. ^ "Language issue in Karnataka explodes into a violent agitation". indiatoday.
  7. ^ Anita Pratap (21 November 2013). "Problems for Karnataka CM Ramakrishna Hegde after five years in power". India Today. Retrieved 6 November 2021.