Parkash Singh Badal sworn in as Punjab CM
Parkash Singh Badal sworn in as Punjab CM for record 5th time
![]() |
Badal,
his son Sukhbir, 50, as Deputy Chief Minister and 16 Cabinet rank
ministers (14 from the SAD and four from the BJP) were administered the
oath of office and secrecy by Governor Shivraj V Patil in Chappar Chiri,
about 25 kms from Chandigarh, at a ceremony attended by leaders of
various political parties, including the BJP, Trinamool Congress, NCP,
JD-U and INLD.
Those
present on the occasion included L K Advani, Nitin Gadkari, Rajnath
Singh, Vasundhara Raje, Navjot Sidhu (all from BJP), Mukul Roy, Rachpal
Singh, K D Singh (Trinamool Congress) Union Minister Praful Patel (NCP),
JD-U chief Sharad Yadav and INLD leader Om Parkash Chautala.
The chief ministers present were Narendar Modi (Gujarat) and Prem Kumar Dhumal (Himachal Pradesh).
The
exercise of government formation in the state with a 117-member
assembly, which can have 18 ministers, including the chief minister, was
completed by Badal in one go.
The SAD-BJP alliance got absolute majority in the Assembly polls winning 68 seats whereas the Congress got only 46.
Badal senior headed full two five-year terms from 1997 and 2007. His other terms were between 1977-1980 and 1970-71.
Only
one woman Bibi Jagir Kaur, former President of SGPC, has been included
in the ministry though eight women of the alliance (SAD-six, BJP- two)
were elected.
The
Badal family has four members in the Cabinet. Besides Badal senior and
his son, others are Adesh Partap Singh Kairon (son-in-law of Badal
senior) and Bikram Singh Majithia (brother-in-law of Sukhbir).
Badal
has mostly reposed faith in former ministers as only four first timers
find place in the government. They are Bhagat Chuni Lal and Anil Joshi,
both from the BJP, and Surjit Singh Rakhra and Sharanjit Singh Dhillon,
both from SAD. Rakhra had defeated Punjab Congress President Amarinder Singh's son Raninder.
Former
Deputy Speaker of the Lok Sabha Charanjit Singh Atwal has been named as
the Pro Tem Speaker of the newly constituted state assembly.
The
SAD has created a record in the state since 1966 when Punjab was
reorganized by becoming the first party ever to retain power in alliance
with the BJP with an improved tally of 68 seats against 67 which the
two parties secured in 2007.
The BJP ended up with 12 legislators as against 19 in the outgoing House.
Besides
Badal senior and Sukhbir who was elected from Lambi and Jalalabad seats
respectively, those sworn in were Bhagat Chuni Lal (BJP, Jalandhar
West), Sarwan Singh Phillaur (SAD, Kartarpur SC), Adesh Partap Kairon
(SAD, Patti), Ajit Singh Kohar (SAD, Shahkot), Gulzar Singh Ranike (SAD,
Attari SAD), Madan Mohan Mittal (BJP, Anandpur Sahab), Parminder Singh
Dhindsa (SAD, Sunam), Janmeja Singh Sekhon (SAD, Maur), Tota Singh (SAD,
Dharamkot), Jagir Kaur (SAD, Bholath), Surjit Kumar Jyani (BJP,
Fazilka), Bikram Singh Majithia (SAD, Majitha), Sikander Singh Malooka
(SAD, Rampura Phul) Anil Joshi (BJP, Amritsar North), Surjit Singh
Rakhra (SAD, Samana) and Sharanjit Singh Dhillon (SAD, Sahnewal).
If
it was the sprawling Punjab Cricket Association (PCA) stadium at Mohali
in Punjab as the venue for the swearing in of Badal five years back,
this time it was Chappar Chiri which has a place in Sikh history where
the SAD-BJP government in its previous term had set up a memorial "Fateh
Burj" (tower of victory).
Banda
Singh Bahadur, one of the most respected warriors in Sikh history, had
won the battle against Wazir Khan, who commanded the Mughal army in
1710, at Chappar Chiri in Ajitgarh district, about 25 kms from the state
capital.
The
SAD-BJP alliance has come to power for the second successive term on
the agenda of development and peace setting aside its traditional
Panthic agenda, according to political observers.
The
issues not taken up during the elections included the SAD's demands for
the transfer of Chandigarh and of other Punjabi-speaking areas and
settlement of river water sharing disputes, with neighbouring states,
including Haryana besides its demand for a federal structure, including
more rights for the states, they said.
Though
Chief Ministers of West Bengal, Tamil Nadu and Bihar--Mamata Banerjee, J
Jayalalitha and Nitish Kumar--had also been invited, they expressed
their inability to attend the ceremony citing other pressing
engagements. 
Comments
Post a Comment