Kesab Chandra Gogoi Ministry

The ministry of Kesab Chandra Gogoi was formed on 13 January 1982. The formation of the ministry ended 197 days of President’s rule in Assam. The ministry ended after only 66 days, after Gogoi resigned during a motion of no confidence vote. Gogoi then recommended that the state again be put under President’s Rule.[1][2][3][4]

Kesab Chandra Gogoi Ministry
Date formed13 January 1982
Date dissolved19 March 1982
People and organisations
Head of statePrakash Mehrotra
Head of governmentKesab Chandra Gogoi
Member party
Status in legislatureCoalition
Opposition leaderSarat Chandra Singha
History
PredecessorPresident's rule
SuccessorPresident's rule

History edit

Formation edit

President’s Rule was imposed in Assam after the Anwara Taimur government failed to get the Assam appropriation bill passed by the assembly. On 12 January 1982, Gogoi told the press that he had the backing of 63 MLAs. Gogoi stated "I cannot reveal the identities of the 63 legislators whose support I enjoy for obvious reasons. But I am confident I will prove my majority on the floor of the House." Gogoi then contested for the Leadership.

The Taimur Camp had encouraged Hiteswar Saikia to contest Gogoi’s claim but an opinion poll before the final selection revealed only supporters of Saikia among the 35 partymen assembled while 24 favoured Gogoi and 3 remained neutral. Hours before the selection meeting, 4 Taimur supporters resigned from the party.

Governor Prakash Mehrotra accepted Gogoi’s claim that he had the support of 63 MLAs and he was sworn in as Chief Minister of Assam on 13 January 1982 at Raj Bhavan in a simple ceremony. He constituted his Left-Janata coalition ministry on 13 January 1982.[1][3][4] For many MLAs support of the new government was fear that the Assembly may be dissolved if they don't.

Ministry edit

At the time of the formation of the ministry, the foreigners issue was still very urgent. However Gogoi stated, "My government's policy will not be very different from the previous government's. There will be no reshuffle of officials. I am giving top priority to the solution of the foreigners issue and the maintenance of law and order. Apart from this, implementation of the prime minister's 20-point programme will be my major concern."[3]

As Gogoi said, the ministry focused on Indira Gandhi’s 20 point programmes and he gave more emphasis on the implementation of National Rural Employment Scheme.[1][3]

Motion of No-confidence edit

On 17 March 1982 a Motion of No Confidence was moved against the 65-day-old ministry. Sarat Chandra Singha, Golap Borbora, Hemen Das, Promode Gogoi, Zainal Abedin, Premadhar Bora and Romesh Mohan Kouli jointly filed the motion. The speaker admitted it and fixed discussion for 18 March 1982. However, the speaker adjourned the house sine die after he learned Gogoi tendered in his resignation to the Governor. The opposition had a majority in the house however the Governor chose to dissolve the legislative assembly on advice of Gogoi.

Gogoi, when asked why he recommended the assembly’s dissolution, said "I had no other alternative. If I did not make such a recommendation then the Governor would have had no other alternative but to allow the Opposition to form a ministry." Opposition leader and former Chief Minister Sarat Chandra Singha called this "sheer fascism".[2] On 19 March, the President Sanjiva Reddy then issued a proclamation which dissolved the legislative assembly and brought the state under President's rule.[5]

Cabinet edit

Name Constituency Department Party
Kesab Chandra Gogoi

Chief Minister

Dibrugarh
  • Home
  • Administration reforms
  • Public relations
  • Khadi
  • Village industries
  • Rural development
  • Public works
  • Tourism
  • Other departments not allocated to any Minister
INC
Cabinet Ministers
Mohammed Idris Rupohihat
  • Finance
  • Minority Affairs
  • Political Sufferers
INC
Rabindra Nath Choudhury Abhayapuri South
  • Irrigation
  • fisheries
  • Scheduled castes
  • Tribes welfare
JP
Hiteswar Saikia Nazira
  • Education
  • Cultural affairs
INC
Ramesh Chandra Saharia[a] Panery
  • Revenue
  • Food
  • Civil supplies
INC
Altaf Hossain Mazumdar Barkhola
  • Flood control
  • Judicial Affairs
INC
Santi Ranjan Dasgupta Hojai
  • Agriculture
  • Town
  • Country-planning
JP
Jagannath Singh Udharbond
  • Industry
  • Public Enterprises
JP
Golok Chandra Rajbanshi Rangapara
  • Electricity
  • Mines
  • Parliamentary affairs
  • Animal husbandry
INC
Zahirul Islam Mankachar
  • Municipal administration
  • Community development
JP
Ministers of State
A. N. Akram Hussain Chaygaon INC
Padam Bahadur Chouhan Tamulpur JP
Deputy Minister
Mohammed Fakrul Islam Patharkandi IND

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ramesh Chandra Saharia died on 8 February 1982

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Gogoi ministry" (PDF). shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
  2. ^ a b Sumanta Sen (October 16, 2013). "Assam: Congress(I) ministry led by Keshab Gogoi falls, President's Rule to return". India Today. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  3. ^ a b c d Seema Guha (October 22, 2013). "Assam Cong(I) factional tussle resolved with appointment of Keshab Chandra Gogoi as CM". India Today. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  4. ^ a b "January 14, 1982, Forty Years Ago: Assam Has New CM". The Indian Express. 2022-01-14. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  5. ^ Malhotra, G. C. (2004). Cabinet Responsibility to Legislature: Motions of Confidence and No-confidence in Lok Sabha and State Legislatures. Lok Sabha Secretariat. ISBN 978-81-200-0400-9.