Jump to content

List of deputy chief ministers of Telangana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Deputy Chief Minister of Telangana
Telaṅgāṇa Upa Mukhya Mantrī
since 7 December 2023 (2023-12-07)
Deputy Chief Minister's Office
(Government of Telangana)
StyleThe Honourable (Formal)
Mr./Mrs. Deputy Chief Minister (Informal)
StatusDeputy head of government
AbbreviationDCM of TG
Member ofTelangana Legislature
Telangana Council of Ministers
Reports toGovernor of Telangana
Chief Minister of Telangana
Telangana Legislature
SeatPraja Bhavan, Hyderabad
NominatorChief Minister of Telangana
AppointerGovernor of Telangana
Term lengthFive years and subject to no term limit
At the confidence of the Legislative Assembly
Inaugural holder
Formation2 June 2014; 10 years ago (2014-06-02)
Websitewww.telangana.gov.in

The deputy chief minister of Telangana is the deputy to the chief minister of Telangana, who is head of the government of Telangana. The deputy chief minister is the second highest ranking member of the Telangana Council of Ministers.[1] A deputy chief minister also holds a cabinet portfolio in the state ministry. In the legislative assembly system of government, the chief minister is treated as the "first among equals" in the cabinet; the position of deputy chief minister is used to govern the state with the support of a single party member or to bring political stability and strength within a coalition government, or in times of state emergency, when a proper chain of command is necessary. On multiple occasions, proposals have arisen to make the post permanent, but without result. The same goes for the post of deputy prime minister at the national level.

The first deputy chief minister of Telangana was Mahmood Ali,[2] who was also Minister of Revenue, Relief & Rehabilitation, ULC, Stamps & Registration in Chandrashekar Rao's first ministry. The second deputy chief minister was T. Rajaiah,[3] who took on the role in addition to his health ministership in K. Chandrashekar Rao's government. On 25 January 2015, the chief minister K. Chandrashekar Rao dismissed Rajaiah in the wake of serious charges of corruption in his department and soon that day position of Rajaiah was replaced by Kadiyam Srihari[4] and he became the third deputy chief minister of the state.

The current Deputy Chief Minister is Mallu Bhatti Vikramarka. He assumed the office on 7th December 2023.

List

[edit]
No. Portrait Name Elected Constituency Political Party[a] Term of office[5] Chief Minister Governor
1 M. Mahmood Ali Member of the State Legislative Council Bharat Rashtra Samithi 2 June 2014 12 December 2018 4 years, 193 days K. Chandrashekar Rao E. S. L. Narasimhan
2 T. Rajaiah Ghanpur (Station) 2 June 2014 25 January 2015 237 days
3 Kadiyam Srihari Member of the State Legislative Council 25 January 2015 12 December 2018 3 years, 321 days
Vacant (13 December 2018 - 6 December 2023)
4 Mallu Bhatti Vikramarka Madhira Indian National Congress 7 December 2023 Incumbent 353 days Anumula Revanth Reddy Tamilisai Soundararajan (7 December 2023 - 18 March 2024),
C. P. Radhakrishnan (20 March 2024 - 30 July 2024),
Jishnu Dev Varma (31 July 2024 - present)

Statistics

[edit]
List of deputy chief ministers by length of term
# Deputy Chief Minister Party Term of office
Longest continuous term Total duration of deputy chief ministership
1 M. Mohamood Ali TRS 4 years, 193 days 4 years, 193 days
2 Kadiyam Srihari TRS 3 years, 321 days 3 years, 321 days
3 Bhatti Vikramarka Mallu INC 353 days 353 days
4 T. Rajaiah TRS 237 days 237 days
Timeline
VacantKadiyam SrihariT. RajaiahMahmood Ali (Indian politician)
List by party
Political parties by total time-span of their member holding Deputy CMO (24 November 2024)
No. Political party Number of Deputy chief ministers Total days of holding Deputy CMO
1 Bharat Rashtra Samithi 3 1654 days
2 Indian National Congress 1 353 days
Parties by total duration (in days) of holding Deputy Chief Minister's Office
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
BRS
Kadiyam SrihariT. RajaiahMahmood Ali (Indian politician)

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ This column only names the deputy chief minister's party. The state government he heads with chief minister may be a complex coalition of several parties and independents; these are not listed here.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Rajendran, S. (13 July 2012). "Of Deputy Chief Ministers and the Constitution". The Hindu. Retrieved 7 November 2017.
  2. ^ "KCR keeps his promise; Mehmood Ali becomes first Deputy CM of Telangana". Two Circles. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  3. ^ "Telangana Deputy Chief Minister Rajaiah sacked". TheHindu. 25 January 2015. Retrieved 25 January 2015.
  4. ^ Kodiyam Srikari: As EDUCATION MINISTER & DEPUTY CM
  5. ^ The ordinal number of the term being served by the person specified in the row in the corresponding period