Jump to content

T. V. Rajesh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from T V Rajesh)

T. V. Rajesh
Member of Legislative Assembly, Kerala
In office
2011–2021
Succeeded byM. Vijin
ConstituencyKalliasseri
Personal details
Born (1974-01-11) 11 January 1974 (age 50)
Kalliasseri, Kannur, Kerala
Political partyCPI(M)
SpouseT P Sheena
ChildrenDiya
ResidenceKalliasseri

T. V. Rajesh (born 11 January 1974) is an Indian politician from the state of Kerala, and a former member of the Legislative Assembly of Kerala.[1] He represented the Kalliasseri constituency of Kerala and is a member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI(M)). Rajesh was the president of the DYFI Kerala state committee, and also a state committee member of the CPI(M).

Early life

[edit]

T. V. Rajesh was born to Chandukutty and Madhavi at Kulapuram, Kannur district. He did his schooling in Cheruthazham High School and subsequently completed his pre-degree and bachelor's degree in Political Science from Payyanur College, Kannur. He completed his master's degree in law from Government Law College, Thiruvananthapuram.

Political career

[edit]

T. V. Rajesh entered into politics as a Students' Federation of India (SFI) activist. Later he moved onto Democratic Youth Federation of India and actively took part in various strikes and movements. He was the president of the DYFI Kerala state committee. His political activism saw him lead student struggles right from his days as a high school student. He has been part of many different struggles against various United Democratic Front governments in Kerala. His struggles have been brutally repressed in the past, which made him spend 87 days behind the bars.

He was elected as the state secretary of SFI in 2002 and as the National Joint Secretary in 2003. He was elected as the member of the Legislative Assembly of Kerala from his constituency in May 2011 with a margin of nearly 30,000 votes. In 2012 Kerala state conference of CPI(M), he was elected as a member of the state committee of the party. He was re-elected from the same constituency in 2016 with a margin of more than 42,000 votes.

2016 Kalliasseri election results

[edit]

There were 1,77,121 registered voters in the constituency for the 2016 election.[2]

2016 Kerala Legislative Assembly election : Kalliasseri
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
CPI(M) T. V. Rajesh 83,006 59.83 Increase1.21
INC Amritha Ramakrishnan 40,115 28.91 Decrease 5.73
BJP K. P. Arun 11,036 7.95 Increase3.55
Independent Sunil Koyilerian 1,455 1.05
SDPI K. Subair 1,435 1.03 Decrease0.80
WPOI Sainudeen Karivellur 1,080 0.78
NOTA None of the above 620 0.45
Margin of victory 42,891 30.92 Increase 6.94
Turnout 1,38,747 78.33 Decrease 1.00
CPI(M) hold Swing Increase1.21

2011 Kalliasseri election results

[edit]

There were 1,57,384 registered voters in the constituency for the 2011 election.[3]

2011 Kerala Legislative Assembly election : Kalliasseri
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
CPI(M) T. V. Rajesh 73,190 58.62
INC P. Indira 43,244 34.64
BJP Sreenath Ravi Varma 5,499 4.40
SDPI A. P. Mahmood 2,281 1.83
BSP K. Gopalakrishnan 640 0.51
Margin of victory 29,966 23.98
Turnout 1,24,854 79.33
CPI(M) hold Swing

Positions held

[edit]
  • SFI Cheruthazham unit secretary in 1996
  • SFI Madayi area president in 1998
  • SFI Kannur district president in 1999
  • Calicut University union counselor in 2000
  • SFI Kannur district secretary in 2000
  • SFI Kerala state secretary in 2002
  • Calicut University senate member
  • DYFI Kannur district president in 2006
  • DYFI Kerala state joint secretary in 2006
  • DYFI Kerala state secretary in 2007
  • CPI(M) Kannur district committee member in 2007
  • Member of Kerala Legislative Assembly in 2011
  • CPI(M) Kerala State committee member in 2012

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "DYFI lays siege to job exchanges". The Hindu. 6 September 2011. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
  2. ^ "Kerala Niyamasabha Election Results 2016, Election commission of India". eci.gov.in.
  3. ^ "Kerala Niyamasabha Election Results 2011, Election commission of India". eci.gov.in. Retrieved 11 March 2020.
[edit]