Manohar Joshi ministry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Manohar Joshi ministry
Seal of Maharashtra.png
Ministry of the State of Maharashtra
Shri.Manohar Joshi.jpg
Manohar Joshi , Former Chief Minister of Maharashtra
Date formed14 March 1995
Date dissolved31 January 1999
People and organisations
Head of stateDr. P. C. Alexander (Governor)
Head of governmentManohar Joshi (Shiv Sena)
Deputy head of governmentGopinath Munde (BJP)
Member parties
Status in legislatureCoalition
152 / 288 (53%)
Opposition partyINC
History
Election(s)1995
PredecessorFourth Pawar ministry
SuccessorNarayan Rane ministry

Manohar Joshi was Chief Minister of Maharashtra from 14 March 1995 – 31 January 1999. His cabinet ministers were: [1]

Chief Minister and Cabinet ministers[]

Portfolio Minister Took office Left office Party
Chief Minister
General Administration
Information and Public Relations
Information Technology
Departments or portfolios not allocated to any minister.
Manohar Joshi14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Deputy Chief Minister
Home Affairs
Gopinath Munde14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
Finance
Planning
Hashu Advani14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
Public WorksNitin Gadkari14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
Revenue
Khar Land Development
Relief and Rehabilitation
School Education
Sudhir Joshi14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
TransportPramod Navalkar14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Agriculture
Water Conservation
Shashikant Sutar14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Dairy Development
Animal Husbandry
Fisheries
Narayan Rane14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Public Health
Family Welfare
Medical Education and Drugs
Daulatrao Aher14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
Irrigation
Command Area Development
Mahadeorao Sukaji Shivankar14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
Labour Employment
Minority Development and Aukab
Sabir Shaikh14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Industries
Textiles
Law and Judiciary
Parliamentary Affairs
Liladhar Dake14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Employment GuaranteeHaribhau Bagade14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
Food & Civil Supply
Consumer Affairs
Shobhatai Fadnavis14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
Forest
Environment
Ganesh Naik14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Cooperation
Textiles
Jaiprakash Mundada14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
HousingChandrakant Khaire14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Tourism
Excise
Jagannath Patil14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
Rural Development
Water Supply
Ex-Servicemen Welfare
Anna Dange14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
IrrigationEknath Khadse14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
Skill Development and EntrepreneurshipRadhakrishna Vikhe Patil14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Food and Drug Administration(FDA)Diwakar Raote14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Social WelfareBabanrao Gholap14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Energy
New and Renewable Energy
Sureshdada Jain14 March 199531 January 1999 SHS
Urban DevelopmentDattatray Rane14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP
ProtocolD. B. Patil14 March 199531 January 1999 BJP

Ministers of State[]

Ministers of State
Prabhakar More
  • Home
SHS
Ravindra Mane
  • Urban Development
SHS
Sudhir Mungantiwar
  • Tourism
BJP
Raj K. Purohit BJP
Ramdas Kadam SHS
Vinod Gudadhe Patil BJP
Arjun Khotkar SHS
Prataprao Ganpatrao Jadhav
  • Sports
  • Youth Welfare
  • Irrigation
SHS
Vinayak Korde BJP
Kalidas Kolambkar SHS
Uttamprakash Khandare SHS
Harshvardhan Patil IND
Manisha Nimkar SHS
Ramdas Kadam SHS
Shivajirao Naik IND
Vijay Girkar BJP
Pratapsinh Mohite-Patil BJP
Anil Deshmukh
  • Education
IND
Udayanraje Bhosale BJP
Babasaheb Dhabekar IND
Vijaykumar Gavit IND
IND
Badamrao Pandit IND
Dr. Ramesh Gajbe IND
Bharmuanna Patil IND

From Shiv Sena[]

From Bharatiya Janata Party[]

Ministers by Party[]

Representation of cabinet ministers by party

  Shiv Sena (51%)
  Bharatiya Janata Party (42%)
  Independent (7%)
Party Cabinet Ministers Ministers of State Total Ministers
SHS 13 9 22
BJP 13 7 20
IND - 9 9

See also[]

Narayan Rane ministry

References[]

  1. ^ "Indian Express: Rane sworn in along with jumbo team". expressindia.indianexpress.com. Archived from the original on 15 July 2014. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  2. ^ Singh, Varun (30 October 2014). "Sudhir Mungantiwar to be second in command in new Maharashtra government". www.mid-day.com.


Retrieved from ""