Subhash Prasad Yadav

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Subhash Prasad Yadav
Subhash yadav.jpg
Member Bihar Legislative Council(MLC) July 1998 - June 2004
Member Of Parliament (UPPER HOUSE)
In office
2004 - 2010
ConstituencyGopalganj, Bihar
Personal details
Born (1967-03-27) 27 March 1967 (age 54)
Gopalganj, Bihar
Political partyRashtriya Janata Dal
Spouse(s)Renu Devi
ChildrenAlka Yadav, Randhir Yadav, Saurav yadav, Ekta yadav.
ResidenceGopalganj
Websitehttps://en-gb.facebook.com/people/Subhash-Prasad-Yadav/100020712405506
As of 4 December, 2007

Subhash Prasad Yadav born on 27 March 1967 at Gopalganj (Bihar) and is a politician of the Rashtriya Janata Dal party and was a Member of the Parliament of India representing Bihar in the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Indian Parliament.

He is the brother-in-law of Lalu Prasad Yadav, former Union Railway Minister and former chief minister of Bihar and brother of Sadhu Yadav ex-MP of Member of Parliament for the Gopalganj constituency and Rabri Devi former chief minister of Bihar.

Personal life[]

Subhash Prasad Yadav was born on 27 March 1967 in a Yadav family at Gopalganj (Bihar). His father was Sheo Prasad Choudhry. He matriculated from Mukti Adarsh High School (BSEB) in 1986, passed intermediate examination in Arts from Gopalganj College (University of Bihar) in 1989 and later graduated with a B.A from R.P.S College Patna (Magadh University) in 1993. He then married Renu Devi and had two daughters (Alka yadav and Ekta yadav) and two sons (Randhir Yadav and Saurav Yadav).

Political life[]

Subhash Prasad Yadav was a clerk at the secretariat and when his sister Rabri Devi became the chief minister of Bihar he quit his job and joined RJD to support his sister in July 1997. He started working as a member of RJD party. He remains in the RJD and became the Member of Parliament in RajyaSabha upper house as a representative of Bihar in 2004. Subhash proved his worth again when he wooed Ramanand Yadav, a BJP candidate from Danapur, and got him elected with a huge margin of 55,000 votes on the RJD ticket in the recent by-election.[1]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Roy, Anirban Guha (26 March 2004). "In Bihar, first family comes first". Hindustaan Times. Retrieved 14 February 2018.

External links[]


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