Vazhappady K. Ramamurthy

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Vazhappady K. Ramamurthy or Vazhapadi K. Ramamoorthy (1940 – 22 October 2002) was an Indian trade unionist and politician.[1]

Political career[]

He was an ardent follower of the late K Kamaraj and E. V. K. Sampath. He belonged to the Vanniyar community.[2][3]

He served as the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee president. From 1969 to 1971, he was the president of Youth Congress, Distt. Salem, Tamil Nadu. In 1989 he was appointed as the President, Pradesh Congress Committee (Indira), Tamil Nadu by Rajiv Gandhi.

Ramamurthy was elected as a member of the Lok Sabha six times and was defeated twice, in 1996 and 1999. He was involved with the International Labour Organization and served as minister of state for Labour with independent charge in the Congress government led by P. V. Narasimha Rao for a brief period in 1991. He quit his ministerial post on the Cauvery issue.[4]

He was president of the TNCC for six years before being replaced in 1996 when he formed the Tamil Nadu unit of the Tiwari Congress. Ramamurthy went back to the Congress but left that party again to form Tamizhaga Rajiv Congress (TRC).[5] He was part of NDA and become Union Minister of Petroleum. With the creation of the TRC, he subsequently announced that it would have an alliance with AIADMK in the upcoming Lok Sabha election.[5] A few days later, J. Jayalalitha announced that TNMC was entering the AIADMK-led front, although she denied having engineered the split in the Congress Party.[6] In January 2002, after eight years, Ramamurthy merged TRC with Congress.[7]

Ramamurthy was associated with various trade unions and workers' organizations, serving as honorary president of INTUC Tamil Nadu, Founder-President of the International Institute for Non-aligned Studies, Vice-President of INTUC, Tamil Nadu, and founding member and president of Indian National Rural Labour Federation INRLF, a labour union formed for unorganized rural employees.

Electoral records[]

He was Member of Parliament elected from Tamil Nadu. He was elected to the Lok Sabha as an Indian National Congress candidate from Dharmapuri constituency in 1977 election and from Krishnagiri constituency in 1984, 1989 and 1991 elections.[8][9][10][11] He was elected from Krishnagiri constituency as an Indian National Congress (Indira) candidate in 1980 election.[12] He was elected from Salem constituency as an Independent candidate in 1998 election.[13]

Parliament Committees[]

1977-79 Member, Committee on Papers Laid on the Table; Member, Business Advisory Committee; Member, Consultative Committee, Ministry of Labour; Deputy Chief Whip, Congress Parliamentary Party, (Indira) [C.P.P.(I)]

1980 Member, Committee on Public Undertakings; Member, Business Advisory Committee; Member, Committee on Privileges; Member, Consultative Committee, Ministry of Labour

1984-86 Chairman, Committee on Public Undertakings; Member, Committee on Public Accounts;Member, Consultative Committee, Ministry of Labour

1990 Member, Committee of Privileges, Member, Consultative Committee, Ministry of Labour and Welfare [14]

Personal life[]

His wife, R Kalaimani, was a retired teacher, and they shared two sons and a daughter. His eldest son, Vazhapadi Rama Suganthan, is an AICC member, INRLF National General Secretary and Chairman of Rajiv Gandhi Vazhapadi K Ramamurthy Charitable trust, while his younger son, Vazhapadi R Karnan, is President of INRLF Tamil Nadu state.

Ramamurthy died in Chennai on 27 October 2002.[15]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ PTI (27 October 2002). "Former Union minister Vazhapadi dead". The Times of India.
  2. ^ P. Radhakrishnan (2002). India, the Perfidies of Power: A Social Critique. ISBN 9788179360033.
  3. ^ Muthiah, S. (2008). Madras, Chennai: A 400-year Record of the First City of Modern India, Volume 1. ISBN 9788183794688.
  4. ^ http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Repository/getFiles.asp?Style=OliveXLib:LowLevelEntityToPrint_TOI&Type=text/html&Locale=english-skin-custom&Path=TOIBG/2010/11/16&ID=Ar01100
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Asian Recorder. K. K. Thomas at Recorder Press. 1998.
  6. ^ Business Standard. No Hitch In Seat Sharing Talks, Says Jayalalitha
  7. ^ TRC merges with Congress
  8. ^ Volume I, 1977 Indian general election, 6th Lok Sabha
  9. ^ Volume I, 1984 Indian general election, 8th Lok Sabha
  10. ^ Volume I, 1989 Indian general election, 9th Lok Sabha
  11. ^ Volume I, 1991 Indian general election, 10th Lok Sabha
  12. ^ Volume I, 1980 Indian general election, 7th Lok Sabha
  13. ^ Volume I, 1998 Indian general election, 12th Lok Sabha
  14. ^ [1]
  15. ^ "Ramamurthy laid to rest at Vazhapadi". The Hindu. Chennai, India. 30 October 2002. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012.

Further reading[]

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