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Pages in category "Labour ministers of India" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Ashok Kumar – Labour MP; Claude Moraes – Labour MEP; Dadabhai Naoroji – Liberal MP; first Indian MP in the House of Commons; Priti Patel – Conservative MP; Home Secretary (2019–2022) Shapurji Saklatvala – Communist MP; Virendra Sharma – Labour MP; Alok Sharma – Conservative MP and Secretary of State for Business, Energy and ...
This is a list of members of the 18th Lok Sabha arranged by the states and union territories they are elected from. These MPs were elected in the 2024 Indian general election held in April–June 2024.
Seat distribution in 17th Lok Sabha by party. This is a list of members of the 17th Lok Sabha arranged by the states and union territories they were elected from. These MPs were elected in the 2019 Indian general election held in April–May 2019, and took their seats on 17 June of that year.
Every state in India is governed by its council of ministers with rules and procedures similar to the union council of ministers per Articles 163, 164 and 167(c). In March 2020, the Supreme Court of India used its powers for the first time to do "complete justice" under Article 142 of the Indian Constitution to remove a minister functioning in ...
Indian National Congress (R) 9 Desai: 24 March 1977 1977: Janata Party: Morarji Desai: 10 Charan: 28 July 1979 None Janata Party (Secular) Charan Singh: 11 Indira IV: 14 January 1980 1980: Indian National Congress (Indira) Indira Gandhi: 12 Rajiv I: 31 October 1984 None Rajiv Gandhi: 13 Rajiv II: 31 December 1984 1984: 14 Vishwanath: 2 December ...
The second National Commission on Labour (NCL) was set up on 15 October 1999 [4] under the chairmanship of Ravindra Varma which submitted its report to the then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee on 29 June 2002. [5] The first National Commission on Labour recommended that works committee be set up in any unit which has a recognized union.
India paid ₹ 176 crore (equivalent to ₹ 266 crore or US$31 million in 2023) to its 543 Lok Sabha members in salaries and expenses over 2015, or just over ₹ 2.7 lakh (equivalent to ₹ 4.1 lakh or US$4,700 in 2023) per month per member of parliament in including pensions to dependents of ex MPs . [12]