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Tamil Nadu Gazette is a public journal of the Government of Tamil Nadu, [1] published weekly by the Department of Stationery and Printing. [2] As a public journal, the Gazette prints official notices from the government. The gazette is printed by the Government of Tamil Nadu Press.
University Name Act Name Act No Year Tamil Nadu Government Related Web Links Other Web Links 1: Alagappa University: The Alagappa University Act, 1985: 23 of 1985: 1985 [2] 2: Anna University: The Anna University Act, 1978: 30 of 1978: 1978 [3] [4] [5] 3: Annamalai University: The Annamalai University Act, 1928: 1 of 1929: 1929 [6] [7] [8] 4 ...
Tamil Nadu's Tamil Official Language and Tamil Culture Minister K Pandiarajan have announced that the anglicised names of around 3,000 places in the State would be changed into Tamil. The names of places in Tamil will be transliterated into English. [1] [2] The renaming of places has come into effect by a G.O. passed by Govt. of Tamil Nadu. The ...
This SBSEBHSE was passed by the Tamil Nadu of Government (தமிழ்நாடு அரசிதழ்) in its gazette notification in 2011. [7] [8] [9] This state board of school examinations(sec.) & board of higher secondary examinations, board combines two boards. Tamil Nadu State Board is one of the oldest boards of India. [10] [11]
The Tamil Nadu Council of Ministers is the executive wing of the Government of Tamil Nadu and is headed by the State's Chief Minister M. K. Stalin, who is the head of government and leader of the state cabinet. The current state council of ministers were sworn in on 7 May 2021, following the 2021 Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly election. [1]
Power is divided between the Union government (federal government) and the state governments. The federal government appoints a Governor for each state, who serves as the ceremonial head of state, and a Lieutenant Governor (or Administrator) for certain union territories, whose powers vary depending on the specific union territory.
The Governor is the de jure constitutional head of state while the Chief Minister is the de facto chief executive.The governor is appointed by the President of India.Following elections to the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly, the state's governor usually invites the party (or coalition) with a majority of seats to form the government.
Since 1952, Tamil Nadu has had 12 chief ministers, 13 including V. R. Nedunchezhiyan, who twice acted in the role. The longest-serving chief minister, M. Karunanidhi from Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam held the office for over eighteen years in multiple tenures, while he was the one who had the largest gap between two terms (nearly thirteen years).