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Andhra Pradesh Legislative Council

Upper house of the Andhra Pradesh Legislature


Summary

Upper house of the Andhra Pradesh Legislature

FieldValue
background_color#036D33
nameAndhra Pradesh Legislative Council
native_nameĀndhra Pradēś Śāsana Maṇḍali
coa_picEmblem of Andhra Pradesh.svg
foundation1 July 1958 – 31 May 1982; 30 March 2007 – present
coa_res150px
house_typeUpper house
bodyAndhra Pradesh Legislature
term_limits6 years
leader1_typeGovernor
leader1Syed Abdul Nazeer
election124 February 2023
leader2_typeSecretary General
leader2Suryadevara Prasanna Kumar
election215 July 2024
leader3_typeChairperson
leader3Koyye Moshenu Raju
party3YSR Congress Party
election319 November 2021
leader4_typeDeputy Chairperson
leader4Mayana Zakia Khanam
party4BJP
election426 November 2021
leader5_typeLeader of the House
(Chief Minister)
leader5N. Chandrababu Naidu
party5Telugu Desam Party
election512 June
leader6_typeMinister of Legislative Affairs
leader6Payyavula Keshav
party6Telugu Desam Party
election612 June 2024
leader7_typeLeader of the Opposition
leader7Botsa Satyanarayana
party7YSR Congress Party
election722 Aug 2024
structure1India Andhra Pradesh Legislative Council 2025.svg
structure1_res300px
members58 (50 elected + 8 nominated)
voting_system1Single transferable vote
last_election13 March 2025
session_roomAndhra Pradesh Secretariat.jpg
session_res300px
meeting_placeCouncil Building
Amaravati, Andhra Pradesh, India
website

the upper house of Andhra Pradesh Legislature

(Chief Minister) 2024 Government (14) : Kutami (13) :* TDP (10) :* JSP (2) :* BJP (2) Official Opposition (34) : YSRCP (34) Other Opposition (5) : IND (5) Vacant (5) : Vacant (5) Amaravati, Andhra Pradesh, India

The Andhra Pradesh Legislative Council (Telugu: ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్ శాసన మండలి, ISO: Āndhra Pradēś Śāsana Maṇḍali) is the upper house of the bicameral legislature of the Indian state, Andhra Pradesh. It is situated in the state capital of Amaravati comprising a total of 58 seats. The Sasana Mandali has been in existence in two spells: from 1958 to 1985, and from 2007 continuing till today.

History

In the first years since its creation in post-independence India, the state of Andhra Pradesh worked under a unicameral parliamentary system. On 5 December 1956, the Andhra Pradesh Vidhana Sabha passed a resolution calling for the creation of an upper house, the Vidhan Parishad, to transition to a bicameral system. The members of the majority party/coalition in the lower house would be the ruling party of the upper house, regardless of number. The house will have a chairman who conducts day-to-day affairs, rather than a speaker. The Vidhan Parishad was formed officially on 1 July 1958 under article 169 of the Constitution of India. The first President of India, Rajendra Prasad inaugurated the Vidhan Parishad on 8 July 1958.

Abolition in 1985

In the 1980s, Andhra Pradesh became one of the first states to seek the abolition of the upper houses, which were being increasingly criticised as being unnecessary, unrepresentative of the population, a burden on the state budget and causing delays in passing legislation. However, the move was criticised by the opposition's as an attempt by the then-ruling party, the Telugu Desam Party (TDP), to deny their main political opposition, the Indian National Congress (I) of influence in the state government and the control of the upper house, which could delay TDP-sponsored legislation and where the TDP held no seats. In accordance with a resolution passed by the Andhra Pradesh Vidhan Sabha, the Indian Parliament abolished the Vidhan Parishad through the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Council (Abolition) Act in 1985, after the Congress (I) suffered a major defeat in the state elections in Andhra Pradesh.

Revival in 2007

Subsequent attempts were made to revive the Legislative Council under Chief Minister Marri Chenna Reddy, who belonged to the Congress (I), which had won the state elections in 1989. A resolution to revive the Legislative Council was passed in the Vidhan Sabha on 22 January 1990. The Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Indian Parliament, passed legislation authorising the revival of the Legislative Council as per the resolution of the state Vidhan Sabha on 28 May 1990, but the legislation stalled in the lower house, the Lok Sabha, primarily due to its dissolution in 1991 before the completion of its five-year term. The subsequent Lok Sabhas did not take any further decision or action.

After its victory in the 2004 state elections, the Congress-led Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly passed another resolution on 8 July 2004 calling for the revival of the Legislative Council. This time it was introduced in the Lok Sabha as the Andhra Pradesh Council Bill on 16 December 2004. On 15 December 2006 the Lok Sabha passed the legislation, which was quickly passed by the Rajya Sabha on 20 December, and received the assent of the President on 10 January 2007. The newly revived Legislative Council was constituted on 30 March 2007 and inaugurated on 2 April by Rameshwar Thakur, the Governor of Andhra Pradesh.

Second abolition proposed in 2020

The ruling YSR Congress Party made and passed the resolution for abolition of the Legislative Council in the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly on 27 January 2020 to make way for the YSRCP-sponsored capital decentralization bill which has been stalled by the opposition TDP which had majority in the council, as the chairman decided to send the two bills pertaining to the decentralization of the capital that are the Andhra Pradesh Decentralisation and Inclusive Development of All Regions Act, 2020 and the Andhra Pradesh Capital Region Development Authority Repeal Act, 2020 to a select committee.

The resolution was later withdrawn by the ruling YSRCP as it gained a majority by then in the council making a way to pass it's sponsored bills and with no response from the Parliament of India regarding the decision to abolish the council.

Composition

The chairman, elected by the council, presides over the sessions of the council. The deputy chairman is also elected to preside in the chairman's absence.

Presiding officers

DesignationName
GovernorSyed Abdul Nazeer
ChairpersonKoyye Moshenu Raju
(YSRCP)
Deputy ChairpersonMayana Zakia Khanam
(BJP)
Leader of the House
(Chief Minister)N. Chandrababu Naidu
(TDP)
Leader of the OppositionBotsa Satyanarayana
(YSRCP)

Members

PartyMembersTotal58
34
10
2
2
5
Vacant5

Members

Main article: List of members of the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Council

Elected by Members of the Legislative Assembly (20)

Keys:

#MemberPartyTerm startTerm end
1P. V. V. Suryanarayana Raju30-Mar-202329-Mar-2029
2Chandragiri Yesuratnam30-Mar-202329-Mar-2029
3Bommi Israel30-Mar-202329-Mar-2029
4Isaac Basha29-Nov-202128-Nov-2027
5Duvvada Srinivas30-Mar-202129-Mar-2027
6Devasani Chinna Govinda Reddy29-Nov-202128-Nov-2027
7Palavalasa Vikranth29-Nov-202128-Nov-2027
8Mohammed Ruhulla21-Mar-202229-Mar-2027
9Kavali Greeshma30-Mar-202529-Mar-2031
10Beedha Ravichandra30-Mar-202529-Mar-2031
11Bendula Thirumala Naidu30-Mar-202529-Mar-2031
12Panchumarthi Anuradha30 Mar 202329-Mar-2029
13Chennamsetty Ramachandraiah08-Jul-202429-Mar-2027
14Konidela Nagendra Rao30-Mar-202529-Mar-2031
15Pidugu Hariprasad08-Jul-202429-Mar-2027
16Somu Veerraju30-Mar-202529-Mar-2031
17Vacant since 19-Mar-202529-Mar-2029
18Vacant since 28-Aug-202429-Mar-2029
19Vacant since 23-Nov-202429-Mar-2029
20Vacant since 30-Aug-202429-Mar-2027

Elected from Local Authorities constituencies (20)

Keys:

#ConstituencyMemberPartyTerm startTerm end
1ChitoorCipai Subramanyam02-May-202301-May-2029
2East GodavariKudupudi Suryanarayana Rao02-May-202301-May-2029
3KurnoolAlampur Madhusudhan02-May-202301-May-2029
4SrikakulamNarthu Ramarao02-May-202301-May-2029
5NelloreMeriga Muralidhar02-May-202301-May-2029
6West GodavariKavuru Srinivasa Rao02-May-202301-May-2029
7West GodavariVanka Raveendranath02-May-202301-May-2029
8AnantpuramSanipalli Mangamma30 Mar 202329-Mar-2029
9KadapaPonnapureddy Rama Subba Reddy30 Mar 202329-Mar-2029
10AnantapuramYellareddygari Sivarami Reddy2-Dec-20211-Dec-2027
11ChitoorK. R. J. Bharath2-Dec-20211-Dec-2027
12East GodavariAnanta Satya Udaya Bhaskar2-Dec-20211-Dec-2027
13GunturMurugudu Hanumantha Rao2-Dec-20211-Dec-2027
14GunturUmmareddy Venkateswarlu2-Dec-20211-Dec-2027
15KrishnaMonditoka Arunkumar2-Dec-20211-Dec-2027
16KrishnaTalasila Raghuram2-Dec-20211-Dec-2027
17PrakasamTumati Madhava Rao2-Dec-20211-Dec-2027
18VisakhapatnamVarudu Kalyani2-Dec-20211-Dec-2027
19VisakhapatnamBotsa Satyanarayana21-Aug-20241-Dec-2027
20VizianagaramIndukuri Raghu Raju02-Dec-20211-Dec-2027

Elected from Graduates constituencies (5)

Keys:

#ConstituencyMemberPartyTerm startTerm end
1Srikakulam–Vizianagaram–VisakhapatnamVepada Chiranjeevi Rao30-Mar-202329-Mar-2029
2Prakasam-Nellore-ChittoorKancharla Srikanth30-Mar-202329-Mar-2029
3Kadapa–Anantapur–KurnoolBhumireddy Rama Gopal Reddy30-Mar-202329-Mar-2029
4East Godavari–West GodavariPerabathula Rajasekharam30-Mar-202529-Mar-2031
5Krishna-GunturAlapati Rajendra Prasad30-Mar-202529-Mar-2031

Elected from Teachers constituencies (5)

Keys:

#ConstituencyMemberPartyTerm startTerm end
1Prakasam-Nellore-ChittoorParvathareddy Chandra Sekhar ReddyIndependent politician}}"IND30-Mar-2023
2Kadapa-Kurnool-AnantapurM. V. Rama Chandra ReddyIndependent politician}}"IND30-Mar-2023
3East Godavari-West GodavariBorra Gopi MurthyIndependent politician}}"IND09-Dec-2024
4Krishna-GunturTamatam KalpalathaIndependent politician}}"IND30-Mar-2021
5Srikakulam-Vizianagaram-VisakhapatnamGade Srinivasulu NaiduIndependent politician}}"IND30-Mar-2025

Nominated by Governor (8)

Keys:

#MemberPartyTerm startTerm end
1Kumbha Ravibabu10-Aug-202309-Aug-2029
2Vacant since 30-Aug-202409-Aug-2029
3Rajagolla Ramesh Yadav16-Jun-202115-Jun-2027
4Koyye Moshenu Raju16-Jun-202115-Jun-2027
5Lella Appi Reddy16-Jun-202115-Jun-2027
6Thota Trimurthulu16-Jun-202115-Jun-2027
7Pandula Ravindra Babu28-Jul-202027-Jul-2026
8Mayana Zakia Khanam28-Jul-202027-Jul-2026

References

References

  1. (22 August 2024). "ANDHRA PRADESH LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL - Recognition as Leader of Opposition in the Council - Notified.".
  2. (2023-01-06). "YSRCP all set to capture 23 Upper House seats this year".
  3. "Andhra Pradesh Legislative Council History". National Informatics Centre.
  4. Sharma. (2009). "Introduction to the Constitution of India, Fifth Edition". PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd..
  5. Laxmikanth. (2010). "Indian Polity For UPSC 3E". Tata McGraw-Hill.
  6. Agarala Easwara Reddy. (1994). "State politics in India: reflections on Andhra Pradesh". M.D. Publications Pvt. Ltd..
  7. (2021-11-23). "Andhra Assembly withdraws resolution to abolish Legislative Council".
  8. (2020-01-23). "YSRCP leaders stage protest against Chandrababu Naidu in Visakhapatnam".
  9. (2020-01-28). "Andhra Pradesh assembly passes resolution to abolish Legislative Council". The Economic Times.
  10. Lasania, Yunus Y.. (2020-01-23). "YSR Congress may check opposition to Andhra's decentralization plan next week".
  11. (2020-01-27). "Andhra Pradesh moves to scrap Vidhan Parishad — why some states have Legislative Council".
  12. (2021-11-24). "Andhra Pradesh passes resolution to keep legislative council".
  13. (2021-11-23). "CM Jaganmohan Reddy withdraws decision to scrap Andhra Pradesh legislative council".
  14. (2021-11-23). "Andhra Assembly withdraws resolution to abolish Legislative Council".
  15. "Member's Information - Legislative Council - Liferay DXP".
  16. "WHAT IS LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL". Business Standard India.
  17. Arikatla, Venkat. (2025-03-19). "Marri Rajasekhar quits YSRCP, MLC post!".
  18. (2024-08-29). "YSRCP women’s wing chief Sunitha resign".
  19. (2024-11-23). "YSRCP suffers jolt as MLC Venkata Ramana resigns from party, post".
  20. Service, Express News. (2024-08-31). "Andhra Pradesh: Two more YSRC MLCs submit resignation".
  21. (1 December 2025). "Six MLCs press Council Chairman to act on long-pending resignations; one withdraws her request".
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