Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/india

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Fourth Jayalalithaa ministry

Government of Tamil Nadu, India from 2011 to 2014

Fourth Jayalalithaa ministry

Government of Tamil Nadu, India from 2011 to 2014

FieldValue
cabinet_typeMinistry
cabinet_number15th
jurisdictionTamil Nadu
flagFile:Flag of India.svg
flag_bordertrue
imageJ Jayalalithaa.jpg
captionJ. Jayalalithaa
date_formed16 May 2011
date_dissolved27 September 2014
government_headJ. Jayalalithaa
state_headGovernor Surjit Singh Barnala
political_partiesAIADMK
legislature_statusMajority
opposition_partyDMDK
opposition_leaderVijayakanth
election2011
last_election2006
legislature_term5 Years
incoming_formation14th Tamil Nadu Assembly
outgoing_formation13th Tamil Nadu Assembly
previousFifth Karunanidhi ministry
successorSecond Panneerselvam ministry

The Fourteenth legislative assembly election was held on 13 April 2011 to elect members from 234 constituencies in Tamil Nadu. Results were released on 13 May 2011. Two major parties Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) and All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) faced the election as coalitions of multiple parties with the DMK front consisting of 8 parties and the AIADMK of 11 parties. AIADMK front won the election, winning in 203 constituencies, with the AIADMK party itself winning 150 seats thus securing a simple majority to be able to form the government without the support of its coalition partners.

Cabinet ministers

S.noNameConstituencyDesignationPortfoliosParty
Chief Minister
1.J. JayalalithaaSrirangamChief MinisterAIADMK
Cabinet Ministers
2.O. PanneerselvamBodinayakkanurMinister for FinanceAIADMK
3.Edappadi PalaniswamiEdappadiMinister for Highways and Minor Ports
4.Sellur K. RajuMadurai WestMinister for Co-operation
5.Natham R. ViswanathanNathamMinister for Electricity, Prohibition and Excise
6.K. P. MunusamyKrishnagiriMinister for Municipal Administration, Rural Development and Implementation of Special Programme
7.K.A. JayapalNagapattinamMinister for Fisheries
8.P. PalaniappanPappireddipattiMinister for Higher Education
9.B. ValarmathiThousand LightsMinister for Social Welfare and Nutritious Noon Meal Programme
10.P. ThangamaniKumarapalayamMinister for Industries
11.N. D. VenkatachalamPerunduraiMinister for Revenue
12.R. KamarajKrishnarayapuramMinister for Food and Civil Supplies
13.S. SundararajParamakudiMinister for Handlooms and Textiles
14.S. Gokula IndiraAnna NagarMinister for Tourism
15.R. VaithilingamOrathanaduMinister for Housing and Urban Development
16.V. S. VijayVelloreMinister for Health
17.K.T. Rajenthra BhalajiSivakasiMinister for Information and Special Programme Implementation
18.V. MoorthyMadavaramMinister for Milk and Dairy Development
19.B. V. RamanaaThiruvallurMinister for Commercial Taxes and Registration
20.M.C. SampathCuddaloreMinister for Environment
21.P. MohanSankarapuramMinister for Rural Industries
22.N. R. SivapathiMusiriMinister for School Education and Sports and Youth Welfare, Law, Courts and Prisons
23.V. Senthil BalajiKarurMinister for Transport
24.Mukkur N. SubramanianCheyyarMinister for Information Technology
25.N. SubramanianGandharvakottaiMinister for Adi Dravidar and Tribal Welfare
26.A. Mohammed JohnRanipetMinister for Backward Classes and Minorities Welfare
27.T.K.M. ChinnayyaTambaramMinister for Animal Husbandry
28.S. DamodaranKinathukadavuMinister for Agriculture
29.K. T. PachaimalKanyakumariMinister for Forests
30.K. V. RamalingamErode (West)Minister for Public Works
31.S. T. ChellapandianThoothukkudiMinister for Labour
32.M. S. M. AnandanTiruppur (North)Minister for Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments
33.P. Chendur PandianKadayanallurMinister for Khadi and Village Industries

Swearing-in

Jayalalitha submitted her unanimous election as the leader of ADMK legislature party to Governor Surjit Singh Barnala on 15 May 2011. She was sworn-in as Chief Minister along with 33 other ministers at the Madras University centenary auditorium on 16 May 2011 by the Governor, the same venue she took oath in 1991 when she first became chief minister. She and all other ministers took oath in Tamil. The ceremony was attended by then Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, former Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu, Communist Party of India (CPI) General Secretary A. B. Bardhan and Rashtriya Lok Dal Chief Ajit Singh among others.

Achievements

Relocation of assembly building

Jayalalithaa along with her council of ministers during the occasion of the completion of one year in office after 2011 victory

In one of the first actions following her re-election as the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, Jayalaitha proceeded to relocate the assembly and secretariat from the newly constructed building back to Fort St. George. The assembly building was constructed during M. Karunanidhi's tenure and costed over 1000 crores of rupees. This move was opposed by Pattali Makkal Katchi, Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and Dravidar Kazhagam. A public interest litigation has been filed in Chennai high court by lawyer G. Krishnamoorthy alleging that the relocation was against public interest and unmindful of the large amount of tax money used for the construction of the new building.

Amma Unavagam

In February 2013, Jayalalithaa Government inaugurated the state-run Subsidised food programme called Amma Unavagam (Amma Canteen), which was later praised by economist and Nobel laureate Amartya Sen in his book An Uncertain Glory – India and its Contradictions and inspired by many states in India. The Scheme was also lauded by Egypt in 2014. Under the scheme, municipal corporations of the state-run canteens serving subsidised food at low prices.

Amma Branded Schemes

The plenty of populist schemes such as Amma Kudineer (bottled mineral water), 'Amma' Salt, 'Amma' Medical Shops, and 'Amma' Cement were also implemented.

In 2015, The Government launched 'Amma baby care kit' scheme where every mother who gave birth in the government hospital gets 16 types of products.

Tamizhaga arasu madikanini thittam

Tamizhaga arasu madikanini thittam is a scheme in Tamil Nadu to distribute free laptops to students of secondary schools and colleges. The scheme was implemented beginning in September 2011 to fulfill a campaign promise of Chief Minister Jayalalithaa of the AIADMK.

ContentSpecification
ProcessorIntel Pentium dual-core processor
Operating systemWindows 7 & Linux BOSS 4.0
Size14-inch display
Weight2.7 kg
Physical memory2 GB RAM
HDD320 GB
WarrantyOne year

Other Achievements

The Government also announced the Pension Scheme for Destitute Transgender by which those above ages of 40 could get a monthly pension of Rs.1,000. Jayalalithaa government ensured members of the transgender community could enrol for education and job. Beginning from 2011, every year Jayalalithaa government gave free laptops to students who clear tenth and twelfth standard to impart digital education to rural areas. The government in 2011 decided to give four goats and a cow to each family below poverty line — mixer and grinders and fans for households, 3 sets of free uniforms, school, bags, notebooks, geometry boxes for all children in government schools, and cycles and laptops for Class 11 and 12 students. In 2011 It launched the marriage assistance scheme wherein the female students received 4 gram gold free for use as Thirumangalyam for their marriage and cash assistance up to Rs.50,000 for undergraduate or diploma holding females. There were rampant power cut issues between 2006 and 2011 while AIADMK was in opposition wherein for 10 to 15 hours there was no supply of electricity. However, after Jayalalithaa regained power, between 2011 and 2015, The state government corrected all the discrepancies of previous DMK regime such that the Central Electricity Authority in 2016 said the state is expected to have 11,649 million units of surplus power. Tamil Nadu became among the power surplus states while Jayalalithaa was chief minister in this term. In the government ensured the wrongfully usurped property by land grabbing during 2006 to 2011 in the previous DMK regime, had been retrieved and handed over to rightful owners between 2011 and 2015.

Jayalalithaa Government announced in 2012, the Vision 2023 document which embodied a strategic plan for infrastructure development which included raising the per capita income of residents to $10,000 per annum, matching Human Development Index to that of developed countries by 2023, providing high-quality infrastructure all over the State, making Tamil Nadu the knowledge capital and innovation hub of India. This project had three components — Overall Vision Document, Compilation of Project Profile and Road Map. The work on this continued under her supervision until her death. She inaugurated 'Amma health insurance scheme' in 2012.

Reshuffles

References

References

  1. (16 May 2011). "Jayalalithaa to be sworn in today". The Hindu.
  2. (17 May 2011). "Jayalalithaa sworn in Tamil Nadu Chief Minister". The Hindu.
  3. (17 May 2011). "தலைமைச் செயலகத்தை இடம் மாற்றக் கூடாது: ராமதாஸ்". Dinamani.
  4. (17 May 2011). "MDMK, Dravida Kazhagam oppose shifting of Assembly". The Hindu.
  5. (17 May 2011). "PIL plea seeks directive to stop shifting of the Assembly". The Hindu.
  6. [[Jean Drèze]]. (11 August 2013). "An Uncertain Glory India and Its Contradictions". [[Princeton University Press]].
  7. (25 March 2020). "In Lockdown, Tamil Nadu's Amma Canteens Rise to the Occasion". [[The Wire (India).
  8. (13 August 2013). "Amma canteens and Amartya Sen". [[The Hindu]].
  9. "Tamil Nadu's Amma canteen concept catches on in other states". [[Mint (newspaper).
  10. (1 June 2014). "Egypt comes calling at Amma Canteen". [[The Hindu]].
  11. (1 June 2014). "Fame of Amma canteens head to Egypt". [[India TV]].
  12. (24 February 2013). "New budget restaurants to be renamed Amma Unavagam". [[The Hindu]].
  13. (7 September 2013). "Taste Amma mineral water at Rs. 10 in Chennai". The Hindu.
  14. (11 June 2014). "Now comes 'Amma Salt'". The Hindu.
  15. (26 June 2014). "Jaya Launches 'Amma' Medical Shops". Outlook.
  16. "Tamil Nadu govt launches 'Amma Cement'". The Hindu.
  17. (8 September 2015). "TN CM launches 'Amma baby care Kit' scheme". Business standard.
  18. (6 December 2016). "The many things Amma was: List of schemes implemented by Jayalalithaa". Business standard.
  19. (25 September 2011). "An excellent scheme". [[The Hindu]].
  20. (12 September 2011). "TN Govt's laptop scheme to be implemented this week". [[The Hindu]].
  21. (2 August 2012). "Transgenders to get Rs 1,000 monthly pension". The Times of India.
  22. (14 February 2016). "Free laptop Scheme Tamil Nadu". Startupindiascheme.
  23. Janardhanan, Arun. (19 May 2016). "The Jayalalithaa model works: Power to the people and freebies for the poor". The Indian Express.
  24. (7 June 2011). "Revised marriage aid scheme launched". The Hindu.
  25. (3 August 2016). "There is no magic in Tamil Nadu being a power surplus state, Jayalalithaa says". timesofindia.
  26. (9 September 2015). "Tamil Nadu on verge of becoming power surplus state: CM Jayalalithaa". economictimes.
  27. (9 July 2016). "TN govt seek PM's help for evacuation of surplus wind power". indianexpress.
  28. (13 May 2016). "Jayalalithaa's achievements over the last few years". Thehansindia.com.
  29. "'Vision 2023' has achievable components: Jayalalithaa". The Hindu.
  30. (11 January 2012). "Chief Minister's comprehensive health insurance scheme launched". The Hindu.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Fourth Jayalalithaa ministry — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report