1957 Madras State Legislative Assembly election
{{Short description|none}}
{{Use Indian English|date=February 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2014}}
{{Infobox election
| election_name = 1957 Madras Legislative Assembly election
| country = India
| type = parliamentary
| ongoing = no
| previous_election = 1952 Madras Legislative Assembly election
| previous_year = 1952
| next_election = 1962 Madras Legislative Assembly election
| next_year = 1962
| election_date = {{Start date|1957|03|31|df=yes}}
| seats_for_election = All 205 seats in the Legislature of Madras State
| image1 = {{CSS image crop|Image=K Kamaraj 1976 stamp of India (cropped).jpg|bSize=100|cWidth=100|cHeight=120|oLeft=0|oTop=02}}
| leader1 = K. Kamaraj
| party1 = Indian National Congress
| leaders_seat1 = Sattur
| seats1 = 151
| popular_vote1 = 5,046,576
| percentage1 = 45.34%
| swing1 = {{increase}} 10.46%
| image2 = {{CSS image crop|Image=Chakravarthi Rajagopalachari.jpg|bSize=100|cWidth=100|cHeight=120|oLeft=0|oTop=02}}
| leader2 = C. Rajagopalachari
| leaders_seat2 = MLC
| party2 = Indian National Democratic Congress
| seats2 = 26
| seat_change2 = New Party
| popular_vote2 = Contested as Independents
| percentage2 = Contested as Independents
| swing2 = Contested as Independents
| title = Chief Minister
| posttitle = Chief Minister
| before_election = K. Kamaraj
| before_party = Indian National Congress
| after_election = K. Kamaraj
| after_party = Indian National Congress
| majority_seats = 103
| party3 = Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam
| image3 = {{CSS image crop|Image=CN_Annadurai.jpg|bSize=100|cWidth=100|cHeight=120|oLeft=0|oTop=02}}
| leader3 = C. N. Annadurai
| leaders_seat3 = Kancheepuram
(won)
| seats3 = 15
| seat_change3 = boycotted
| popular_vote3 = Contested as Independents
| percentage3 = Contested as Independents
| swing3 = Contested as Independents
}}
The second legislative assembly election to the Madras state (presently Tamil Nadu) was held on 31 March 1957. This was the first election held after the linguistic reorganisation of Madras State in 1956. Indian National Congress and its leader, K. Kamaraj won the election and defeated their rival, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam. In 1954, due to the resignation of C. Rajagopalachari, for his controversial Kula Kalvi Thittam, the leadership of Congress was contested between K. Kamaraj, and C. Subramaniam (who got the support of M. Bhaktavatsalam). Eventually, K. Kamaraj, won the support of the party, was elected leader and chief minister of Madras State in 1954. In a surprise move, he appointed both M. Bhaktavatsalam and C. Subramaniam, to his cabinet, allowing great unity amongst the Congress that ruled the state of Madras, for the next decade. This election saw future DMK leaders M. Karunanidhi and K. Anbazhagan win their first MLA seats in the legislative assembly.[http://www.assembly.tn.gov.in/disp_ind.asp?prof_id=34 Tamil Nadu Government website]
Delimitation and reorganisation
On 1 October 1953, a separate Andhra State consisting of the Telugu-speaking areas of the composite Madras State was formed, and the Kannada-speaking area of Bellary District was merged with the then Mysore State. This reduced the strength of the Legislative Assembly to 231.
On 1 November 1956, the States Reorganisation Act 1956 took effect, and consequently, the constituencies in the erstwhile Malabar district were merged with the Kerala State. This further reduced the strength to 190. The Tamil-speaking area of Kerala (present-day Kanyakumari district) and Shenkottah taluk were added to Madras State.{{cite web | url=http://www.epw.in/system/files/pdf/1955_7/42/reorganisation_of_statesthe_approach_and_arrangements.pdf | title=Reorganisation of States, 1955 | publisher=The Economic Weekly | date=15 October 1955 | access-date=25 July 2015}}
According to the new Delimitation of Parliamentary and Assembly Constituencies Order 1956, made by the Delimitation Commission of India under the provisions of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, the strength of the Madras Legislative Assembly was increased to 205. The 1957 elections were conducted for these 205 seats. In 1959, as a result of The Andhra Pradesh and Madras (Alteration of Boundaries) Act 1959, one member of the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly was allotted to Madras, increasing its Legislative Assembly strength to 206.
Two-member constituencies
Out of the total 167 constituencies in the state, 38 were two-member constituencies, 37 of which had one reserved for Scheduled caste candidates and one for Scheduled tribe candidates.[http://www.assembly.tn.gov.in/history/history.htm The State Legislature - Origin and Evolution] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100413233934/http://www.assembly.tn.gov.in/history/history.htm |date=13 April 2010 }} These constituencies were larger in size and had a greater number of voters (more than 1,00,000){{Cite web |url=http://164.100.47.132/lssnew/constituent/vol4p5.pdf |title=Constituent Assembly of India Debates Vol IV, Friday 18 July 1947 |access-date=10 November 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110703135909/http://164.100.47.132/lssnew/constituent/vol4p5.pdf |archive-date=3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }} when compared to general constituencies. Two separate lists of candidates, a general list and a reserved list, are contested in those constituencies. Each voter had to cast two votes, one for each list.
The two winners were chosen as follows:
- Reserved Member: Candidate with the most votes among the reserved (SC/ST) list candidates
- General Member: Candidate with the most votes among the rest of the candidates, excluding the Reserved Member (including both reserved and general lists).
This system led to anomalies. In some cases, like the Coimbatore-II constituency in the 1957 election, both elected members belonged to the reserved list; the candidate with the second highest number of votes in the reserved list secured more votes than the highest vote-getter in the general list. Multiple members were elected only in the 1952 and 1957 elections, as double-member representation was abolished in 1961 by the enactment of the Two-Member Constituencies Abolition Act, 1961.{{cite book | first1=Zoya| last1=Hasan | first2=Eswaran| last2=Sridharan| first3=R| last3=Sudharshan| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Zgt2JdUrsHUC | year= 2005| title=India's living constitution: ideas, practices, controversies| publisher= Anthem Press| isbn =978-1-84331-136-2| pages=360–63}}
Parties and issues
Indian National Congress, Communist Party of India, Forward Bloc, Praja Socialist Party, Socialist Party, Congress Reform Committee (Indian National Democratic Congress), and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) were the major parties contesting this election. This was the first election contested by the DMK since its formation in 1949. The decision to contest elections was taken in 1956 at the party's Trichy conference. The party fielded its candidates in 8 parliamentary and 117 assembly seats as independents since it was not an officially recognised party.{{cite book|title=The success of India's democracy|author=Kohli|first=Atul|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2001|isbn=0-521-80530-9|page=89|author-link=Atul Kohli}} The increased Tamilian character of the Congress party after the appointment of K. Kamaraj, a non-Brahman, as Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, robbed DMK of its main electoral plank as the sole proponent of Tamil nationalism. It increasingly changed its focus to economic issues and the slower industrialization of the South as an election issue. The DMK election manifesto had a socialist image, and the creation of Dravida Nadu became a side issue as it implicitly accepted the prevailing constitutional order.{{cite journal | title=The DMK and the Politics of Tamil Nationalism| author=Robert L. Hardgrave Jr. | journal=Pacific Affairs| year=1964–1965| volume=37|issue=4| pages=396–411| jstor=2755132| doi=10.2307/2755132}}{{Cite journal| first = R.|last=Manivannan| title =1991 Tamil Nadu Elections: Issues, Strategies and Performance| journal = Economic and Political Weekly| volume = 27| issue = 4| pages = 164–170| date = 25 January 1992| jstor =4397536}}
Periyar E. V. Ramasamy issued a statement in support of K. Kamaraj before the commencement of the election. In October 1956, the central executive of Dravidar Kazhagam resolved to support K. Kamaraj.{{cite journal | title=Urban Life and Populist Radicalism: Dravidian Politics in Madras| author=Lloyd I. Rudolph| journal=The Journal of Asian Studies| date=May 1961| volume=20|issue=3| pages=283–297| jstor=2050816| doi=10.2307/2050816| s2cid=145124008}}
Since Mr. Kamaraj has done his best to serve the Tamilians, since he has changed Acharyar's educational system designed to perpetuate the caste system, since he has conferred many jobs and many benefits on Tamilians in the educational and other spheres and since the Brahman and DMK people are trying to oust him from power, it has become the duty of all Tamilians to support Mr. Kamaraj and his followers in the electionThe Hindu (10 October 1956)
K. Kamaraj accepted the support of Dravidar Kazhagam and said if the Kazhagam canvassed votes for him out of their own free will, he could not possibly tell them he did not want their votes. He also made it clear that the Congress party cannot support a party that is communal in nature, and he did not in any way share E. V. Ramasamy's views.The Hindu (6 March 1957)
K. Kamaraj's decision to accept support and provide candidature to some former members of Dravidar Kazhagam caused division within Congress, resulting in a new party called the Congress Reform Committee (CRC). Though the party was created in the last moment, it fielded candidates in 12 parliamentary and 55 assembly seats.{{Citation| last = James R. Roach| title = India's 1957 elections| journal = Far Eastern Survey| volume = 26| issue = 5| pages = 65–78| date = May 1957| jstor = 3024537| doi=10.2307/3024537}}
Voting and results
Source: Election Commission of India
{{election table|title=Summary of results of the 1957 Madras Legislative Assembly election{{cite web | url=http://eci.nic.in/eci_main/StatisticalReports/SE_1957/StatRep_Madras_1957.pdf | title=Statistical Report on General Election, 1957 : To the Legislative Assembly of Madras | publisher=Election Commission of India | access-date=2015-07-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130127200447/https://eci.gov.in/eci_main/StatisticalReports/SE_1957/StatRep_Madras_1957.pdf |archive-date=27 Jan 2013}} |sortable=yes}}
!colspan=9|File:India Madras Legislative Assembly 1957.svg
|- style="background-color:#E9E9E9; text-align:center;"
! class="unsortable" |
! Political party !! Flag !! Seats
Contested !! Won !! % of
Seats
! Votes !! Vote % !! Change in
vote %
|- style="background: #90EE90;"
| {{party color cell|Indian National Congress}}
| style="text-align:left;" |Indian National Congress
| 204 || 151 ({{decrease}}1) || 73.66 || 50,46,576 || 45.34 || {{increase}} 10.46
|-
| {{party color cell|Communist Party of India}}
| style="text-align:left;" |Communist Party of India
| 35px
| 58 || 4 ({{decrease}}58) || 1.95 || 8,23,582 || 7.40 || {{decrease}} 5.78
|-
| {{party color cell|Praja Socialist Party}}
| style="text-align:left;" |Praja Socialist Party
|35px
| 23 || 2 (New) || 0.98 || 2,93,778 || 2.64 || New
|-
| {{Party name with colour|Independent politician}}
|
| 602 || 48 ({{decrease}} 14) || 23.41 || 49,67,060 || 44.62 || N/A
|- class="unsortable" style="background-color:#E9E9E9"
! colspan = 3|
! style="text-align:center;" |Total Seats !! 205 ({{decrease}}170) !! style="text-align:center;" |Voters !! 2,39,05,575 !! style="text-align:center;" |Turnout !! colspan = 2|1,11,30,996 (46.56%)
|}
DMK was not officially recognised as a party by the Election Commission of India until 1962, so it was registered as an independent party. The Congress Reform Committee was the second and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam was the third party in the assembly. Congress won 45% of the vote, the CRC 8%, and the DMK 14%.
= By constituency =
class="wikitable" |
style="background-color:#ADD8E6"|*
|Elected as Chief Minister of Madras State |
style="background-color:#FFE6E6"|**
|DMK Candidates contesting as independents |
class="wikitable sortable" border="1"
!S.No ! Constituency ! Winner ! Party ! Runner Up ! Party |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Madras City |
--
|1 |INC |N. Jeevarathnam | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|2 |INC |G. Rajamannar Chettiar |PSP |
--
|3 |T. N. Anandanayaki |INC | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|4 |1) Pakkiriswami Pillai | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |2) T. S. Govindaswamy |INC |
--
|5 | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |K. Venkatasamy Naidu |INC |
--
|6 | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |Radhakrishnan |INC |
--
|7 |INC |Appadurai | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|8 |INC |Kumari S. Vijayalakshmi |PSP |
--
|9 |K. Vinayakam |INC |A. S. Jesupatham | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Chingleput |
--
|10 |1) O. Venkatasubba Reddy |INC |2) O.N. Doraibabu |IND |
--
|11 |1) Muthuswamy Naicker |INC |3) Ramachandran |IND |
--
|12 |A. S. Doraiswami Reddiar |INC |N. P. Loganathan | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|13 |1) V. Govindasami Naidu |INC |3) T. Shanmugam | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|14 |Kamalambuiammal |INC |Venugopal Reddy |IND |
--
|15 |1) Eakambara Mudaly |INC |3) N. Govindasamy Naidu |IND |
--
|16 |INC |C. V. M. Annamalai | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|17 |IND |K. Duraiswamy Nayagar |INC |
--
|18 |C. N. Annadurai[https://eci.gov.in/files/file/4101-madras-1957/?do=download&csrfKey=602931eeaba39df88e6fdb48ddf4d311 1957 Madras State Election Results, Election Commission of India] ' | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |P. S. Srinivasan |INC |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|North Arcot |
--
|19 |INC |Thomas |IND |
--
|20 |B. Bhakthavatsalu Naidu |INC |M. Subramanian Naicker |IND |
--
|21 |P. Ramachandran |INC |V. Darmalinga Nayagar |IND |
--
|22 |1) M. Ramachandra Reddy |INC |2) A. Dharma Gounder |IND |
--
|23 |S. Khader Sheriff |INC |Lachaumanan | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|24 |Chandrasekara Naicker |INC |R. A. Subhaan |IND |
--
|25 |1) V. K. Kothandaraman |CPI |3) Venkatachalam |INC |
--
|26 |IND |Sundara Gounder |CPI |
--
|27 |1) V. K. Krishnamurthy |INC |2) Sampangi Naidu |IND |
--
|28 |Arni |P. Doraisamy Reddiar |IND |V. K. Kannan |INC |
--
|29 |S. M. Annamalai |IND |T. B. Kesava Reddiar |IND |
--
|30 |INC |S. Murugan |IND |
--
|31 |1) P. U. Shanmugham | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |3) V. K. Annamalai Gounder |INC |
--
|32 |T. Karia Goundar |INC |R. Venkatachala Mudaliar |IND |
--
|33 |A. A. Rasheed |INC |M. P. Vadivelu Gounder | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|34 |R. C. Samanna Gounder |INC |Natesa Pillai | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Salem |
--
|35 |1) P. M. Munusami Gounder |INC |3) T. Ponnusamy |IND |
--
|36 |S. Nagaraja Manigar |INC |N. Mohanram |IND |
--
|37 |Muni Reddi |IND |Venkatakrishna Desai |INC |
--
|38 |K. Appavoo Pillai |IND |INC |
--
|39 |Hemalatha Devi |INC |D. K. Gorunatha Chettiar |IND |
--
|40 |M. Kandasami Kandar |INC |R. S. Veerappa Chetty |IND |
--
|41 |1) S. Andi Goundan |INC |3) Raja Paul David |IND |
--
|42 |INC | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|43 |A. Rathnavel Gounder |INC |S. M. Ramiah |CPI |
--
|44 |INC |Chelliah |IND |
--
|45 |INC |Chinnappan |IND |
--
|46 |K. S. Ardhanareeswara Gounder |INC |Surendiran |PSP |
--
|47 |INC | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |R. Thandavan |IND |
--
|48 |1) T. M. Kaliannan |INC |3) Rangasamy Gounder |IND |
--
|49 |1) P. Kolanda Gounder |INC |2) V. Kaliappan |IND |
--
|50 |T. Sivagnanam Pillai |INC |Somasundara Gounder |IND |
--
|51 |A. Raja Gounder |INC |K. V. K. Ramaswamy |IND |
--
|52 |1) Irusappan | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |3) A. Sambasiva Reddiar |INC |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|South Arcot |
--
|53 |1) Nataraja Odayar |IND |2) Parthasarathy |INC |
--
|54 |1) S. A. M. Annamalai Odayar |IND |2) Lakshmi Narasamma |INC |
--
|55 |IND |K. Aranganathan |INC |
--
|56 |M. Jangal Reddiar |IND |V. Gopal Gounder |IND |
--
|57 |1) P. Veerappa Gounder |IND |3) Venugopal Gounder |INC |
--
|58 |A. Govindasami Nayagar |IND |K. M. Krishna Gounder |INC |
--
|59 |Sarangapani Gounder |INC |Shanmuga Udayar | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|60 |INC |Manonmani Ammal |IND |
--
|61 |INC |Sambandan |IND |
--
|62 |1) Sivachidambara Ramasamy Padayachi |INC |2) Krishnamoorthy Gounder |IND |
--
|63 |Vedamanickam |IND |K. S. Venkatakrishna Reddiar |IND |
--
|64 |IND |G. Rajavelu Padayachi |INC |
--
|65 |Samikannu Padayachi |INC |R. Balagurusamy | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|66 |1) G. Vagheesam Pillai |INC |3) Chokalingam |IND |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Tanjore |
--
|67 |1) C. Muthia Pillai |INC |3) K. Sami Durai Annangar |CPI |
--
|68 |1) G. Narayanasami Naidu |INC |3) M. Kathamuthu |
--
|69 |1) M. D. Thiagaraja Pillai |INC |3) S. Arunachalam Pillai |CPI |
--
|70 |N. S. Ramalingam |INC |CPI |
--
|71 |1) V. Vedayyan |INC |3) C. Kandasamy |CPI |
--
|72 |INC |S. K. Sivanada Saluvar |IND |
--
|73 |INC |Mohammed Amirdeen |IND |
--
|74 |T. Sambath |INC |Neelamegham | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|75 |Karunagiri Muthaiah |INC |P. Poonambala Gounder |IND |
--
|76 |INC |D. Pakshiraja Moovarayar |IND |
--
|77 |INC |R. Gopalakrishnan |IND |
--
|78 |Krishnasami Gopalar |INC |Ramachandra Dorai |IND |
79
|PSP |N. Sunderasa Thevar |INC |
--
|80 |R. Srinivasa Ayyar |INC |V. Arunachala Thevar |bgcolor=#FFE6E6|IND |
--
|81 |S. Ramasami Thevar |IND |Muthuvel Ambalam |INC |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Tiruchirappalli |
--
|82 |V. Ramiah |INC |Muthuvairava Ambalagarar |IND |
--
|83 |1) Arunachala Thevar |INC |Subbiah |IND |
--
|84 |Annamalai Muthuraja |INC |E. P. Mathuram |IND |
--
|85 |E. P. Mathuram |IND |T. Durairaj Pillai |INC |
--
|86 |CPI |Subburethinam |INC |
--
|87 |K. Vasudevan |INC |Chitrambalam |IND |
--
|88 |S. Lazar |INC | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|89 |Subbiah |INC |Ramasamy |IND |
--
|90 |INC |Jayaramulu Chettiar |IND |
--
|91 |Ramalinga Padayachi |INC |Narayanan |IND |
--
|92 |1) Krishnasami |INC |2) Raja Chidambaram |IND |
--
|93 |1) V. A. Muthaiya |INC |3) M. P. Muthukaruppan |IND |
--
|94 |INC |K. S. Ramasami |CPI |
--
|95 |INC |N. Rathinam | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|96 | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |K. A. Dharmalingam |INC |
--
|97 |1) Venkitachala Nattar |INC |3) Haritharanathan |IND |
--
|98 |N. P. M. Chinnaya Kavundar |INC |A. Rajagopal Pillai |IND |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Ramanathapuram |
--
|99 |N. V. Chockalingam |INC |S. Shanmugam |CPI |
--
|100 |INC |Ganesan Saw |IND |
--
|101 |D. Subramania Rajkumar |IND |Saminathan |INC |
--
|102 |KR. RM. Kariamanickamambalam |IND |S. Ramakrishnathevar |INC |
--
|103 |INC |S. Alagu |IND |
--
|104 |K. Ramachandran |IND |G. Govindan |INC |
--
|105 |R. Shanmuga Rajeshwara Sethupathi |IND |G. Mangalasamy |CPI |
--
|106 |1) U. Muthuramalinga Thevar |IND |3) Chinniah |INC |
--
|107 |IND |A. V. Thiruppathi |INC |
-- bgcolor="#ADD8E6"
|108 |INC |IND |
--
|109 |INC |P. Muthuramanuja Thevar |IND |
--
|110 |1) R. Krishnasami Naidu |INC |3) S. Alagarsamy |CPI |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Tirunelveli |
--
|111 |IND |Selvaraj |INC |
--
|112 |1) K. Ramasubbu |INC |3) S. Arunachala Nadar |IND |
--
|113 |INC |IND |
--
|114 |INC |Y. Perumal |IND |
--
|115 |INC |M. R. Meganathan |IND |
--
|116 |IND |S. Kandasamy |INC |
--
|117 |INC |Kartheesan |IND |
--
|118 |INC |S. Madasamy |IND |
--
|119 |1) Rajathi Kunchithapatham |INC |3) Kandish |IND |
--
|120 |INC |Challapandian |IND |
--
|121 |IND |A. Balagan |INC |
--
|122 |IND |I. A. Chidambaram Pillai |INC |
--
|123 |IND |Nallasivan |CPI |
--
|124 |1) P. Urkavalan |INC |3) Adinamilagi |IND |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Kanyakumari |
--
|125 |IND |Natarajan |INC |
--
|126 |INC |CPI |
--
|127 |INC |S. Doraiswamy |IND |
--
|128 |INC |S. Muthukaruppa Pillai |IND |
--
|129 |INC |Uncontested |Uncontested |
--
|130 |INC |Uncontested |Uncontested |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Madurai |
--
|131 |K. Pandiaraj |INC |IND |
--
|132 |INC |M. Muthiala |IND |
--
|133 |M. Alagirisamy |INC |Gurusamy |IND |
--
|134 |1) N. R. Thiagarajan |INC |2) S. S. Rajendran | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|135 |IND |P. V. Raj |- |
--
|136 |A. V. P. Periavala Guruya Reddi |IND |INC |
--
|137 |INC |CPM |
--
|138 |INC |S. Muthu | bgcolor="#FFE6E6" |IND |
--
|139 |S. Chinnakaruppa Thevar |INC |K. P. Janaki |CPI |
--
|140 |1) W. P. A. R. Chandrasekaran |INC |3) T. G. Krishnamoorthy |IND |
--
|141 |1) P. Kakkan |INC |3) K. Paramasivam Ambalan |IND |
--
|142 |Thiruvenkatasamy Naicker |IND |S. Chiinasamy Naidu |INC |
--
|143 |T. S. Soundaram Ramachandran |INC |Madanagopal |CPI |
--
|144 |M. J. Jamal Mohideen |INC |A. Balasubramaniam |CPI |
--
|145 |M. A. B. Arumugasamy Chettiar |INC |IND |
--
|146 |Karuthappa Gounder |INC |Angamuthu Naicker |IND |
--
|147 |INC |Venkitasami Gounder |IND |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Coimbatore |
--
|148 |S. T. Subbaya Gounder |IND |N. Mounaguruswamy Naidu |INC |
--
|149 |1) N. Mahalingam |INC |3) P. Thangavel Gounder |PSP |
--
|150 |INC |C. Guruswamy Naidu |PSP |
--
|151 |A. Sanapathi Gounder |INC |P. S. Govindasamy Gounder |IND |
--
|152 |K. G. Palanisamy Gounder |INC |P. Muthuswamy Gounder |IND |
--
|153 |K. P. Nallasivam |IND |A. Thengappa Gounder |INC |
--
|154 |V. S. Manickasundaram |INC |K. T. Raju |CPI |
--
|155 |CPI |Manicka Mudaliar |INC |
--
|156 |1) G. G. Gurumurthi |INC |3) K. Komarasami Gounder |IND |
--
|157 |INC |Mariappan |CPI |
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|158 |K. L. Ramaswami |INC |Uncontested |Uncontested |
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|159 |INC |V. Ponnulinga Gounder |CPI |
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|160 |P. S. Chinnadurai |PSP |Kumarasami Gounder |INC |
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|161 |Savitri Shanmugam |INC |Bupathy |CPI |
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|162 |1) Marudachalam |CPI |3) Kuppuswamy |INC |
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|163 |INC |CPI |
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|164 |INC |Karuppa Gounder |IND |
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|165 |D. Raghubadhi Devi |INC |Madhannan |IND |
colspan="6" style="background-color:#dec78c; color:white" align="center"|Nilgiris |
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|166 |INC |H. B. Ari Gowder |IND |
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|167 |B. K. Linga Gowder |INC |K. Bhojan |IND |
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Kamaraj's second cabinet
Kamaraj's council of ministers during his second tenure as chief minister (1 April 1957 – 1 March 1962){{cite book |author=Kandaswamy. P|title=The political Career of K. Kamaraj|publisher=Concept Publishing Company|year=2008 |pages=62–64 |oclc=46929395 |asin=B00069WY4K |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bOjT3qffnMkC}}
class="wikitable" width="80%" style="font-size: x-big; font-family: verdana"
! style="background-color:#666666; color:white; width:180px"|Minister ! style="background-color:#666666; color:white"|Portfolios |
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|Chief Minister, Public, Planning and Development (including Local development Works, Women's Welfare, Community Projects and Rural Welfare), National Extension Scheme |
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|Home |
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|Finance |
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|Industries |
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|Revenue |
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| Works |
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|Electricity |
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|Local Administration |
See also
Footnotes and references
{{Reflist |2}}
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20081207201816/http://www.eci.gov.in/ Election Commission of India]
- [http://www.assembly.tn.gov.in/archive/Resumes/review_02assly/index.htm 1957 Election]
{{Tamil Nadu assembly elections|state=expanded}}
Category:State Assembly elections in Tamil Nadu