User:Oritsu.me/Sandbox/Lists

= Rajapaksa cabinets =

class="wikitable sortable"

! Portfolio

! Minister

! colspan="2"| Party

! Took office

! Left office

President of Sri Lanka

| Mahinda Rajapaksa

| {{party name with color|Sri Lanka Freedom Party}}

| {{dts|19-11-2005}}

| {{dts|09-01-2015}}

rowspan="2"| Prime Minister of Sri Lanka

| Ratnasiri Wickremanayake

| {{party name with color|Sri Lanka Freedom Party}}

| {{dts|19-11-2005}}

| {{dts|21-04-2010}}

D. M. Jayaratne

| {{party name with color|Sri Lanka Freedom Party}}

| {{dts|21-04-2010}}

| {{dts|09-01-2015}}

= Minister, Australia =

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! colspan="2"| {{abbr|No|Number}}

! Portrait

! style="width:16em"| Minister
{{small|(birth{{ndash}}death)
Constituency}}

! style="width:7em"| Term start

! style="width:7em"| Term end

! style="width:5em"| Term length

! style="width:20em"| Simultaneous portfolios

! Party

! Ministry

1

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| 60px

| Don Willesee
{{small|(1916{{ndash}}2003)
Senator for Western Australia}}

| {{small|19 December}}
1972

| {{small|30 November}}
1973

| {{ayd|19 Dec 1972|30 Nov 1973}}

| align="left"| Vice-President of the Executive Council

| rowspan="4"| Labor

| rowspan="2"| Whitlam II

rowspan="2"| 2

| rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| rowspan="2"| 60px

| rowspan="2"| Lionel Bowen
{{small|(1922{{ndash}}2012)
MP for Kingsford Smith}}

| {{small|30 November}}
1973

| {{small|12 June}}
1974

| rowspan="2"| '''{{ayd|30 Nov 1973|6 Jun 1975}}

| rowspan="2" align="left"| Postmaster-General {{small|(until 1974)}}

{{small|12 June}}
1974

| {{small|6 June}}
1975

| rowspan="2"| Whitlam III

3

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| 60px

| Doug McClelland
{{small|(born 1926)
Senator for New South Wales}}

| {{small|6 June}}
1975

| {{small|11 November}}
1975

| {{ayd|6 Jun 1975|11 Nov 1975}}

|

4

| bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party of Australia}}"|

| 60px

| Reg Withers
{{small|(1924{{ndash}}2014)
Senator for Western Australia}}

| {{small|11 November}}
1975

| {{small|22 December}}
1975

| {{ayd|11 Nov 1975|22 Dec 1975}}

| align="left"| {{ubl|Vice-President of the Executive Council|Minister of the Capital Territory|Minister for the Media|Minister for Tourism and Recreation}}

| Liberal

| Fraser I

colspan="10"| {{nobold|Position not in use (22 December 1985{{snd}}11 March 1983)}}
5

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| 60px

| Mick Young
{{small|(1936{{ndash}}1996)
MP for Port Adelaide}}

| {{small|11 March}}
1983

| {{small|14 July}}
1983

| {{ayd|11 Mar 1983|14 Jul 1983}}

| align="left"| Vice-President of the Executive Council

| rowspan="6"| Labor

| rowspan="3"| Hawke I

6

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| 60px

| Kim Beazley
{{small|(born 1948)
MP for Swan}}

| {{small|14 July}}
1983

| {{small|21 January}}
1984

| {{ayd|14 Jul 1983|21 Jan 1984}}

| align="left"| Minister for Aviation

rowspan="2"| (5)

| rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| rowspan="2"| 60px

| rowspan="2"| Mick Young
{{small|(1936{{ndash}}1996)
MP for Port Adelaide}}

| {{small|21 January}}
1984

| {{small|13 December}}
1984

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|21 Jan 1984|16 Feb 1987}}

| rowspan="2" align="left"| Leader of the House

{{small|13 December}}
1984

| {{small|16 February}}
1987

| rowspan="2"| Hawke II

7

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

|

| Michael Tate
{{small|(born 1945)
Senator for Tasmania}}

| {{small|16 February}}
1987

| {{small|24 July}}
1987

| {{ayd|16 Feb 1987|24 Jul 1987}}

| align="left"|

8

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| 60px

| Susan Ryan
{{small|(1942{{ndash}}2020)
Senator for Australian Capital Territory}}

| {{small|24 July}}
1987

| {{small|19 January}}
1988

| {{ayd|24 Jul 1987|19 Jan 1988}}

| align="left"| Minister Assisting the Prime Minister for the Status of Women

| Hawke III

colspan="10"| {{nobold|Position not in use (19 January 1988{{snd}}24 March 1993)}}
9

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| 60px

| Frank Walker
{{small|(1942{{ndash}}2012)
MP for Robertson}}

| {{small|24 March}}
1993

| {{small|25 March}}
1994

| {{ayd|24 Mar 1993|25 Mar 1994}}

| align="left"| Vice-President of the Executive Council

| rowspan="2"| Labor

| rowspan="2"| Keating II

10

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| 60px

| Gary Johns
{{small|(born 1952)
MP for Petrie}}

| {{small|25 March}}
1994

| {{small|11 March}}
1996

| {{ayd|25 Mar 1994|11 Mar 1996}}

| align="left"| Vice-President of the Executive Council

colspan="10"| {{nobold|Position not in use (11 March 1996{{snd}}9 October 1997)}}
11

| bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party of Australia}}"|

| 60px

| Nick Minchin
{{small|(born 1953)
Senator for South Australia}}

| {{small|9 October}}
1997

| {{small|21 October}}
1998

| '''{{ayd|9 Oct 1997|21 Oct 1998}}

| align="left"| Minister Assisting the Prime Minister

| rowspan="6"| Liberal

| Howard I

12

| bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party of Australia}}"|

| 60px

| Chris Ellison
{{small|(born 1954)
Senator for Western Australia}}

| {{small|21 October}}
1998

| {{small|30 January}}
2001

| {{ayd|21 Oct 1998|30 Jan 2001}}

| align="left"|

| rowspan="2"| Howard II

rowspan="3"| 13

| rowspan="3" bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party of Australia}}"|

| rowspan="3"| 60px

| rowspan="3"| Eric Abetz
{{small|(born 1958)
Senator for Tasmania}}

| {{small|30 January}}
2001

| {{small|26 November}}
2001

| rowspan="3"| {{ayd|30 Jan 2001|27 Jan 2006}}

| rowspan="3"|

{{small|26 November}}
2001

| {{small|26 October}}
2004

| Howard III

{{small|26 October}}
2004

| {{small|27 January}}
2006

| rowspan="2"| Howard IV

14

| bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party of Australia}}"|

| 60px

| Gary Nairn
{{small|(1951{{ndash}}2024)
MP for Eden-Monaro}}

| {{small|27 January}}
2006

| {{small|3 December}}
2007

| {{ayd|27 Jan 2006|3 Dec 2007}}

|

15

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| 60px

| John Faulkner
{{small|(born 1954)
Senator for New South Wales}}

| {{small|3 December}}
2007

| {{small|9 June}}
2009

| {{ayd|3 Dec 2007|9 Jun 2009}}

| align="left"| Cabinet Secretary
Vice-President of the Executive Council

| rowspan="4"| Labor

| rowspan="2"| Rudd I

rowspan="2"| 16

| rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| rowspan="2"| 60px

| rowspan="2"| Joe Ludwig
{{small|(born 1959)
Senator for Queensland}}

| {{small|9 June}}
2009

| {{small|24 June}}
2010

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|9 Jun 2009|14 Sep 2010}}

| rowspan="2" align="left"| Cabinet Secretary
Manager of Government Business in the Senate

{{small|24 June}}
2010

| {{small|14 September}}
2010

| Gillard I

17

| bgcolor="{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}"|

| 60px

| Gary Gray
{{small|(born 1958)
MP for Brand}}

| {{small|14 September}}
2010

| {{small|25 March}}
2013

| {{ayd|14 Sep 2010|25 Mar 2013}}

| align="left"| Minister for the Public Service and Integrity

| rowspan="2"| Gillard II

= Religious minority politicians of India =

Presidents

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! style="width:8em"| Term length

70px

| Zakir Husain

| Muslim

| 13 May 1967

| 3 May 1969

| {{ayd|13 May 1967|3 May 1969}}

70px

| Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed

| Muslim

| 24 August 1974

| 11 February 1977

| {{ayd|24 Aug 1974|11 Feb 1977}}

70px

| Zail Singh

| Sikh

| 25 July 1982

| 25 July 1987

| {{ayd|25 Jul 1982|25 Jul 1987}}

70px

| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam

| Muslim

| 25 July 2002

| 25 July 2007

| {{ayd|25 Jul 2002|25 Jul 2007}}

Vice Presidents

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! style="width:8em"| Term length

70px

| Zakir Husain

| Muslim

| 13 May 1962

| 13 May 1967

| {{ayd|13 May 1962|13 May 1967}}

70px

| Mohammad Hidayatullah

| Muslim

| 31 August 1979

| 31 August 1984

| {{ayd|31 Aug 1979|31 Aug 1984}}

70px

| Mohammad Hamid Ansari

| Muslim

| 11 August 2007

| 11 August 2017

| {{ayd|11 Aug 2007|11 Aug 2017}}

Prime Ministers

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! colspan="2"| Party

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! style="width:8em"| Term length

70px

| Manmohan Singh

| Sikh

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| 22 May 2004

| 26 May 2014

| {{ayd|22 May 2004|26 May 2014}}

Union Ministers

= Cabinet Ministers =

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! colspan="2"| Party

! Portfolio

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! Term length

| C. H. Bhabha

| Parsi

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of Commerce

| 15 August 1947

| 6 April 1948

| {{ayd|15 Aug 1947|6 Apr 1948}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| M. C. Chagla

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of Education

| 21 November 1963

| 13 November 1966

| {{ayd|21 Nov 1963|13 Nov 1966}}

Minister of External Affairs

| 13 November 1966

| 5 September 1967

| {{ayd|13 Nov 1966|5 Sep 1967}}

rowspan="6"| 70px

| rowspan="6"| Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed

| rowspan="6"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=6}}

| Minister of Irrigation and Power

| 29 January 1966

| 13 November 1966

| {{ayd|29 Jan 1966|13 Nov 1966}}

Minister of Education

| 13 November 1966

| 13 March 1967

| {{ayd|13 Nov 1966|13 Mar 1967}}

Minister of Industrial Development and Company Affairs

| 13 March 1967

| 14 February 1969

| {{ayd|13 Mar 1967|14 Feb 1969}}

Minister of Industrial Development, Internal Trade and Company Affairs

| 14 February 1969

| 27 June 1970

| {{ayd|14 Feb 1969|27 Jun 1970}}

Minister of Food and Agriculture

| 27 June 1970

| 2 May 1971

| {{ayd|27 Jun 1970|2 May 1971}}

Minister of Agriculture

| 2 May 1971

| 3 July 1974

| {{ayd|2 May 1971|3 Jul 1974}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Parkash Singh Badal

| rowspan="2"| Sikh

| {{party name with color|Shiromani Akali Dal|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of Communications

| 26 March 1977

| 27 March 1977

| {{ayd|26 Mar 1977|27 Mar 1977}}

Minister of Agriculture

| 28 March 1977

| 17 June 1977

| {{ayd|28 Mar 1977|17 Jun 1977}}

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| Surjit Singh Barnala

| rowspan="3"| Sikh

| {{party name with color|Shiromani Akali Dal|rowspan=3}}

| Minister of Agriculture

| 18 June 1977

| 28 July 1979

| {{ayd|18 Jun 1977|28 Jul 1979}}

Minister of Chemicals and Fertilizers

| rowspan="2"| 19 March 1998

| rowspan="2"| 13 October 1999

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|19 Mar 1998|13 Oct 1999}}

Minister of Food and Consumer Affairs
70px

| Zail Singh

| Sikh

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of Home Affairs

| 14 January 1980

| 22 June 1982

| {{ayd|14 Jan 1980|22 Jun 1982}}

rowspan="5"| 70px

| rowspan="5"| Mohsina Kidwai

| rowspan="5"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=5}}

| Minister of Rural Development

| 4 November 1984

| 31 December 1984

| {{ayd|4 Nov 1984|31 Dec 1984}}

Minister of Health and Family Welfare

| 31 December 1984

| 24 June 1986

| {{ayd|31 Dec 1984|24 Jun 1986}}

Minister of Transport

| 24 June 1986

| 22 October 1986

| {{ayd|24 Jun 1986|22 Oct 1986}}

Minister of Urban Development

| 22 October 1986

| 2 December 1989

| {{ayd|22 Oct 1986|2 Dec 1989}}

Minister of Tourism

| 14 February 1988

| 2 December 1989

| {{ayd|14 Feb 1988|2 Dec 1989}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Abdul Ghafoor

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of Housing and Urban Affairs

| 31 December 1984

| 25 September 1985

| {{ayd|31 Dec 1984|25 Sep 1985}}

Minister of Urban Development

| 25 September 1985

| 22 October 1986

| {{ayd|25 Sep 1985|22 Oct 1986}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Mufti Mohammad Sayeed

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of Tourism

| 12 May 1986

| 15 July 1987

| {{ayd|12 May 1986|15 Jul 1987}}

{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

| Minister of Home Affairs

| 6 December 1989

| 10 November 1990

| {{ayd|6 Dec 1989|10 Nov 1990}}

70px

| Ziaur Rahman Ansari

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of Environment and Forests

| 25 June 1988

| 2 December 1989

| {{ayd|25 Jun 1988|2 Dec 1989}}

rowspan="7"| 70px

| rowspan="7"| Ghulam Nabi Azad

| rowspan="7"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=7}}

| Minister of Parliamentary Affairs

| 21 June 1991

| 18 January 1993

| {{ayd|21 Jun 1991|18 Jan 1993}}

Minister of Civil Aviation and Tourism

| 9 January 1993

| 16 May 1996

| {{ayd|9 Jan 1993|16 May 1996}}

Minister of Parliamentary Affairs

| 17 January 1996

| 16 May 1996

| {{ayd|17 Jan 1996|16 May 1996}}

Minister of Urban Development

| rowspan="2"| 23 May 2004

| rowspan="2"| 1 November 2005

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|23 May 2004|1 Nov 2005}}

Minister of Parliamentary Affairs
Minister of Health and Family Welfare

| 28 May 2009

| 26 May 2014

| {{ayd|28 May 2009|26 May 2014}}

Minister of Water Resources

| 1 February 2014

| 26 May 2014

| {{ayd|1 Feb 2014|26 May 2014}}

70px

| Manmohan Singh

| Sikh

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of Finance

| 21 June 1991

| 16 May 1996

| {{ayd|21 Jun 1991|16 May 1996}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| A. K. Antony

| rowspan="2"| Christian

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of Civil Supplies, Consumer Affairs and Public Distribution

| 18 January 1993

| 8 February 1995

| {{ayd|18 Jan 1993|8 Feb 1995}}

Minister of Defence

| 24 October 2006

| 26 May 2014

| {{ayd|24 Oct 2006|26 May 2014}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| P. A. Sangma

| rowspan="2"| Christian

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of Labour

| 10 February 1995

| 15 September 1995

| {{ayd|10 Feb 1995|15 Sep 1995}}

Minister of Information and Broadcasting

| 15 September 1995

| 16 May 1996

| {{ayd|15 Sep 1995|16 May 1996}}

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| A. R. Antulay

| rowspan="3"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

| Minister of Health and Family Welfare

| 11 June 1995

| 16 May 1996

| {{ayd|11 Jun 1995|16 May 1996}}

Minister of Water Resources

| 7 February 1996

| 16 May 1996

| {{ayd|7 Feb 1996|16 May 1996}}

Minister of Minority Affairs

| 29 January 2006

| 22 May 2009

| {{ayd|29 Jan 2006|22 May 2009}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Syed Shahnawaz Hussain

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of Civil Aviation

| 1 September 2001

| 24 May 2003

| {{ayd|1 Sep 2001|24 May 2003}}

Minister of Textiles

| 24 May 2003

| 22 May 2004

| {{ayd|24 May 2003|22 May 2004}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Paty Ripple Kyndiah

| rowspan="2"| Christian

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of Development of North Eastern Region

| 23 May 2004

| 24 October 2006

| {{ayd|23 May 2004|24 Oct 2006}}

Minister of Tribal Affairs

| 23 May 2004

| 22 May 2009

| {{ayd|23 May 2004|22 May 2009}}

70px

| Farooq Abdullah

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Jammu and Kashmir National Conference}}

| Minister of New and Renewable Energy

| 28 May 2009

| 26 May 2014

| {{ayd|28 May 2009|26 May 2014}}

rowspan="4"| 70px

| rowspan="4"| Salman Khurshid

| rowspan="4"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=4}}

| Minister of Water Resources

| 19 January 2011

| 12 July 2011

| {{ayd|19 Jan 2011|12 Jul 2011}}

Minister of Minority Affairs

| 19 January 2011

| 28 October 2012

| {{ayd|19 Jan 2011|28 Oct 2012}}

Minister of Law and Justice

| 12 July 2011

| 28 October 2012

| {{ayd|12 Jul 2011|28 Oct 2012}}

Minister of External Affairs

| 28 October 2012

| 26 May 2014

| {{ayd|28 Oct 2012|26 May 2014}}

70px

| Najma Heptulla

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|BJP}}

| Minister of Minority Affairs

| 27 May 2014

| 12 July 2016

| {{ayd|27 May 2014|12 Jul 2016}}

70px

| Harsimrat Kaur Badal

| Sikh

| {{party name with color|Shiromani Akali Dal}}

| Minister of Food Processing Industries

| 27 May 2014

| 17 September 2020

| {{ayd|27 May 2014|17 Sep 2020}}

70px

| Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|BJP}}

| Minister of Minority Affairs

| 3 September 2017

| 6 July 2022

| {{ayd|3 Sep 2017|6 Jul 2022}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Hardeep Singh Puri

| rowspan="2"| Sikh

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of Housing and Urban Affairs

| 7 July 2021

| 9 June 2024

| {{ayd|7 Jul 2021|9 Jun 2024}}

Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas

| 7 July 2021

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|7 Jul 2021}}

rowspan="5"| 70px

| rowspan="5"| Kiren Rijiju

| rowspan="5"| Buddhist

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=5}}

| Minister of Law and Justice

| 7 July 2021

| 18 May 2023

| {{ayd|7 Jul 2021|18 May 2023}}

Minister of Earth Sciences

| 18 May 2023

| 9 June 2024

| {{ayd|18 May 2023|9 Jun 2024}}

Minister of Food Processing Industries

| 20 March 2024

| 9 June 2024

| {{ayd|20 Mar 2024|9 Jun 2024}}

Minister of Parliamentary Affairs

| rowspan="2"| 10 June 2024

| rowspan="2"| Incumbent

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|10 Jun 2024}}

Minister of Minority Affairs

= Ministers of State (Independent Charge) =

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! colspan="2"| Party

! Portfolio

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! Term length

70px

| Mohsina Kidwai

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Rural Development

| 2 August 1984

| 31 October 1984

| {{ayd|21 Aug 1984|31 Oct 1984}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Ziaur Rahman Ansari

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Shipping and Transport

| 31 December 1984

| 25 September 1985

| {{ayd|31 Dec 1984|25 Sep 1985}}

Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Environment and Forests

| 25 June 1988

| 2 December 1989

| {{ayd|25 Jun 1988|2 Dec 1989}}

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| P. A. Sangma

| rowspan="3"| Christian

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

| Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Labour

| 20 September 1986

| 6 February 1988

| {{ayd|20 Sep 1986|6 Feb 1988}}

Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Coal

| 21 June 1991

| 18 January 1993

| {{ayd|21 Jun 1991|18 Jan 1993}}

Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Labour

| 10 July 1992

| 10 February 1995

| {{ayd|10 Jul 1992|10 Feb 1995}}

70px

| Syed Shahnawaz Hussain

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|BJP}}

| Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Coal

| 8 February 2001

| 1 September 2001

| {{ayd|8 Feb 2001|1 Sep 2001}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Salman Khurshid

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Corporate Affairs

| rowspan="2"| 28 May 2009

| rowspan="2"| 19 January 2011

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|28 May 2009|19 Jan 2011}}

Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Minority Affairs
70px

| K. V. Thomas

| Christian

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution

| 19 January 2011

| 26 May 2014

| {{ayd|19 Jan 2011|26 May 2014}}

70px

| Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|BJP}}

| Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Minority Affairs

| 12 July 2016

| 3 September 2017

| {{ayd|12 Jul 2016|3 Sep 2017}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Hardeep Singh Puri

| rowspan="2"| Sikh

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Housing and Urban Affairs

| 3 September 2017

| 7 July 2021

| {{ayd|3 Sep 2017|7 Jul 2021}}

Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Civil Aviation

| 31 May 2019

| 7 July 2021

| {{ayd|31 May 2019|7 Jul 2021}}

70px

| Kiren Rijiju

| Buddhist

| {{party name with color|BJP}}

| Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Youth Affairs and Sports

| 31 May 2019

| 7 July 2021

| {{ayd|31 May 2019|7 Jul 2021}}

= Ministers of State =

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! colspan="2"| Party

! Portfolio

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! Term length

70px

| Syed Mahmud

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of State for External Affairs

| 7 December 1954

| 17 April 1957

| {{ayd|7 Dec 1954|17 Apr 1957}}

rowspan="4"| 70px

| rowspan="4"| Ziaur Rahman Ansari

| rowspan="4"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=4}}

| Minister of State for Commerce

| 3 March 1980

| 19 October 1980

| {{ayd|3 Mar 1980|19 Oct 1980}}

Minister of State for Irrigation

| 19 October 1980

| 29 January 1983

| {{ayd|19 Oct 1980|29 Jan 1983}}

Minister of State for Shipping and Transport

| 29 January 1983

| 31 December 1984

| {{ayd|29 Jan 1983|31 Dec 1984}}

Minister of State for Environment and Forests

| 25 September 1985

| 14 February 1988

| {{ayd|25 Jun 1988|2 Dec 1989}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Mohsina Kidwai

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State for Labour and Rehabilitation

| 11 September 1982

| 29 January 1983

| {{ayd|11 Sep 1982|29 Jan 1983}}

Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare

| 29 January 1983

| 2 August 1984

| {{ayd|29 Jan 1983|2 Aug 1984}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| P. A. Sangma

| rowspan="2"| Christian

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State for Commerce and Industry

| 1 January 1985

| 25 September 1985

| {{ayd|1 Jan 1985|25 Sep 1985}}

Minister of State for Home Affairs (States)

| 25 September 1985

| 20 January 1986

| {{ayd|25 Sep 1985|20 Jan 1986}}

70px

| Salman Khurshid

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of State for External Affairs

| 18 January 1993

| 16 May 1996

| {{ayd|18 Jan 1993|16 May 1996}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Omar Abdullah

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Jammu and Kashmir National Conference|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State for Commerce and Industry

| 13 October 1999

| 22 July 2001

| {{ayd|13 Oct 1999|22 Jul 2001}}

Minister of State for External Affairs

| 22 July 2001

| 23 December 2002

| {{ayd|22 Jul 2001|23 Dec 2002}}

rowspan="4"| 70px

| rowspan="4"| Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi

| rowspan="4"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=4}}

| Minister of State for Information and Broadcasting

| 20 March 1998

| 13 October 1999

| {{ayd|20 Mar 1998|13 Oct 1999}}

rowspan="2"| Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs

| 16 February 1999

| 13 October 1999

| {{ayd|16 Feb 1999|13 Oct 1999}}

9 November 2014

| 3 September 2017

| {{ayd|9 Nov 2014|3 Sep 2017}}

Minister of State for Minority Affairs

| 9 November 2014

| 12 July 2016

| {{ayd|9 Nov 2014|12 Jul 2016}}

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| Syed Shahnawaz Hussain

| rowspan="3"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=3}}

| Minister of State for Agriculture (Food Processing Industries)

| 13 October 1999

| 27 May 2000

| {{ayd|13 Oct 1999|27 May 2000}}

Minister of State for Youth Affairs and Sports

| 27 May 2000

| 30 September 2000

| {{ayd|27 May 2000|30 Sep 2000}}

Minister of State for Human Resource Development

| 30 September 2000

| 8 February 2001

| {{ayd|30 Sep 2000|8 Feb 2001}}

rowspan="4"| 70px

| rowspan="4"| E. Ahamed

| rowspan="4"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian Union Muslim League|rowspan=4}}

| Minister of State for External Affairs

| 23 May 2004

| 22 May 2009

| {{ayd|23 May 2004|22 May 2009}}

Minister of State for Railways

| 28 May 2004

| 19 January 2011

| {{ayd|28 May 2004|19 Jan 2011}}

Minister of State for External Affairs

| 19 January 2011

| 26 May 2014

| {{ayd|19 Jan 2011|26 May 2014}}

Minister of State for Human Resource Development

| 12 July 2011

| 28 October 2012

| {{ayd|12 Jul 2011|28 Oct 2012}}

70px

| K. Rahman Khan

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of State for Chemicals and Fertilizers

| 23 May 2004

| 20 July 2004

| {{ayd|23 May 2004|20 Jul 2004}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| K. V. Thomas

| rowspan="2"| Christian

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State for Agriculture

| rowspan="2"| 28 May 2009

| rowspan="2"| 19 January 2011

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|28 May 2009|19 Jan 2011}}

Minister of State for Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution
70px

| Agatha Sangma

| Christian

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Minister of State for Rural Development

| 28 May 2009

| 27 October 2012

| {{ayd|28 May 2009|27 Oct 2012}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Kiren Rijiju

| rowspan="2"| Buddhist

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State for Home Affairs

| 27 May 2014

| 30 May 2019

| {{ayd|27 May 2014|30 May 2019}}

Minister of State for Minority Affairs

| 31 May 2019

| 7 July 2021

| {{ayd|31 May 2019|7 Jul 2021}}

70px

| M. J. Akbar

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|BJP}}

| Minister of State for External Affairs

| 5 July 2016

| 17 October 2018

| {{ayd|5 Jul 2016|17 Oct 2018}}

70px

| Hardeep Singh Puri

| Sikh

| {{party name with color|BJP}}

| Minister of State for Commerce and Industry

| 31 May 2019

| 7 July 2021

| {{ayd|31 May 2019|7 Jul 2021}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Ravneet Singh Bittu

| rowspan="2"| Sikh

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State for Railways

| rowspan="2"| 10 June 2024

| rowspan="2"| Incumbent

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|10 Jun 2024}}

Minister of State for Food Processing Industries
rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| George Kurian

| rowspan="2"| Christian

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of State for Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying

| rowspan="2"| 10 June 2024

| rowspan="2"| Incumbent

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|10 Jun 2024}}

Minister of State for Minority Affairs

= Deputy Ministers =

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! colspan="2"| Party

! Portfolio

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! Term length

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| Ziaur Rahman Ansari

| rowspan="3"| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

| Deputy Minister of Industrial Development

| 6 December 1973

| 10 October 1974

| {{ayd|6 Dec 1973|10 Oct 1974}}

Deputy Minister of Industry and Civil Supplies

| 10 October 1974

| 3 January 1976

| {{ayd|10 Oct 1974|3 Jan 1976}}

Deputy Minister of Petroleum

| 3 January 1976

| 24 March 1977

| {{ayd|3 Jan 1976|24 Mar 1977}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| P. A. Sangma

| rowspan="2"| Christian

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| Deputy Minister of Industry

| 31 October 1980

| 15 January 1982

| {{ayd|31 Oct 1980|15 Jan 1982}}

Deputy Minister of Commerce

| 15 January 1982

| 31 December 1984

| {{ayd|15 Jan 1982|31 Dec 1984}}

70px

| Salman Khurshid

| Muslim

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| Deputy Minister of Commerce

| 21 June 1991

| 18 January 1993

| {{ayd|21 Jun 1991|18 Jan 1993}}

States

= Governors =

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! State

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! Term length

| Williamson A. Sangma

| Christian

| Mizoram

| 21 July 1989

| 7 February 1990

| {{ayd|21 Jul 1989|7 Feb 1990}}

70px

| Paty Ripple Kyndiah

| Christian

| Mizoram

| 10 February 1993

| 28 January 1998

| {{Ayd|10 Feb 1993|28 Jan 1998}}

70px

| M. M. Jacob

| Christian

| Meghalaya

| 19 June 1995

| 11 April 2007

| {{ayd|19 Jun 1995|11 Apr 2007}}

70px

| Fathima Beevi

| Muslim

| Tamil Nadu

| 25 January 1997

| 3 July 2001

| {{ayd|25 Jan 1997|3 Jul 2001}}

| Sukhdev Singh Kang

| Sikh

| Kerala

| 25 January 1997

| 18 April 2002

| {{ayd|25 Jan 1997|18 Apr 2002}}

rowspan="2"|

| rowspan="2"| Mohammed Fazal

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| Goa

| 26 November 1999

| 25 October 2002

| {{ayd|26 Nov 1999|25 Oct 2002}}

Maharashtra

| 10 October 2002

| 5 December 2004

| {{ayd|10 Oct 2002|5 Dec 2004}}

70px

| Sikander Bakht

| Muslim

| Kerala

| 18 April 2002

| 23 February 2004†

| {{ayd|18 Apr 2002|23 Feb 2004}}

70px

| Buta Singh

| Sikh

| Bihar

| 5 November 2004

| 29 January 2006

| {{ayd|5 Nov 2004|29 Jan 2006}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Syed Sibtey Razi

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| Jharkhand

| 10 December 2004

| 25 July 2009

| {{ayd|10 Dec 2004|25 Jul 2009}}

Assam

| 27 July 2009

| 10 November 2009

| {{ayd|27 Jul 2009|10 Nov 2009}}

rowspan="4"| 70px

| rowspan="4"| S. C. Jamir

| rowspan="4"| Christian

| Goa

| 17 July 2004

| 21 July 2008

| {{ayd|17 Jul 2004|21 Jul 2008}}

Maharashtra

| 9 March 2008

| 22 January 2010

| {{ayd|9 Mar 2008|22 Jan 2010}}

Gujarat

| 30 July 2009

| 26 November 2009

| {{ayd|30 Jul 2009|26 Nov 2009}}

Odisha

| 21 March 2013

| 20 March 2018

| {{ayd|21 Mar 2013|20 Mar 2018}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| M. O. H. Farook

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| Jharkhand

| 22 January 2010

| 4 September 2011

| {{ayd|22 Jan 2010|4 Sep 2011}}

Kerala

| 8 September 2011

| 26 January 2012†

| {{ayd|8 Sep 2011|26 Jan 2012}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Syed Ahmed

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| Jharkhand

| 4 September 2011

| 15 May 2015

| {{ayd|4 Sep 2011|15 May 2015}}

Manipur

| 16 May 2015

| 27 September 2015†

| {{ayd|16 May 2015|27 Sep 2015}}

70px

| Najma Heptulla

| Muslim

| Manipur

| 21 August 2016

| 10 August 2021

| {{ayd|21 Aug 2016|10 Aug 2021}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Arif Mohammad Khan

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| Kerala

| 6 September 2019

| 2 January 2025

| {{ayd|6 Sep 2019|2 Jan 2025}}

Bihar

| 2 January 2025

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|2 Jan 2025}}

70px

| Syed Abdul Nazeer

| Muslim

| Andhra Pradesh

| 24 February 2023

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|24 Feb 2023}}

= Chief Ministers =

class="wikitable sortable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! State

! colspan="2"| Party

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! Term length

rowspan="4"|

| rowspan="4"| Williamson A. Sangma

| rowspan="4"| Christian

| rowspan="4"| Meghalaya

| {{party name with color|All Party Hill Leaders Conference}}

| rowspan="2"| 2 April 1970

| rowspan="2"| 3 March 1978

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|2 Apr 1970|3 Mar 1978}}

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}
7 May 1981

| 24 February 1983

| {{ayd|7 May 1981|24 Feb 1983}}

2 April 1983

| 5 February 1988

| {{ayd|2 Apr 1983|5 Feb 1988}}

70px

| Zail Singh

| Sikh

| Punjab

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| 17 March 1972

| 30 April 1977

| {{ayd|17 Mar 1972|30 Apr 1977}}

70px

| Abdul Ghafoor

| Muslim

| Bihar

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| 2 July 1973

| 11 April 1975

| {{ayd|2 Jul 1973|11 Apr 1975}}

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| A. K. Antony

| rowspan="3"| Christian

| rowspan="3"| Kerala

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

| 27 April 1977

| 29 October 1978

| {{ayd|27 Apr 1977|29 Oct 1978}}

22 March 1995

| 20 May 1996

| {{ayd|22 Mar 1995|20 May 1996}}

17 May 2001

| 31 August 2004

| {{ayd|17 May 2001|31 Aug 2004}}

70px

| C. H. Mohammed Koya

| Muslim

| Kerala

| {{party name with color|Indian Union Muslim League}}

| 12 October 1979

| 1 December 1979

| {{ayd|12 Oct 1979|1 Dec 1979}}

70px

| A. R. Antulay

| Muslim

| Maharashtra

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| 9 June 1980

| 21 January 1982

| {{ayd|9 Jun 1980|21 Jan 1982}}

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| Farooq Abdullah

| rowspan="3"| Muslim

| rowspan="3"| Jammu and Kashmir

| {{party name with color|Jammu and Kashmir National Conference|rowspan=3}}

| 8 September 1982

| 2 July 1984

| {{ayd|8 Sep 1982|2 Jul 1984}}

7 November 1986

| 18 January 1990

| {{ayd|7 Nov 1986|18 Jan 1990}}

9 October 1996

| 18 October 2002

| {{ayd|9 Oct 1996|18 Oct 2002}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Mufti Mohammad Sayeed

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| rowspan="2"| Jammu and Kashmir

| {{party name with color|Jammu and Kashmir People's Democratic Party|rowspan=2}}

| 2 November 2002

| 2 November 2005

| {{ayd|2 Nov 2002|2 Nov 2005}}

1 March 2015

| 7 January 2016†

| {{ayd|1 Mar 2015|7 Jan 2016}}

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| Neiphiu Rio

| rowspan="3"| Christian

| rowspan="3"| Nagaland

| {{party name with color|Naga People's Front|rowspan=2}}

| 6 March 2003

| 3 January 2008

| {{ayd|6 Mar 2003|3 Jan 2008}}

12 March 2008

| 24 May 2014

| {{ayd|12 Mar 2008|24 May 2014}}

{{party name with color|Nationalist Democratic Progressive Party}}

| 8 March 2018

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|8 Mar 2018}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Oommen Chandy

| rowspan="2"| Christian

| rowspan="2"| Kerala

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| 31 August 2004

| 12 May 2006

| {{ayd|31 Aug 2004|12 May 2006}}

18 May 2011

| 20 May 2016

| {{ayd|18 May 2011|20 may 2016}}

70px

| Ghulam Nabi Azad

| Muslim

| Jammu and Kashmir

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| 2 November 2005

| 11 July 2008

| {{ayd|2 Nov 2005|11 Jul 2008}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Omar Abdullah

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| rowspan="2"| Jammu and Kashmir

| {{party name with color|Jammu and Kashmir National Conference|rowspan=2}}

| 5 January 2009

| 8 January 2015

| {{ayd|5 Jan 2009|8 Jan 2015}}

16 October 2024

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|16 Oct 2024}}

70px

| Mukul Sangma

| Christian

| Meghalaya

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| 20 April 2010

| 6 March 2018

| {{ayd|20 Apr 2010|6 Mar 2018}}

70px

| Mehbooba Mufti

| Muslim

| Jammu and Kashmir

| {{party name with color|Jammu and Kashmir People's Democratic Party}}

| 4 April 2016

| 19 June 2018

| {{ayd|4 Apr 2016|19 Jun 2018}}

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| Pema Khandu

| rowspan="3"| Buddhist

| rowspan="3"| Arunachal Pradesh

| {{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| rowspan="3"| 17 July 2016

| rowspan="3"| Incumbent

| rowspan="3"| {{ayd|17 Jul 2016}}

{{party name with color|People's Party of Arunachal}}
{{party name with color|BJP}}
70px

| Conrad Sangma

| Christian

| Meghalaya

| {{party name with color|National People's Party (India)}}

| 6 March 2018

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|6 Mar 2018}}

70px

| Y. S. Jagan Mohan Reddy

| Christian

| Andhra Pradesh

| {{party name with color|YSRCP}}

| 30 May 2019

| 12 June 2024

| {{ayd|30 May 2019|12 Jun 2024}}

= Deputy Chief Ministers =

class="wikitable sortable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! State

! colspan="2"| Party

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! Term length

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| C. H. Mohammed Koya

| rowspan="2"| Muslim

| rowspan="2"| Kerala

| {{party name with color|Indian Union Muslim League|rowspan=2}}

| 28 December 1981

| 17 March 1982

| {{ayd|28 Dec 1981|17 Mar 1982}}

24 May 1982

| 28 September 1983†

| {{ayd|24 May 1982|28 Sep 1983}}

| K. Avukader Kutty Naha

| Muslim

| Kerala

| {{party name with color|Indian Union Muslim League}}

| 24 October 1983

| 25 March 1987

| {{ayd|24 Oct 1983|25 Mar 1987}}

= Ministers =

class="wikitable sortable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! State

! colspan="2"| Party

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! Term length

Judiciary

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Religious group

! Designation

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! style="width:8em"| Term length

= Tribal politicians of India =

Presidents

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Background

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! style="width:8em"| Term length

70px

| Droupadi Murmu

| Santhali

| 25 July 2022

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|25 JUl 2022}}

Ministers

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Group

! colspan="2"| Party

! Portfolio

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! Term length

rowspan="3"| 70px

| rowspan="3"| Jual Oram

| rowspan="3"| Oraon

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=3}}

| rowspan="3"| Minister of Tribal Affairs

| 13 October 1999

| 22 May 2004

| {{ayd|13 Oct 1999|22 May 2004}}

27 May 2014

| 30 May 2019

| {{ayd|27 May 2014|30 May 2019}}

10 June 2024

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|10 Jun 2024}}

rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Arjun Munda

| rowspan="2"| Munda

| {{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

| Minister of Tribal Affairs

| 31 May 2019

| 9 June 2024

| {{ayd|31 May 2019|9 Jun 2024}}

Minister of Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare

| 7 December 2023

| 9 June 2024

| {{ayd|7 Dec 2023|9 Jun 2024}}

Governors

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Background

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! style="width:8em"| Term length

Chief Ministers

class="wikitable"

! Portrait

! style="width:13em"| Name

! style="width:8em"| Background

! style="width:10em"| Term start

! style="width:10em"| Term end

! style="width:8em"| Term length

= Female indian judges =

Chief Justices

class="wikitable sortable"

! class=unsortable|Image

! Name

! High Court

! Term start

! Term end

! Term length

70px

| Leila Seth

| Himachal Pradesh High Court

| {{dts|05-08-1991}}

| {{dts|20-10-1992}}

| {{ayd|5 Aug 1991|20 Oct 1992}}

rowspan="2"|

| rowspan="2"| Sujata Manohar

| Bombay High Court

| {{dts|15-01-1994}}

| {{dts|20-04-1994}}

| {{ayd|15 Jan 1994|20 Apr 1994}}

Kerala High Court

| {{dts|21-04-1994}}

| {{dts|07-11-1994}}

| {{ayd|21 Apr 1994|7 Nov 1994}}

| Gyan Sudha Misra

| Jharkhand High Court

| {{dts|13-07-2008}}

| {{dts|29-04-2010}}

| {{ayd|13 Jul 2008|29 Apr 2010}}

rowspan="4"| 70px

| rowspan="4"| Manjula Chellur

| rowspan="2"| Kerala High Court

| {{dts|09-11-2011}}

| {{dts|26-09-2012}}

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|9 Nov 2011|5 Aug 2014}}

{{dts|26-09-2012}}

| {{dts|05-08-2014}}

Calcutta High Court

| {{dts|06-08-2014}}

| {{dts|21-08-2016}}

| {{ayd|6 Aug 2014|21 Aug 2016}}

Bombay High Court

| {{dts|22-08-2016}}

| {{dts|04-12-2017}}

| {{ayd|22 Aug 2016|4 Dec 2017}}

70px

| R. Banumathi

| Jharkhand High Court

| {{dts|16-11-2013}}

| {{dts|13-08-2014}}

| {{ayd|16 Nov 2013|13 Aug 2014}}

70px

| Indira Banerjee

| Madras High Court

| {{dts|05-04-2017}}

| {{dts|06-08-2018}}

| {{ayd|5 Apr 2017|6 Apr 2018}}

| Abhilasha Kumari

| Manipur High Court

| {{dts|09-02-2018}}

| {{dts|22-02-2018}}

| {{ayd|9 Feb 2018|22 Feb 2018}}

70px

| Hima Kohli

| Telangana High Court

| {{dts|07-01-2021}}

| {{dts|30-08-2021}}

| {{ayd|7 Jan 2021|30 Aug 2021}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|

| Sunita Agarwal

| Gujarat High Court

| {{dts|23-07-2023}}

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|23 Jul 2023}}

Judges

class="wikitable sortable"

! class=unsortable|Image

! Name

! High Court

! Term start

! Term end

! Term length

70px

| Leila Seth

| Delhi High Court

| {{dts|25-07-1988}}

| {{dts|04-08-1991}}

| {{ayd|25 Jul 1988|4 Aug 1991}}

= Female heads of judiciary =

class="wikitable sortable"

! Name

! class=unsortable|Image

! Country

! Position

! Mandate start

! Mandate end

! Term length

Ho Jong-suk

|80px

|{{flag|North Korea}}

|President of the Supreme Court

|{{dts|28-10-1959}}

|{{dts|24-06-1960}}

|{{ayd|28 Oct 1959|24 Jun 1960}}

Beverley McLachlin

|80px

|{{flag|Canada}}

|Chief Justice of Canada

|{{dts|07-01-2000}}

|{{dts|15-12-2017}}

|{{ayd|7 Jan 2000|15 Dec 2017}}

Sian Elias

|80px

|{{flag|New Zealand}}

|Chief Justice of New Zealand

|{{dts|17-05-1999}}

|{{dts|13-03-2019}}

|{{ayd|17 May 1999|13 Mar 2019}}

Ellen Gracie Northfleet

|80px

|{{flag|Brazil}}

|President of the Supreme Federal Court

|{{dts|30-03-2006}}

|{{dts|24-04-2008}}

|{{ayd|30 Mar 2006|24 Apr 2008}}

Georgina Theodora Wood

|

|{{flag|Ghana}}

|Chief Justice of Ghana

|{{dts|15-06-2007}}

|{{dts|18-06-2017}}

|{{ayd|15 Jun 2007|18 Jun 2017}}

rowspan="2"| Shirani Bandaranayake

|rowspan="2"| 70px

|rowspan="2"| {{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|rowspan="2"| Chief Justice of Sri Lanka

|{{dts|18-05-2011}}

|{{dts|13-01-2013}}

|{{ayd|18 May 2011|13 Jan 2013}}

{{dts|28-01-2015}}

|{{dts|29-01-2015}}

|{{ayd|28 Jan 2015|29 Jan 2015}}

Susan Denham

|80px

|{{flag|Ireland}}

|Chief Justice of Ireland

|{{dts|25-07-2011}}

|{{dts|28-07-2017}}

|{{ayd|25 Jul 2011|28 Jul 2017}}

Aloma Mariam Mukhtar

|80px

|{{flag|Nigeria}}

|Chief Justice of Nigeria

|{{dts|16-07-2012}}

|{{dts|20-11-2014}}

|{{ayd|16 Jul 2012|20 Nov 2014}}

Maria Lourdes Sereno

|80px

|{{flag|Philippines}}

|Chief Justice of the Philippines

|{{dts|25-08-2012}}

|{{dts|11-05-2018}}

|{{ayd|25 Aug 2012|11 May 2018}}

Sushila Karki

|80px

|{{flag|Nepal}}

|Chief Justice of Nepal

|{{dts|11-07-2016}}

|{{dts|06-06-2017}}

|{{ayd|11 Jul 2016|6 Jun 2017}}

Cármen Lúcia

|80px

|{{flag|Brazil}}

|President of the Supreme Federal Court

|{{dts|12-09-2016}}

|{{dts|13-09-2018}}

|{{ayd|12 Sep 2016|13 Sep 2018}}

Susan Kiefel

|80px

|{{flag|Australia}}

|Chief Justice of Australia

|{{dts|30-01-2017}}

|{{dts|05-11-2023}}

|{{ayd|30 Jan 2017|5 Nov 2023}}

Sophia Akuffo

|80px

|{{flag|Ghana}}

|Chief Justice of Ghana

|{{dts|19-06-2017}}

|{{dts|20-12-2019}}

|{{ayd|19 Jun 2017|20 Dec 2019}}

Teresita de Castro

|80px

|{{flag|Philippines}}

|Chief Justice of the Philippines

|{{dts|28-08-2018}}

|{{dts|10-10-2018}}

|{{ayd|28 Aug 2018|10 Oct 2018}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|Helen Winkelmann

|80px

|{{flag|New Zealand}}

|Chief Justice of New Zealand

|{{dts|14-03-2019}}

|Incumbent

|{{ayd|14 Mar 2019}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat

|80px

|{{flag|Malaysia}}

|Chief Justice of Malaysia

|{{dts|02-05-2019}}

|Incumbent

|{{ayd|2 May 2019}}

Nemat Abdullah Khair

|

|{{flag|Sudan}}

|Chief Justice of Sudan

|{{dts|10-10-2019}}

|{{dts|18-05-2021}}

|{{ayd|10 Oct 2019|18 May 2021}}

Kwasi Anin-Yeboah

|

|{{flag|Ghana}}

|Chief Justice of Ghana

|{{dts|07-01-2020}}

|{{dts|23-05-2023}}

|{{ayd|7 Jan 2020|23 May 2023}}

Metinee Chalodhorn

|

|{{flag|Thailand}}

|President of the Supreme Court of Thailand

|{{dts|01-10-2020}}

|{{dts|30-09-2021}}

|{{ayd|1 Oct 2020|30 Sep 2021}}

Piyakul Boonperm

|

|{{flag|Thailand}}

|President of the Supreme Court of Thailand

|{{dts|01-10-2021}}

|{{dts|30-09-2022}}

|{{ayd|1 Oct 2021|30 Sep 2022}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|Rehana Mungly-Gulbul

|

|{{flag|Mauritius}}

|Chief Justice of Mauritius

|{{dts|18-11-2021}}

|Incumbent

|{{ayd|18 Nov 2021}}

Rosa Weber

|80px

|{{flag|Brazil}}

|President of the Supreme Federal Court

|{{dts|12-09-2022}}

|{{dts|28-09-2023}}

|{{ayd|12 Sep 2022|28 Sep 2023}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|Sue Carr, Baroness Carr of Walton-on-the-Hill

|80px

|{{flag|United Kingdom}}

|Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales

|{{dts|01-10-2023}}

|Incumbent

|{{ayd|1 Oct 2023}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|Kudirat Kekere-Ekun

|

|{{flag|Nigeria}}

|Chief Justice of Nigeria

|{{dts|22-08-2024}}

|Incumbent

|{{ayd|22 Aug 2024}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|Mandisa Maya

|80px

|{{flag|South Africa}}

|Chief Justice of South Africa

|{{dts|01-09-2024}}

|Incumbent

|{{ayd|1 Sep 2024}}

rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightblue"| Murdu Fernando

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightblue"|

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightblue"| {{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightblue"| Chief Justice of Sri Lanka

|{{dts|10-10-2024}}

|{{dts|02-12-2024}}

|{{ayd|10 Oct 2024|2 Dec 2024}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|{{dts|02-12-2024}}

|Incumbent

|{{ayd|2 Dec 2024}}

= Officeholders India =

CJ, Gauhati

class="wikitable"

! #

! Chief Justice

! Parent high court

! Assumed office

! Left office

! Term length

! Appointer

1

| Justice Sir Ronald Francis Lodge

| Assam High Court

| 5 April 1948

| 7 April 1949

| {{ayd|5 Apr 1948|7 Apr 1949}}

2

| Justice Thakurdas Vasanmal Thadani

| Sindh High Court

| 8 April 1949

| 21 November 1952

| {{ayd|8 Apr 1949|21 Nov 1952}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Ram Labhaya (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 22 November 1952

| 9 February 1953

| {{ayd|22 Nov 1952|9 Feb 1953}}

3

| Justice Sarjoo Prasad

| rowspan="2"| Patna High Court

| 10 February 1953

| 20 February 1959

| {{ayd|10 Feb 1953|20 Feb 1959}}

4

| Justice Chandreswar Prasad Sinha

| 21 February 1959

| 2 January 1961

| {{ayd|21 Feb 1959|2 Jan 1961}}

5

| Justice Holiram Deka

| Gauhati High Court

| 3 January 1961

| 29 June 1961

| {{ayd|3 Jan 1961|29 Jun 1961}}

6

| Justice Gopalji Mehrotra

| Allahabad High Court

| 30 June 1961

| 6 February 1967

| {{ayd|30 Jun 1961|6 Feb 1967}}

7

| Justice C. Sanjeeva Rao Naidu

| Andhra Pradesh High Court

| 7 February 1967

| 8 March 1968

| {{ayd|7 Feb 1967|8 Mar 1968}}

8

| Justice S. K. Dutta

| rowspan="4"| Gauhati High Court

| 8 March 1968

| 30 January 1970

| {{ayd|8 Mar 1968|30 Jan 1970}}

9

| Justice Parbati Kumar Goswami

| 31 January 1970

| 10 October 1973

| {{ayd|31 Jan 1970|10 Oct 1973}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice M. C. Pathak (acting)

| 11 October 1973

| January 1974

|

10

| Justice M. C. Pathak

| January 1974

| 30 June 1977

|

{{ndash}}

| Justice M. Sadananda Swamy (acting)

| rowspan="2"| Karnataka High Court

| 1 July 1977

| 30 September 1977

| {{ayd|1 Jul 1977|30 Sep 1977}}

11

| Justice M. Sadananda Swamy

| 1 October 1977

| 5 April 1978

| {{ayd|1 Oct 1977|5 Apr 1978}}

12

| Justice Chand Mal Lodha

| Rajasthan High Court

| 6 July 1978

| 10 March 1979

| {{ayd|6 Jul 1978|10 Mar 1979}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Baharul Islam (acting)

| rowspan="5"| Gauhati High Court

| 11 March 1979

| 6 September 1979

| {{ayd|11 Mar 1979|6 Sep 1979}}

13

| Justice Baharul Islam

| 7 September 1979

| 1 March 1980

| {{ayd|7 Sep 1979|1 Mar 1980}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Dambarudhar Pathak (acting)

| 1 March 1980

| 17 April 1983

| {{ayd|1 Mar 1980|17 Apr 1983}}

14

| Justice Dambarudhar Pathak

| 18 April 1983

| 8 August 1983

| {{ayd|18 Apr 1983|8 Aug 1983}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Kiranmoy Lahiri (acting)

| 9 August 1983

| 11 August 1983

| {{ayd|9 Aug 1983|11 Aug 1983}}

15

| Justice Tribeni Sahai Misra

| Allahabad High Court

| 12 August 1983

| 14 November 1984

| {{ayd|12 Aug 1983|14 Nov 1984}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Kiranmoy Lahiri (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 15 November 1984

| 29 September 1985

| {{ayd|15 Nov 1984|29 Sep 1985}}

16

| Justice P. C. Reddy

| Andhra Pradesh High Court

| 30 September 1985

| 2 November 1986

| {{ayd|30 Sep 1985|2 Nov 1986}}

17

| Justice Kiranmoy Lahiri

| rowspan="3"| Gauhati High Court

| 3 November 1986

| 20 November 1986

| {{ayd|3 Nov 1986|20 Nov 1986}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice K. N. Saikia (acting)

| 20 November 1986

| 13 June 1987

| {{ayd|20 Nov 1986|13 Jun 1987}}

18

| Justice K. N. Saikia

| 14 June 1987

| 1 March 1988

| {{ayd|14 Jun 1987|1 Mar 1988}}

19

| Justice Guman Mal Lodha

| Rajasthan High Court

| 1 March 1988

| 15 March 1988

| {{ayd|1 Mar 1988|15 Mar 1988}}

20

| Justice A. S. Raghuvir

| Andhra Pradesh High Court

| 6 May 1988

| 21 March 1991

| {{ayd|6 May 1988|21 Mar 1991}}

{{ndash}}
21

| Justice Ullal Lakshminarayana Bhat

| Kerala High Court

| 20 August 1991

| 14 December 1993

| {{ayd|20 Aug 1991|14 Dec 1993}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice R. K. Manisana Singha (acting)

| rowspan="2"| Gauhati High Court

| 15 December 1993

| 26 January 1994

| {{ayd|15 Dec 1993|26 Jan 1994}}

22

| Justice R. K. Manisana Singha

| 27 January 1994

| 1 February 1994

| {{ayd|27 Jan 1994|1 Feb 1994}}

23

| Justice Viney Krishna Khanna

| Allahabad High Court

| 24 April 1994

| 14 February 1997

| {{ayd|24 Apr 1994|14 Feb 1997}}

{{ndash}}
24

| Justice M. Ramakrishna

| Karnataka High Court

| 18 June 1997

| 12 April 1998

| {{ayd|18 Jun 1997|12 Apr 1998}}

{{ndash}}
25

| Justice Brijesh Kumar

| Allahabad High Court

| 12 February 1999

| 18 October 2000

| {{ayd|12 Feb 1999|18 Oct 2000}}

26

| Justice N. C. Jain

| Punjab and Haryana High Court

| 18 October 2000

| 5 April 2001

| {{ayd|18 Oct 2000|5 Apr 2001}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice H. K. Sema (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 5 April 2001

| 6 June 2001

| {{ayd|5 Apr 2001|6 Jun 2001}}

{{ndash}}
{{ndash}}

| Justice Ravinder Singh Mongia (acting)

| rowspan="2"| Punjab and Haryana High Court

| 21 June 2001

| 20 September 2001

| {{ayd|21 Jun 2001|20 Sep 2001}}

| Justice Ravinder Singh Mongia

| 21 September 2001

| 10 June 2002

| {{ayd|21 Sep 2001|10 Jun 2002}}

| Justice P. P. Naolekar

| Madhya Pradesh High Court

| 10 June 2002

| 27 July 2004

| {{ayd|10 Jun 2002|27 Jul 2004}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Dinendra Biswas (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 27 July 2004

| 20 May 2005

| {{ayd|27 Jul 2004|20 May 2005}}

| Justice Binod Kumar Roy

| Patna High Court

| 21 May 2005

| 30 September 2005

| {{ayd|21 May 2005|29 Sep 2005}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Dinendra Biswas (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 30 September 2005

| 4 December 2005

| {{ayd|30 Sep 2005|4 Dec 2005}}

| Justice B. Sudarshan Reddy

| Andhra Pradesh High Court

| 5 December 2005

| 11 January 2007

| {{ayd|5 Dec 2005|11 Jan 2007}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Dinendra Biswas (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 12 January 2007

| 3 May 2007

| {{ayd|12 Jan 2007|3 May 2007}}

| Justice Jasti Chelameswar

| Andhra Pradesh High Court

| 3 May 2007

| 17 March 2010

| {{ayd|3 May 2007|17 Mar 2010}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Ranjan Gogoi (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 18 March 2010

| 16 April 2010

| {{ayd|18 Mar 2010|16 Apr 2010}}

| rowspan="5"| Pratibha Patil

| Justice Ramesh Surajmal Garg

| Madhya Pradesh High Court

| 17 April 2010

| 18 June 2010

| {{ayd|17 Apr 2010|18 Jun 2010}}

| Justice Madan Bhimarao Lokur

| Delhi High Court

| 24 June 2010

| 14 November 2011

| {{ayd|24 Jun 2010|14 Nov 2011}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel (acting)

| rowspan="2"| Punjab and Haryana High Court

| 15 November 2011

| 19 December 2011

| {{ayd|15 Nov 2011|19 Dec 2011}}

| Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel

| 20 December 2011

| 10 October 2013

| {{ayd|20 Dec 2011|10 Oct 2013}}

| Justice Abhay Manohar Sapre

| Madhya Pradesh High Court

| 19 October 2013

| 12 August 2014

| {{ayd|19 Oct 2013|12 Aug 2014}}

| rowspan="4"| Pranab Mukherjee

{{ndash}}

| Justice K. Sreedhar Rao (acting)

| Karnataka High Court

| 13 August 2014

| 20 October 2015

| {{ayd|13 Aug 2014|20 Oct 2015}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Tinlianthang Vaiphei (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 21 October 2015

| 4 March 2016

| {{ayd|21 Oct 2015|4 Mar 2016}}

| Justice Ajit Singh

| Madhya Pradesh High Court

| 5 March 2016

| 5 September 2018

| {{ayd|5 Mar 2016|5 Sep 2018}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Arup Kumar Goswami (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 6 September 2018

| 29 October 2018

| {{ayd|6 Sep 2018|29 Oct 2018}}

| rowspan="8"| Ram Nath Kovind

| Justice A. S. Bopanna

| Karnataka High Court

| 29 October 2018

| 23 May 2019

| {{ayd|29 Oct 2018|23 May 2019}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Arup Kumar Goswami (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 24 May 2019

| 6 October 2019

| {{ayd|24 May 2019|6 Oct 2019}}

| Justice Ajai Lamba

| Punjab and Haryana High Court

| 7 October 2019

| 20 September 2020

| {{ayd|7 Oct 2019|20 Sep 2020}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice N. Kotiswar Singh (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 21 September 2020

| 9 January 2021

| {{ayd|21 Sep 2020|9 Jan 2021}}

| Justice Sudhanshu Dhulia

| Uttarakhand High Court

| 10 January 2021

| 8 May 2022

| {{ayd|10 Jan 2021|8 May 2022}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice N. Kotiswar Singh (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 9 May 2022

| 22 June 2022

| {{ayd|9 May 2022|22 Jun 2022}}

| Justice Rashmin Manharbhai Chhaya

| Gujarat High Court

| 23 June 2022

| 11 January 2023

| {{ayd|23 Jun 2022|11 Jan 2023}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice N. Kotiswar Singh (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 12 January 2023

| 14 February 2023

| {{ayd|12 Jan 2023|14 Feb 2023}}

| rowspan="4"| Droupadi Murmu

| Justice Sandeep Mehta

| Rajasthan High Court

| 15 February 2023

| 8 November 2023

| {{ayd|15 Feb 2023|8 Nov 2023}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Lanusungkum Jamir (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 9 November 2023

| 4 February 2024

| {{ayd|9 Nov 2023|4 Feb 2024}}

| Justice Vijay Bishnoi

| Rajasthan High Court

| 5 February 2024

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|5 Feb 2024}}

CJ, Tripura

class="wikitable"

! #

! Chief Justice

! Parent high court

! Assumed office

! Left office

! Term length

! Appointer

1

| Justice Deepak Gupta

| Himachal Pradesh High Court

| 23 March 2013

| 15 May 2016

| {{ayd|23 Mar 2013|15 May 2016}}

| rowspan="3"| Pranab Mukherjee

{{ndash}}

| Justice T. Vaiphei (acting)

| rowspan="2"| Gauhati High Court

| 16 May 2016

| 20 September 2016

| {{ayd|16 May 2016|20 Sep 2016}}

2

| Justice T. Vaiphei

| 21 September 2016

| 28 February 2018

| {{ayd|21 Sep 2016|28 Feb 2018}}

3

| Justice Ajay Rastogi

| Rajasthan High Court

| 1 March 2018

| 1 November 2018

| {{ayd|1 Mar 2018|1 Nov 2018}}

| rowspan="6"| Ram Nath Kovind

{{ndash}}

| Justice Subhasis Talapatra (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 2 November 2018

| 13 November 2018

| {{ayd|2 Nov 2018|13 Nov 2018}}

4

| Justice Sanjay Karol

| Himachal Pradesh High Court

| 14 November 2018

| 10 November 2019

| {{ayd|14 Nov 2018|10 Nov 2019}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice Subhasis Talapatra (acting)

| Gauhati High Court

| 11 November 2019

| 15 November 2019

| {{ayd|11 Nov 2019|15 Nov 2019}}

5

| Justice Akil Kureshi

| Gujarat High Court

| 16 November 2019

| 11 October 2021

| {{ayd|16 Nov 2019|11 Oct 2021}}

6

| Justice Indrajit Mahanty

| Orissa High Court

| 12 October 2021

| 10 November 2022

| {{ayd|12 Oct 2021|10 Nov 2022}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice T. Amarnath Goud (acting)

| Telangana High Court

| 11 November 2022

| 14 February 2023

| {{ayd|11 Nov 2022|14 Feb 2023}}

| rowspan="5"| Droupadi Murmu

7

| Justice Jaswant Singh

| Punjab and Haryana High Court

| 15 February 2023

| 22 February 2023

| {{ayd|15 Feb 2023|22 Feb 2023}}

{{ndash}}

| Justice T. Amarnath Goud (acting)

| Telangana High Court

| 23 February 2023

| 16 April 2023

| {{ayd|23 Feb 2023|16 Apr 2023}}

8

| Justice Aparesh Kumar Singh

| Jharkhand High Court

| 17 April 2023

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|17 Apr 2023}}

FICCI Presidents

class="wikitable sortable"

! #

! Name

! Term

! Background

1

| Sir Dinshaw Maneckji Petit, 2nd Baronet

| 1927

|

2

| Sir Purshotamdas Thakurdas

| 1928

|

3

| G. D. Birla

| 1929

|

4

| Sir Lala Shri Ram

| 1930

|

5

| M. Jamal Mohammed Sahib

| 1931

|

6

| Walchand Hirachand

| 1932

| Founder, Walchand Group

7

| Nalini Ranjan Sarkar

| 1933

|

8

| Kasturbhai Lalbhai

| 1934

| Co-Founder, Arvind Mills

9

| Sir Padampat Singhania

| 1935

| Chairman, JK Mills

10

| D. P. Khaitan

| 1936

| Founder, Khaitan & Co

11

| Sir Rahimtoola M. Chinoy

| 1937

|

12

| Jamshed N. R. Mehta

| 1938

|

13

| Dewan Bahadur C. S. Ratnasabapathi Mudaliar

| 1939

|

14

| Amritlal Ojha

| 1940

| Founder, Amritlal & Sons

15

| Sir Chunilal Mehta

| 1941

| Founder, Century Mills

16

| Gaganvihari Lallubhai Mehta

| 1942

|

17

| Sir Muthiah Annamalai Muthiah Chettiar, Rajah of Chettinad

| 1943

|

18

| J. C. Setalvad

| 1944

|

19

| Rai Bahadur Sir Badridas Goenka

| 1945

| Chairman, Imperial Bank of India

20

| Sir Gurusharan Lal Bhadani

| 1946

| Founder, Gaya Sugar, Cotton and Jute Mills

21

| M. A. Master

| 1947

|

22

| Lalji Mehrotra

| 1948

|

23

| K. D. Jalan

| 1949

|

24

| Sir Tulsidas Kilachand

| 1950

|

25

| C. M. Kothari

| 1951

| Founder, Kothari Group

26

| Sahu Shanti Prasad Jain

| 1952

| Chairman, Bennett, Coleman

27

| Ramanlal Gokaldas Saraiya

| 1953

| Founder, Sarvajanik Education Society

28

| Brij Mohan Birla

| 1954

| Chairman, Hindustan Motors

29

| Shantilal Mangaldas

| 1955

|

30

| Lala Lakshmipat Singhania

| 1956

| Chairman, J. K. Organisation

31

| Babubhai Maneklal Chinai

| 1957

|

32

| Sir Bijoy Prasad Singh Roy

| 1958

| Chairman, Basanti Cotton Mills

33

| Madanmohan R. Ruia

| 1959{{ndash}}1960

|

34

| A. M. M. Murugappa Chettiar

| 1960{{ndash}}1961

| Founder, Murugappa Group

35

| Karam Chand Thapar

| 1961{{ndash}}1962

| Founder, Thapar Group

| Rajeev Chandrasekhar

| 2007{{ndash}}2008

| Founder Chairman, Jupiter Capital

| Harsh Pati Singhania

| 2008{{ndash}}2009

| Chairman and Managing Director, JK Paper

| Rajan Mittal

| 2009{{ndash}}2010

| Vice Chairman and Managing Director, Bharti Enterprises

| Harsh Mariwala

| 2010{{ndash}}2011

| Chairman, Marico

| Rajya Vardhan Kanoria

| 2011{{ndash}}2012

| Chairman and Managing Director, Kanoria Chemicals

| Naina Lal Kidwai

| 2012{{ndash}}2013

| Group General Manager and Country Head, HSBC India

| Sidharth Birla

| 2013{{ndash}}2014

| Chairman, Xpro India

| Dr. Jyotsna Suri

| 2014{{ndash}}2015

| Chairman and Managing Director, Bharat Hotels

| Harshavardhan Neotia

| 2015{{ndash}}2016

| Chairman, Ambuja Neotia Group

| Pankaj Patel

| 2016{{ndash}}2017

| Chairman, Zydus Lifesciences

| Rashesh Shah

| 2017{{ndash}}2018

| Chairman and CEO, Edelweiss Group

| Sandip Somany

| 2018{{ndash}}2019

| Chairman and Managing Director, Hindware

| Dr. Sangita Reddy

| 2019{{ndash}}2020

| Joint Managing Director, Apollo Hospitals

| Uday Shankar

| 2020{{ndash}}2021

| Chairman, Disney Star

| Sanjiv Mehta

| 2021{{ndash}}2022

| Chairman and Managing Director, Hindustan Unilever

| Subhrakant Panda

| 2022{{ndash}}2023

| Managing Director, Indian Metals and Ferro Alloys

| Dr. Anish Shah

| 2023{{ndash}}2024

| Group CEO, Mahindra Group and Managing Director, Mahindra & Mahindra

| Harsha Vardhan Agarwal

| 2024{{ndash}}2025

| Vice Chairman and Managing Director, Emami

DIB

class="wikitable sortable"

!#

!Name

!From

!To

!Tenure

!Remarks

| Syed Asif Ibrahim, IPS (MP:1977)

| 1 January 2013

| 31 December 2014

| {{ayd|1 Jan 2013|31 Dec 2014}}

|

| Dineshwar Sharma, IPS (KL:1979)

| 1 January 2015

| 1 January 2017

| {{ayd|1 Jan 2015|1 Jan 2017}}

| later Administrator of Lakshadweep

| Rajiv Jain, IPS (JH:1980)

| 1 January 2017

| 26 June 2019

| {{ayd|1 Jan 2017|26 Jun 2019}}

| formerly Special Director, IB

| Arvind Kumar, IPS (AM:1984)

| 30 June 2019

| 30 June 2022

| {{ayd|30 Jun 2019|30 Jun 2022}}

| formerly Special Director, IB; later Vigilance Commissioner

| Tapan Deka, IPS (HP:1988)

| 1 July 2022

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|1 Jul 2022}}

| formerly Special Director, IB

DG, CISF

class="wikitable sortable"

!#

!Name

!From

!To

!Tenure

!Remarks

colspan="6"| Inspectors General of Central Industrial Security Force
1

| S. B. Shetty, IPS

| 13 July 1968

| 16 October 1969

| {{ayd|13 Jul 1968|16 Oct 1969}}

|

2

| M. Singaravellu, IPS

| 26 November 1969

| 12 May 1972

| {{ayd|26 Nov 1969|12 May 1972}}

| transferred as DGP, Kerala

3

| M. Gopalan, IPS

| 25 May 1972

| 30 April 1973

| {{ayd|25 May 1972|30 Apr 1973}}

|

4

| L. S. Bisht, IPS

| 28 May 1973

| 28 February 1978

| {{ayd|28 May 1973|28 Feb 1978}}

|

5

| R. C. Gopal, IPS

| 28 February 1978

| 18 December 1978

| {{ayd|28 Feb 1978|18 Dec 1978}}

| formerly DG, CRPF

colspan="6"| Directors General of Central Industrial Security Force
6

| Surendra Nath, IPS

| 19 December 1978

| 23 February 1984

| {{ayd|19 Dec 1978|23 Feb 1984}}

| later Governor of Himachal Pradesh and Punjab

7

| S. Anand Ram, IPS

| 29 February 1984

| 21 August 1985

| {{ayd|29 Feb 1984|21 Aug 1985}}

|

8

| D. M. Mishra, IPS

| 31 August 1985

| 30 November 1987

| {{ayd|31 Aug 1985|30 Nov 1987}}

|

9

| G. S. Mander, IPS

| 1 December 1987

| 20 December 1990

| {{ayd|1 Dec 1987|20 Dec 1990}}

|

10

| P. S. Bhinder, IPS

| 20 December 1990

| 30 September 1992

| {{ayd|20 Dec 1990|30 Sep 1992}}

|

11

| S. C. Mehta, IPS

| 30 October 1992

| 31 August 1994

| {{ayd|30 Oct 1992|31 Aug 1994}}

|

12

| P. K. Kanungo, IPS

| 17 February 1995

| 29 February 1996

| {{ayd|17 Feb 1995|29 Feb 1996}}

|

13

| Ashok Tandon, IPS

| 1 March 1996

| 1 October 1996

| {{ayd|1 Mar 1996|1 Oct 1996}}

|

14

| R. K. Sharma, IPS

| 1 October 1996

| 14 January 1999

| {{ayd|1 Oct 1996|14 Jan 1999}}

|

15

| Dr. Trinath Mishra, IPS (UP:1965)

| 14 January 1999

| 31 July 2000

| {{ayd|14 Jan 1999|31 Jul 2000}}

| transferred as DG, CRPF

16

| B. B. Nanda, IPS (OR:1965)

| 31 July 2000

| 31 January 2002

| {{ayd|31 Jul 2000|31 Jan 2002}}

| formerly DG, BPRD

17

| H. J. Dora, IPS (AP:1965)

| 23 February 2002

| 10 September 2002

| {{ayd|23 Feb 2002|10 Sep 2002}}

| formerly DGP, Andhra Pradesh; transferred as Vigilance Commissioner

{{ndash}}

| Dr. Trinath Mishra, IPS (UP:1965)

| 10 September 2002

| 30 September 2002

| {{ayd|10 Sep 2002|30 Sep 2002}}

| DG, CRPF; additional charge

18

| B. B. Mishra, IPS (OR:1967)

| 1 October 2002

| 30 June 2003

| {{ayd|1 Oct 2002|30 Jun 2003}}

| transferred as Special Secretary, Ministry of Home Affairs

{{ndash}}

| R. C. Agarwal, IPS (UP:1968)

| 1 July 2003

| 23 September 2003

| {{ayd|1 Jul 2003|23 Sep 2003}}

| DG, ITBP; additional charge

19

| K. M. Singh, IPS (MH:1968)

| 23 September 2003

| 30 April 2005

| {{ayd|23 Sep 2003|30 Apr 2005}}

| later Member, NDMA

20

| S. I. S. Ahmed, IPS (WB:1970)

| 6 June 2005

| 1 March 2007

| {{ayd|6 Jun 2005|1 Mar 2007}}

| transferred as DG, CRPF

21

| Ranjeet Kumar Das, IPS (UP:1970)

| 10 April 2007

| 31 October 2008

| {{ayd|10 Apr 2007|31 Oct 2008}}

| formerly SDG, IB

{{ndash}}

| R. K. Bhatia, IPS (UP:1974)

| 1 November 2008

| 17 November 2008

| {{ayd|1 Nov 2008|17 Nov 2008}}

| ADG, CISF; additional charge

22

| Niraj Ranjan Das, IPS (WB:1973)

| 17 November 2008

| 31 January 2012

| {{ayd|17 Nov 2008|31 Jan 2012}}

| formerly ADG (East Zone), CRPF

23

| Rajiv, IPS (UP:1975)

| 1 February 2012

| 31 October 2013

| {{ayd|1 Feb 2012|31 Oct 2013}}

| formerly DG, NDRF & CD

24

| Arvind Ranjan, IPS (KL:1977)

| 26 December 2013

| 30 April 2015

| {{ayd|26 Dec 2013|30 Apr 2015}}

| formerly DG, NSG

25

| Surinder Singh, IPS (WB:1980)

| 1 May 2015

| 31 August 2016

| {{ayd|1 May 2015|31 Aug 2016}}

| formerly SDG, IB

26

| O. P. Singh, IPS (UP:1983)

| 26 September 2016

| 21 January 2018

| {{ayd|26 Sep 2016|21 Jan 2018}}

| formerly DG, NDRF; transferred as DGP, Uttar Pradesh

{{ndash}}

| Alok Kumar Pateria, IPS (MP:1986)

| 22 January 2018

| 10 April 2018

| {{ayd|22 Jan 2018|10 Apr 2018}}

| ADG, CISF; officiating

27

| Rakesh Ranjan, IPS (BH:1984)

| 11 April 2018

| 30 November 2020

| {{ayd|11 Apr 2018|30 Nov 2020}}

| formerly SDG, BSF

{{ndash}}

| Kumar Rajesh Chandra, IPS (BH:1985)

| 1 December 2020

| 7 January 2021

| {{ayd|1 Dec 2020|7 Jan 2021}}

| DG, SSB; additional charge

28

| Subodh Kumar Jaiswal, IPS (MH:1985)

| 8 January 2021

| 25 May 2021

| {{ayd|8 Jan 2021|25 May 2021}}

| formerly DGP, Maharashtra; transferred as Director, CBI

{{ndash}}

| M. A. Ganapathy, IPS (UK:1986)

| 26 May 2021

| 15 November 2021

| {{ayd|26 May 2021|15 Nov 2021}}

| DG, NSG; additional charge

29

| Sheel Vardhan Singh, IPS (BH:1986)

| 15 November 2021

| 31 August 2023

| {{ayd|15 Nov 2021|31 Aug 2023}}

| formerly SDG, IB; later appointed Member, UPSC

{{ndash}}

| rowspan="2"| Nina Singh, IPS (RJ:1989)

| 1 September 2023

| 29 December 2023

| {{ayd|1 Sep 2023|29 Dec 2023}}

| SDG, CISF; additional charge

30

| 29 December 2023

| 31 July 2024

| {{ayd|29 Dec 2023|31 Jul 2024}}

|

{{ndash}}

| Anish Dayal Singh, IPS (MN:1988)

| 31 July 2024

| 31 August 2024

| {{ayd|31 Jul 2024|31 Aug 2024}}

| DG, CRPF; additional charge

31

| Rajwinder Singh Bhatti, IPS (BH:1990)

| 1 September 2024

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|1 Sep 2024}}

| formerly DGP, Bihar

DG, ITBP

class="wikitable sortable"

!#

!Name

!From

!To

!Tenure

!Remarks

colspan="6"| Inspectors General of Indo-Tibetan Police Force
1

| Balbir Singh, IPS

| 2 February 1963

| 2 June 1964

| {{ayd|2 Feb 1963|2 Jun 1964}}

|

2

| B. Chatterjee, IPS

| 2 June 1964

| 31 August 1974

| {{ayd|2 Jun 1964|31 Aug 1974}}

|

3

| R. N. Sheopary, IPS

| 3 September 1974

| 22 December 1980

| {{ayd|3 Sep 1974|22 Dec 1980}}

| transferred as DG, CRPF

4

| K. Ramamurty, IPS

| 22 December 1980

| 31 January 1981

| {{ayd|22 Dec 1980|31 Jan 1981}}

|

colspan="6"| Directors General of Indo-Tibetan Police Force
5

| Shiv Raj Bahadur, IPS

| 4 June 1981

| 31 December 1983

| {{ayd|4 Jun 1981|31 Dec 1983}}

|

{{ndash}}

| Shiva Swaroop, IPS

| 1 January 1984

| 19 March 1984

| {{ayd|1 Jan 1984|19 Mar 1984}}

| DG, CRPF; additional charge; later Lieutenant Governor, Arunachal Pradesh

| M. C. Mishra, IPS

| 19 March 1984

| 28 March 1985

| {{ayd|19 Mar 1984|28 Mar 1985}}

| transferred as DG, BSF

8

| O. P. Bhutani, IPS

| 28 March 1985

| 28 February 1987

| {{ayd|28 Mar 1985|28 Feb 1987}}

|

9

| J. M. Qureshi, IPS

| 28 February 1987

| 2 March 1988

| {{ayd|28 Feb 1987|2 Mar 1988}}

|

{{ndash}}

| G. S. Mander, IPS

| 2 March 1988

| 8 July 1988

| {{ayd|2 Mar 1988|8 Jul 1988}}

| DG, CISF; additional charge

11

| D. V. L. N. Rama Krishna Roy, IPS

| 8 July 1988

| 31 January 1992

| {{ayd|8 Jul 1988|31 Jan 1992}}

|

12

| R. K. Wadehra, IPS (UP:1959)

| 31 January 1992

| 31 January 1993

| {{ayd|31 Jan 1992|31 Jan 1993}}

|

13

| D. K. Arya, IPS

| 3 February 1993

| 31 January 1994

| {{ayd|3 Feb 1993|31 Jan 1994}}

| transferred as DG, BSF

{{ndash}}

| S. C. Mehta, IPS

| 31 January 1994

| 16 April 1994

| {{ayd|31 Jan 1994|16 Apr 1994}}

| DG, CISF; additional charge

15

| R. C. Jha, IPS

| 16 April 1994

| 31 March 1995

| {{ayd|16 Apr 1994|31 Mar 1995}}

|

16

| Jogender Singh, IPS

| 31 March 1995

| 10 April 1996

| {{ayd|31 Mar 1995|10 Apr 1996}}

| transferred as Director, CBI

17

| R. K. Sharma, IPS

| 10 April 1996

| 10 January 1997

| {{ayd|10 Apr 1996|10 Jan 1997}}

| formerly DG, CISF

18

| Bibhuti Bhusan Nandy, IPS (OR:1964)

| 10 January 1997

| 3 April 1997

| {{ayd|10 Jan 1997|3 Apr 1997}}

| formerly Additional Secretary, RAW; later National Security Advisor, Mauritius

19

| Nikhil Kumar, IPS (UT:1963)

| 3 April 1997

| 3 December 1997

| {{ayd|3 Apr 1997|3 Dec 1997}}

| formerly Commissioner, Delhi Police; transferred as DG, NSG; later Governor of Nagaland and Kerala

20

| Pandit Gautam Kaul, IPS

| 1 June 1998

| 31 March 2001

| {{ayd|1 Jun 1998|31 Mar 2001}}

|

21

| S. C. Chaube, IPS (UP:1966)

| 31 March 2001

| 31 December 2002

| {{ayd|31 Mar 2001|31 Dec 2002}}

| transferred as DG, CRPF

22

| R. C. Agarwal, IPS (UP:1968)

| 31 December 2002

| 30 June 2004

| {{ayd|31 Dec 2002|30 Jun 2004}}

| formerly SDG, BSF

23

| K. J. Singh, IPS (WB:1969)

| 1 July 2004

| 30 April 2005

| {{ayd|1 Jul 2004|30 Apr 2005}}

| formerly ADG, ITBP

24

| S. K. Jain, IPS

| 5 May 2005

| 31 October 2005

| {{ayd|5 May 2005|31 Oct 2005}}

|

{{ndash}}

| N. C. Joshi, IPS

| 1 November 2005

| 31 December 2005

| {{ayd|1 Nov 2005|31 Dec 2005}}

| DG, BPR&D; additional charge

| V. K. Joshi, IPS (BH:1971)

| 1 January 2006

| 2 February 2008

| {{ayd|1 Jan 2006|2 Feb 2008}}

| transferred as DG, CRPF

23

| Vikram Srivastava, IPS

| 2 February 2008

| 31 January 2010

| {{ayd|2 Feb 2008|31 Jan 2010}}

| transferred as DG, CRPF

24

| R. K. Bhatia, IPS (BH:1974)

| 1 February 2010

| 31 August 2011

| {{ayd|1 Feb 2010|31 Aug 2011}}

| formerly DG, NDRF & CD

25

| Ranjit Sinha, IPS (BH:1974)

| 1 September 2011

| 3 December 2012

| {{ayd|1 Sep 2011|3 Dec 2012}}

| formerly DG, RPF; transferred as Director, CBI

{{ndash}}

| Mahboob Alam, IPS (TN:1981)

| 3 December 2012

| 18 December 2012

| {{ayd|3 Dec 2012|18 Dec 2012}}

| ADG, ITBP; additional charge

26

| Ajay Chadha, IPS (UT:1977)

| 19 December 2012

| 31 August 2013

| {{ayd|19 Dec 2012|31 Aug 2013}}

| formerly Special Security (Internal Security), Ministry of Home Affairs

{{ndash}}

| Mahboob Alam, IPS (TN:1981)

| 1 September 2013

| 11 November 2013

| {{ayd|1 Sep 2013|11 Nov 2013}}

| ADG, ITBP; additional charge

27

| Subhas Goswami, IPS (AM:1977)

| 11 November 2013

| 31 December 2014

| {{ayd|11 Nov 2013|31 Dec 2014}}

| formerly CMD, Assam Police Housing Corporation

{{ndash}}

| Prakash Mishra, IPS (OR:1977)

| 1 January 2015

| 10 February 2015

| {{ayd|1 Jan 2015|10 Feb 2015}}

| DG, CRPF; additional charge

28

| Shri Krishna Chaudhary, IPS (BH:1979)

| 10 February 2015

| 30 June 2017

| {{ayd|10 Feb 2015|30 Jun 2017}}

| formerly DG, RPF & NDRF

29

| R. K. Pachnanda, IPS (WB:1983)

| 30 June 2017

| 31 October 2018

| {{ayd|30 Jun 2017|31 Oct 2018}}

| formerly DG, NDRF

30

| Surjeet Singh Deswal, IPS (HR:1984)

| 31 October 2018

| 31 August 2021

| {{ayd|31 Oct 2018|31 Aug 2021}}

| formerly DG, SSB; later Vice-Chancellor, Sports University of Haryana

31

| Sanjay Arora, IPS (TN:1988)

| 31 August 2021

| 1 August 2022

| {{ayd|31 Aug 2021|1 Aug 2022}}

| formerly SDG, CRPF; transferred as Police Commissioner, Delhi

{{ndash}}

| Dr. Sujoy Lal Thaosen, IPS (MP:1988)

| 1 August 2022

| 2 October 2022

| {{ayd|1 Aug 2022|2 Oct 2022}}

| DG, SSB; additional charge

32

| Anish Dayal Singh, IPS (MA:1988)

| 3 October 2022

| 31 December 2024

| {{ayd|3 Oct 2022|31 Dec 2024}}

| formerly Special Director, IB; transferred as DG, CRPF

33

| Rahul Rasgotra, IPS (MA:1989)

| 1 January 2024

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|1 Jan 2024}}

| formerly Special Director, IB

DG, NCB

class="wikitable sortable"

!#

!Name

!From

!To

!Tenure

!Remarks

| R. R. Bhatnagar, IPS (UP:1983)

|

| Rina Mitra, IPS (MP:1983)

|

| 3 January 2018

| Special Secretary (Internal Security), Ministry of Home Affairs; additional charge

| Abhay, IPS (OR:1986)

| 3 January 2018

| 4 July 2019

| {{ayd|3 Jan 2018|4 Jul 2019}}

| formerly ADG, CRPF; transferred as Director, SVPNPA

| Rakesh Asthana, IPS (GJ:1984)

| 1 August 2019

| 29 July 2021

| {{ayd|1 Aug 2019|29 Jul 2021}}

| DG, BCAS and later DG, BSF; additional charge

| Satya Narayan Pradhan, IPS (JH:1988)

| 29 July 2021

| 31 August 2024

| {{ayd|29 Jul 2021|31 Aug 2024}}

| formerly DG, NDRF; additional charge until 15 November 2021

| Anish Dayal Singh, IPS (MA:1988)

| 5 September 2024

| 17 September 2024

| {{ayd|5 Sep 2024|17 Sep 2024}}

| DG, CRPF; additional charge

| Anurag Garg, IPS (HP:1993)

| 18 September 2024

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|18 Sep 2024}}

| formerly ADG, BSF

Director, SPG

class="wikitable sortable"

!#

!Name

!From

!To

!Tenure

!Remarks

| Bharat Vir Wanchoo, IPS (WB:1976)

| 2004

| 2011

|

| later Governor of Goa

|

DGP, Assam

class="wikitable sortable"

!#

!Name

!From

!To

!Tenure

!Remarks

|
| Deepak Narayan Dutta, IPS
| Ghanashyam Murari Shrivastava, IPS ()
| Shankar Prasad Barua, IPS ()
{{ndash}}

| Rajendra Kumar, IPS ()

|

| 16 January 2012

|

| ADGP (Home Guards & Civil Defence); additional charge

| Jayanta Narayan Choudhury, IPS (1978)

| 16 January 2012

| 17 January 2014

| {{ayd|16 Jan 2012|17 Jan 2014}}

| transferred as DG, NSG

| Khagen Sarma, IPS (1982)

| 17 January 2014

| 30 November 2015

| {{ayd|17 Jan 2014|30 Nov 2015}}

|

| Mukesh Sahay, IPS (1984)

| 30 November 2015

| 30 April 2018

| {{ayd|30 Nov 2015|30 Apr 2018}}

|

| Kuladhar Saikia, IPS (1985)

| 1 May 2018

| 30 November 2019

| {{ayd|1 May 2018|30 Nov 2019}}

| later President, Asom Sahitya Sabha

| Bhaskar Jyoti Mahanta, IPS (1988)

| 30 November 2019

| 31 January 2023

| {{ayd|30 Nov 2019|31 Jan 2023}}

| acting until 11 December 2019

| Gyanendra Pratap Singh, IPS (1991)

| 1 February 2023

| 30 January 2025

| {{ayd|1 Feb 2023|30 Jan 2025}}

| transferred as DG, CRPF

| Harmeet Singh, IPS (1992)

| 30 January 2025

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|30 Jan 2025}}

|

Finance Secretaries

class="wikitable sortable"

!#

!Name

!From

!To

!Tenure

!Remarks

| Subhash Chandra Garg, IAS (RJ:1983)

| 1 March 2019

| 26 July 2019

| {{ayd|1 Mar 2019|26 Jul 2019}}

|

| Rajiv Kumar, IAS (JH:1984)

| 1 September 2017

| 29 February 2020

| {{ayd|1 Sep 2017|29 Feb 2020}}

| later Chief Election Commissioner

| Ajay Bhushan Pandey, IAS (MH:1984)

| 3 March 2020

| 28 February 2021

| {{ayd|3 Mar 2020|28 Feb 2021}}

|

| T. V. Somanathan, IAS (TN:1987)

| 28 April 2021

| 30 August 2024

| {{ayd|28 Apr 2021|30 Aug 2024}}

| later Cabinet Secretary

| Tuhin Kanta Pandey, IAS (OR:1987)

| 7 September 2024

| 28 February 2025

| {{ayd|7 Sep 2024|28 Feb 2025}}

| later Chairman, SEBI

Revenue Secys

[https://dor.gov.in/rs-independence]

class="wikitable sortable"

!#

!Name

!From

!To

!Tenure

!Remarks

| V. C. Pande, IAS

| 25 May 1985

| 12 March 1987

| {{ayd|25 May 1985|12 Mar 1987}}

| later Cabinet Secretary

| N. K. Singh, IAS

| 1 August 1996

| 19 August 1998

| {{ayd|1 Aug 1996|19 Aug 1998}}

|

| Vineeta Rai, IAS (UT:1968)

| 1 June 2003

| 30 September 2004

| {{ayd|1 Jun 2003|30 Sep 2004}}

|

| K. M. Chandrasekhar, IAS (KL:1970)

| 19 October 2004

| 21 May 2007

| {{ayd|19 Oct 2004|21 May 2007}}

| later Cabinet Secretary

| Duvvuri Subbarao, IAS (AP:1972)

| 22 May 2007

| 30 June 2007

| {{ayd|22 May 2007|30 Jun 2007}}

| Economic Affairs Secretary; additional charge

| P. V. Bhide, IAS (AP:1973)

| 1 June 2007

| 31 January 2010

| {{ayd|1 Jun 2007|31 Jan 2010}}

| Sunil Mitra, IAS (WB:1975)

| 31 January 2010

| 30 June 2011

| {{ayd|31 Jan 2010|30 Jun 2011}}

| later Finance Secretary

| Raminder Singh Gujral, IAS (HY:1976)

| 30 June 2011

| 6 August 2012

| {{ayd|30 Jun 2011|6 Aug 2012}}

| later Finance Secretary

| Sumit Bose, IAS (MP:1976)

| 6 August 2012

| 31 March 2014

| {{ayd|6 Aug 2012|31 Mar 2014}}

| later Finance Secretary

| Rajiv Takru, IAS (GJ:1979)

| 1 April 2014

| 16 June 2014

| {{ayd|1 Apr 2014|16 Jun 2014}}

|

| Shaktikanta Das, IAS (TN:1980)

| 16 June 2014

| 31 August 2015

| {{ayd|16 Jun 2014|31 Aug 2015}}

| later Governor of the Reserve Bank of India

| Dr. Hasmukh Adhia, IAS (GJ:1981)

| 1 September 2015

| 30 November 2018

| {{ayd|1 Sep 2015|30 Nov 2018}}

| later Finance Secretary

| Dr. Ajay Bhushan Pandey, IAS (MH:1984)

| 1 December 2018

| 28 February 2021

| {{ayd|1 Dec 2018|28 Feb 2021}}

| later Finance Secretary

| Tarun Bajaj, IAS (HY:1988)

| 28 February 2021

| 30 November 2022

| {{ayd|28 Feb 2021|30 Nov 2022}}

| formerly Economic Affairs Secretary; additional charge until 6 April 2021

| Sanjay Malhotra, IAS (RJ:1990)

| 1 December 2022

| 10 December 2024

| {{ayd|1 Dec 2022|10 Dec 2024}}

| later Governor of the Reserve Bank of India

| Ajay Seth, IAS (KA:1987)

| 11 December 2024

| 26 December 2024

| {{ayd|11 Dec 2024|26 Dec 2024}}

| Economic Affairs Secretary; additional charge

| Arunish Chawla, IAS (BH:1992)

| 26 December 2024

| 9 January 2025

| {{ayd|26 Dec 2024|9 Jan 2025}}

|

| Tuhin Kanta Pandey, IAS (OR:1987)

| 9 January 2025

| 28 February 2025

| {{ayd|9 Jan 2025|28 Feb 2025}}

| Finance Secretary; concurrent charge

| Ajay Seth, IAS (KA:1987)

| 1 March 2025

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|1 Mar 2025}}

| Economic Affairs Secretary; additional charge

Secretary to the PoI

class="wikitable sortable"

!#

!Name

!From

!To

!Tenure

!President

| Gopalkrishna Gandhi, IAS (TN:1968)

|

| P. Madhavan Nair, IAS (AGMUT:1967)

| 25 July 2002

| 25 July 2007

| {{ayd|25 Jul 2002|25 Jul 2007}}

| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam

| Christy Leon Fernandez, IAS (GJ:1973)

| 25 July 2007

| 25 July 2012

| {{ayd|25 Jul 2007|25 Jul 2012}}

| Pratibha Patil

| Omita Paul, IIS (1973)

| 25 July 2012

| 25 July 2017

| {{ayd|25 Jul 2012|25 Jul 2017}}

| Pranab Mukherjee

| Sanjay Kothari, IAS (HR:1978)

| 25 July 2017

| 25 April 2020

| {{ayd|25 Jul 2017|25 Apr 2020}}

| Ram Nath Kovind

| Kapil Dev Tripathi, IAS (AM:1980)

| 25 April 2020

| 18 August 2022

| {{ayd|25 Apr 2020|18 Aug 2022}}

| Ram Nath Kovind
Droupadi Murmu

| Rajesh Kumar, IAS (OR:1987)

| 18 August 2022

| 31 August 2024

| {{ayd|18 Aug 2022|31 Aug 2024}}

| rowspan="2"| Droupadi Murmu

| Deepti Umashankar, IAS (HR:1993)

| 31 August 2024

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|31 Aug 2024}}

= Summit attendees =

= 2013 NAM Iran =

class="wikitable sortable"

! Country

! Representative

! Designation

colspan="3"| Member states
{{flag|Afghanistan|2013}}
{{flag|Algeria}}
{{flag|Angola}}
{{flag|Antigua and Barbuda}}
{{flag|Azerbaijan}}
{{flag|Bahamas}}
{{flag|Bahrain}}
{{flag|Bangladesh}}
{{flag|Barbados}}
{{flag|Belarus}}
{{flag|Belize}}
{{flag|Benin}}
{{flag|Bhutan}}
{{flag|Bolivia}}
{{flag|Botswana}}
{{flag|Brunei}}
{{flag|Burkina Faso}}
{{flag|Burundi}}
{{flag|Cambodia}}
{{flag|Cameroon}}
{{flag|Cape Verde}}
{{flag|Central African Republic}}
{{flag|Chad}}
{{flag|Chile}}
{{flag|Colombia}}
{{flag|Comoros}}
{{flag|Cuba}}
{{flag|Democratic Republic of the Congo}}
{{flag|Djibouti}}
{{flag|Dominica}}
{{flag|Dominican Republic}}
{{flag|Ecuador}}
{{flag|Egypt}}
{{flag|Equatorial Guinea}}
{{flag|Eritrea}}
{{flag|Eswatini}}
{{flag|Ethiopia}}
{{flag|Fiji}}
{{flag|Gabon}}
{{flag|Gambia}}
{{flag|Ghana}}
{{flag|Grenada}}
{{flag|Guatemala}}
{{flag|Guinea}}
{{flag|Guinea-Bissau}}
{{flag|Guyana}}
{{flag|Haiti}}
{{flag|Honduras}}
{{flag|India}}
{{flag|Indonesia}}
{{flag|Iran}}
{{flag|Iraq}}
{{flag|Ivory Coast}}
{{flag|Jamaica}}
{{flag|Jordan}}
{{flag|Kenya}}
{{flag|Kuwait}}
{{flag|Laos}}
{{flag|Lebanon}}
{{flag|Lesotho}}
{{flag|Liberia}}
{{flag|Libya}}
{{flag|Madagascar}}
{{flag|Malawi}}
{{flag|Malaysia}}
{{flag|Maldives}}
{{flag|Mali}}
{{flag|Mauritania}}
{{flag|Mauritius}}
{{flag|Mongolia}}
{{flag|Morocco}}
{{flag|Myanmar}}
{{flag|Namibia}}
{{flag|Nepal}}
{{flag|Nicaragua}}
{{flag|Niger}}
{{flag|Nigeria}}
{{flag|North Korea}}
{{flag|Oman}}
{{flag|Pakistan}}
{{flag|Palestine}}
{{flag|Panama}}
{{flag|Papua New Guinea}}
{{flag|Peru}}
{{flag|Philippines}}
{{flag|Republic of the Congo}}
{{flag|Qatar}}
{{flag|Rwanda}}
{{flag|Saint Kitts and Nevis}}
{{flag|Saint Lucia}}
{{flag|Saint Vincent and the Grenadines}}
{{flag|São Tomé and Príncipe}}
{{flag|Saudi Arabia}}
{{flag|Senegal}}
{{flag|Seychelles}}
{{flag|Sierra Leone}}
{{flag|Singapore}}
{{flag|Somalia}}
{{flag|South Africa}}
{{flag|Sri Lanka}}
{{flag|Sudan}}
{{flag|Suriname}}
{{flag|Syria|1980}}
{{flag|Tanzania}}
{{flag|Thailand}}
{{flag|Timor-Leste}}
{{flag|Togo}}
{{flag|Trinidad and Tobago}}
{{flag|Tunisia}}
{{flag|Turkmenistan}}
{{flag|Uganda}}
{{flag|United Arab Emirates}}
{{flag|Uzbekistan}}
{{flag|Venezuela}}
{{flag|Vanuatu}}
{{flag|Vietnam}}
{{flag|Yemen}}
{{flag|Zambia}}
{{flag|Zimbabwe}}
colspan="3"| Observer states and guests
{{flag|Bosnia and Herzegovina}}
{{flag|China}}
{{flag|Kazakhstan}}
{{flag|Russia}}
{{flag|Serbia}}
{{flag|South Korea}}
{{flag|Tajikistan}}
{{flag|Turkey}}
colspan="3"| Organizations
{{flag|African Union}}
{{flag|Commonwealth of Nations}}
{{flag|Turkic Council}}
{{flag|United Nations}}

= CHOGM attendees =

=Governors (post-independence)=

Andaman & Nicobar Islands

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Andhra Pradesh

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by
(President)

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

colspan="9"| Governor of Andhra State
1

|75px

|Sir
Chandulal Madhavlal Trivedi

{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE|OBE}} {{post-nominals|list=ICS}}
{{small|(1893{{ndash}}1980)}}

|Gujarat

|1 October
1953

|31 October
1956

!{{ayd|1 Oct 1953|31 Oct 1956}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Punjab

|Rajendra Prasad

colspan="9"| Governor of Andhra Pradesh (unified)
(1)

|75px

|Sir
Chandulal Madhavlal Trivedi

{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE|OBE}} {{post-nominals|list=ICS}}
{{small|(1893{{ndash}}1980)}}

|Gujarat

|1 November
1956

|1 August
1957

!{{ayd|1 Nov 1956|1 Aug 1957}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Andhra State

|rowspan="2"| Rajendra Prasad

2

|75px

|Bhim Sen Sachar
{{small|(1874{{ndash}}1978)}}

|Punjab

|1 August
1957

|8 September
1962

!{{ayd|1 Aug 1957|8 Sep 1962}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Orissa

3

|75px

|{{small|General (Retd.)}}
S. M. Shrinagesh
{{small|(1903{{ndash}}1977)}}

|Maharashtra

|8 September
1962

|4 May
1964

!{{ayd|8 Sep 1962|4 May 1964}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam

|rowspan="2"| Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan

4

|75px

|Pattom A. Thanu Pillai
{{small|(1885{{ndash}}1970)}}

|Kerala

|4 May
1964

|11 April
1968

!{{ayd|4 May 1964|11 Apr 1968}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Punjab

5

|

|Khandubhai Kasanji Desai
{{small|(1898{{ndash}}1975)}}

|Gujarat

|11 April
1968

|25 January
1975

!{{ayd|11 Apr 1968|25 Jan 1975}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

|Zakir Husain

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
S. Obul Reddy
{{small|Chief Justice of Andhra Pradesh High Court
(1916{{ndash}}1996)}}
(Acting)

|Andhra Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 25 January
1975

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 10 January
1976

!{{ayd|25 Jan 1975|10 Jan 1976}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Andhra Pradesh High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="3"| Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed

6

|75px

|Mohan Lal Sukhadia
{{small|(1916{{ndash}}1982)}}

|Rajasthan

|10 January
1976

|16 June
1976

!{{ayd|10 Jan 1976|16 Jun 1976}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Karnataka

7

|75px

|Ramchandra Dhondiba Bhandare
{{small|(1916{{ndash}}1988)}}

|Maharashtra

|16 June
1976

|17 February
1977

!{{ayd|16 Jun 1976|17 Feb 1977}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Bihar

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
B. J. Divan
{{small|Chief Justice of Andhra Pradesh High Court
(1919{{ndash}}2012)}}
(Acting)

|Gujarat

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 17 February
1977

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 5 May
1977

!{{ayd|17 Feb 1977|5 May 1977}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Andhra Pradesh High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| B. D. Jatti
(acting)

8

|

|Sharda Mukherjee
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}2007)}}

|Maharashtra

|5 May
1977

|15 August
1978

!{{ayd|5 May 1977|15 Aug 1978}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

9

|

|K. C. Abraham
{{small|(1899{{ndash}}1986)}}

|Kerala

|15 August
1978

|15 August
1983

!{{Ayd|15 Aug 1978|15 Aug 1983}}

|

|Neelam Sanjiva Reddy

10

|75px

|Thakur Ram Lal
{{small|(1929{{ndash}}2002)}}

|Himachal Pradesh

|15 August
1983

|29 August
1984

!{{ayd|15 Aug 1983|29 Aug 1984}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Himachal Pradesh

|rowspan="2"| Zail Singh

Arunachal Pradesh

=Governors=

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Bhishma Narain Singh
{{small|Governor of Assam
(1933{{ndash}}2018)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Bihar

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 20 February
1987

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 18 March
1987

!{{ayd|20 Feb 1987|18 Mar 1987}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="6"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman
{{small|(President)}}

1

|75px

|R. D. Pradhan
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(1928{{ndash}}2020)}}

|Maharashtra

|18 March
1987

|16 March
1990{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|18 March 1987|16 March 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Home Secretary

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Gopal Singh
{{small|Governor of Nagaland
(1917{{ndash}}1990)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Punjab

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 March
1990

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 May
1990

!{{ayd|16 Mar 1990|8 May 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Nagaland {{small|(continued)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice (Retd.)}}
Devi Das Thakur
{{small|Governor of Assam
(1929{{ndash}}2007)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Jammu and Kashmir

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 May
1990

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 March
1991{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|8 May 1990|16 March 1991}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Lokanath Misra
{{small|Governor of Assam
(1921{{ndash}}2009)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Odisha

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 March
1991

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 25 March
1991

!{{ayd|16 March 1991|25 March 1991}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

2

|

|Surendranath Dwivedy
{{small|(1913{{ndash}}2001)}}

|Orissa

|26 March
1991

|4 July
1993{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|26 Mar 1991|4 Jul 1993}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha {{small|(until 1970)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Madhukar Dighe
{{small|Governor of Meghalaya
(1920{{ndash}}2014)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 July
1993

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 20 October
1993

!{{ayd|4 Jul 1993|20 Oct 1993}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Meghalaya {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Shankar Dayal Sharma

3

|75px

|Mata Prasad
{{small|(1935{{ndash}}2021)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|20 October
1993

|16 May
1999{{ref label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}}

!{{ayd|16 May 1993|20 Oct 1999}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member, Uttar Pradesh Legislative Council

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Lieutenant General (Retd.)}}
Srinivas Kumar Sinha
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|ADC}}
{{small|Governor of Assam
(1926{{ndash}}2016)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Bihar

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 May
1999

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 1 August
1999

!{{ayd|16 May 1999|1 Aug 1999}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| K. R. Narayanan
{{small|(President)}}

4

|

|Arvind Dave
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(born 1940)}}

|Rajasthan

|1 August
1999

|12 June
2003

!{{ayd|1 Aug 1999|12 Jun 2003}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Secretary, Research and Analysis Wing

5

|

|Vinod Chandra Pande
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(1932–2005)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|12 June
2003

|15 December
2004

!{{ayd|12 Jun 2003|15 Dec 2004}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Bihar

|rowspan="5"| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
{{small|(President)}}

6

|75px

|Shilendra Kumar Singh
{{small|(1932{{ndash}}2009)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|16 December
2004

|23 January
2007

!{{ayd|16 Dec 2004|23 Jan 2007}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Foreign Secretary {{small|(until 1990)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| M. M. Jacob
{{small|Governor of Meghalaya
(1926{{ndash}}2018)}}
(Acting)

|Kerala

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 24 January
2007

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 6 April
2007

!{{ayd|24 Jan 2007|6 Apr 2007}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Meghalaya {{small|(continued)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| K. Sankaranarayanan
{{small|Governor of Nagaland
(1932{{ndash}}2022)}}
(Acting)

|Kerala

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 7 April
2007

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 April
2007

!{{ayd|7 Apr 2007|14 Apr 2007}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Nagaland {{small|(continued)}}

(6)

|75px

|Shilendra Kumar Singh
{{small|(1932{{ndash}}2009)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|15 April
2007

|3 September
2007

!{{ayd|15 Apr 2007|3 Sep 2007}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Arunachal Pradesh

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| K. Sankaranarayanan
{{small|Governor of Nagaland
(1932{{ndash}}2022)}}
(Acting)

|Kerala

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 3 September
2007

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 26 January
2008

!{{ayd|3 Sep 2007|26 Jan 2008}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Nagaland {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Pratibha Patil
{{small|(President)}}

7

|75px

|{{small|General (Retd.)}}
Joginder Jaswant Singh
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|AVSM|VSM|ADC}}
{{small|(born 1945)}}

|Punjab

|26 January
2008

|28 May
2013

!{{ayd|26 January 2008|28 May 2013}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief of the Army Staff

8

|75px

|{{small|Lieutenant General (Retd.)}}
Nirbhay Sharma
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|UYSM|AVSM|VSM}}
{{small|(born 1946)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|29 May
2013

|12 May
2015

!{{ayd|29 May 2013|12 May 2015}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member, Union Public Service Commission

|rowspan="6"| Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(President)}}

9

|75px

|Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(born 1941)}}

|Assam

|1 June
2015

|9 July
2016

!{{ayd|1 June 2015|9 July 2016}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Secretary of Assam {{small|(until 2004)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Tathagata Roy
{{small|Governor of Tripura
(born 1945)}}
(Acting)

|West Bengal

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 9 July
2016

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 12 August
2016

!{{ayd|9 Jul 2016|12 Aug 2016}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Tripura {{small|(continued)}}

(9)

|75px

|Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(born 1941)}}

|Assam

|10 July
2016

|13 September
2016{{ref label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}}

!{{ayd|10 Jul 2016|13 Sep 2016}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Arunachal Pradesh

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| V. Shanmuganathan
{{small|Governor of Meghalaya
(born 1949)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Tamil Nadu

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 September
2016

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 27 January
2017{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|14 Sep 2016|27 January 2017}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Meghalaya {{small|(continued)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Padmanabha Balakrishna Acharya
{{small|Governor of Nagaland
(1931{{ndash}}2023)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Karnataka

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 28 January
2017

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 2 October
2017

!{{ayd|28 Jan 2017|2 October 2017}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Nagaland {{small|(continued)}}

10

|75px

|{{small|Brigadier (Retd.)}}
B. D. Mishra
{{small|(born 1939)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 October
2017

|15 February
2023

!{{ayd|3 Oct 2017|15 Feb 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Brigadier, Indian Army

|Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

11

|75px

|{{small|Lieutenant General (Retd.)}}
Kaiwalya Trivikram Parnaik
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|UYSM|YSM}}
{{small|(born 1953)}}

|Maharashtra

|16 February
2023

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|16 Feb 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| General Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Northern Command, Indian Army

|Droupadi Murmu
{{small|(President)}}

Assam

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|

|Sir Muhammad Saleh Akbar Hydari
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCIE|CSI}} {{post-nominals|list=ICS}}
{{small|(1894{{ndash}}1948)}}

|Bombay State

|15 August
1947

|28 December
1948{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|15 August 1947|28 December 1948}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{Small|(British India)}}

|Viscount Mountbatten of Burma
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Sir Ronald Francis Lodge
{{small|Chief Justice of Assam High Court
(1889{{ndash}}1960)}}
(Acting)

|N/A

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 30 December
1948

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 February
1949

!{{ayd|30 December 1948|16 February 1949}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Assam High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| C. Rajagopalachari
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

2

|75px

|Sri Prakasa
{{small|(1890{{ndash}}1971)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|16 February
1949

|27 May
1950

!{{ayd|16 February 1949|27 May 1950}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| High Commissioner to Pakistan

3

|75px

|Jairamdas Daulatram
{{small|(1891{{ndash}}1979)}}

|Bombay State

|27 May
1950

|15 May
1956

!{{ayd|27 May 1950|15 May 1956}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister for Agriculture

|rowspan="7"| Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

4

|

|Sir Sayyid Fazal Ali
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|OBE}}
{{small|(1886{{ndash}}1959)}}

|Bihar

|15 May
1956

|22 August
1959{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd| 15 May 1956|2 August 1959}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Orissa {{small|(until 1954)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Chandreswar Prasad Sinha
{{small|Chief Justice of Assam High Court}}
(Acting)

|Bihar

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 23 August
1959

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 October
1959

!{{ayd|23 August 1959|14 October 1959}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Assam High Court {{small|(continued)}}

5

|75px

|{{small|General (Retd.)}}
Satyawant Mallanna Shrinagesh
{{small|(1903{{ndash}}1977)}}

|Maharashtra

|14 October
1959

|12 November
1960

!{{ayd|14 October 1959|12 November 1960}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief of the Army Staff {{small|(until 1959)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Vishnu Sahay
{{small|ICS
(1901{{ndash}}1989)}}
(Acting)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 12 November
1960

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 13 January
1961

!{{ayd|12 November 1960|13 January 1961}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Cabinet Secretary

(5)

|75px

|{{small|General (Retd.)}}
Satyawant Mallanna Shrinagesh
{{small|(1903{{ndash}}1977)}}

|Maharashtra

|13 January
1961

|7 September
1962

!{{ayd|13 January 1961|7 September 1962}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam

6

|

|Vishnu Sahay
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1901{{ndash}}1989)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|7 September
1962

|17 April
1968

!{{ayd|7 September 1962|17 April 1968}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Acting Governor of Assam

7

|75px

|Braj Kumar Nehru
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1909{{ndash}}2001)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|17 April
1968

|7 December
1970

!{{Ayd|17 April 1968|7 December 1970}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Ambassador to the United States

|Zakir Husain
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Parbati Kumar Goswami
{{small|Chief Justice of Assam and Nagaland High Court
(1913{{Ndash}}1992)}}
(Acting)

|Assam

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 December
1970

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 January
1971

!{{ayd|8 December 1970|4 January 1971}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Assam and Nagaland High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="3"| V. V. Giri
{{small|(President)}}

(7)

|75px

|Braj Kumar Nehru
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1909{{ndash}}2001)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|4 January
1971

|18 September
1973

!{{ayd|4 January 1971|18 September 1973}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam

8

|

|Lallan Prasad Singh
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1912{{ndash}}1998)}}

|Bihar

|19 September
1973

|10 August
1981

!{{ayd|19 September 1973|10 August 1981}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Ambassador to Nepal

9

|75px

|Prakash Mehrotra
{{small|(1925{{ndash}}1988)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|10 August
1981

|28 March
1984{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|10 August 1981|28 March 1984}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

|Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Tribeni Sahai Misra
{{small|Chief Justice of Gauhati High Court
(1922{{ndash}}2005)}}
(Acting)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 28 March
1984

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 15 April
1984

!{{ayd|28 March 1984|15 April 1984}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Gauhati High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Zail Singh
{{small|(President)}}

10

|75px

|Bhishma Narain Singh
{{small|(1933{{ndash}}2018)}}

|Bihar

|15 April
1984

|10 May
1989

!{{ayd|15 April 1984|10 May 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister of Parliamentary Affairs, Civil Supplies and Cooperation

11

|

|Harideo Joshi
{{small|(1920{{ndash}}1995)}}

|Rajasthan

|10 May
1989

|21 July
1989

!{{ayd|10 May 1989|21 July 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Rajasthan {{small|(until 1988)}}

|rowspan="4"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Anisetti Raghuvir
{{small|Chief Justice of Gauhati High Court
(1929{{ndash}}2007)}}
(Acting)

|Andhra Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 21 July
1989

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 2 May
1990

!{{ayd|21 July 1989|2 May 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Gauhati High Court {{small|(continued)}}

12

|

|{{small|Justice (Retd.)}}
Devi Das Thakur
{{small|(1929{{ndash}}2007)}}

|Jammu and Kashmir

|2 May
1990

|17 March
1991{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|2 May 1990|17 March 1991}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Deputy Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir {{small|(until 1986)}}

13

|75px

|Lokanath Misra
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}2009)}}

|Odisha

|17 March
1991

|1 September
1997

!{{ayd|17 March 1991|1 September 1997}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha {{small|(until 1978)}}

14

|75px

|{{small|Lieutenant General (Retd.)}}
Srinivas Kumar Sinha
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|ADC}}
{{small|(1926{{ndash}}2016)}}

|Bihar

|1 September
1997

|21 April
2003

!{{ayd|1 September 1997|21 April 2003}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Vice Chief of the Army Staff {{small|(until 1983)}}

|K. R. Narayanan
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Arvind Dave
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
Governor of Arunachal Pradesh
(born 1940)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Rajasthan

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 21 April
2003

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 5 June
2003

!{{ayd|21 April 2003|5 June 2003}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Arunachal Pradesh {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
{{small|(President)}}

15

|75px

|{{small|Lieutenant General (Retd.)}}
Ajai Singh
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|AVSM}}
{{Small|(1934{{ndash}}2023)}}

|Rajasthan

|5 June
2003

|4 July
2008

!{{ayd|5 June 2003|4 July 2008}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Controller of Research and Development (Land Systems), Defence Research and Development Organisation

16

|75px

|Shiv Charan Mathur
{{small|(1927{{ndash}}2009)}}

|Rajasthan

|4 July
2008

|25 June
2009{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|4 July 2008|25 June 2009}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Rajasthan {{small|(until 1989)}}

|rowspan="3"| Pratibha Patil
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| K. Sankaranarayanan
{{small|Governor of Nagaland
(1932{{ndash}}2022)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Kerala

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 26 June
2009

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 27 July
2009

!{{ayd|26 June 2009|27 July 2009}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Nagaland {{small|(continued)}}

17

|75px

|Syed Sibtey Razi
{{small|(1939{{ndash}}2022)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|27 July
2009

|10 November
2009

!{{ayd|27 July 2009|10 November 2009}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Jharkhand

18

|75px

|Janaki Ballabh Patnaik
{{small|(1927{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Odisha

|11 December
2009

|10 December
2014

!{{ayd|11 December 2009|10 December 2014}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Odisha {{small|(until 1999)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Padmanabha Balakrishna Acharya
{{small|Governor of Nagaland
(1931{{ndash}}2023)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Karnataka

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 12 December
2014

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 17 August
2016

!{{ayd|12 December 2014|17 August 2016}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Nagaland {{small|(continued)}}

|Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(President)}}

19

|75px

|Banwarilal Purohit
{{small|(born 1940)}}

|Maharashtra

|22 August
2016

|29 September
2017

!{{ayd|22 August 2016|29 September 2017}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha {{small|(until 1991)}}

|rowspan="2"| Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

20

|75px

|{{small|Professor}}
Jagdish Mukhi
{{small|(born 1942)}}

|Delhi

|10 October
2017

|20 February
2023

!{{ayd|10 October 2017|20 February 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Lieutenant Governor of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands

21

|75px

|Gulab Chand Kataria
{{small|(born 1944)}}

|Rajasthan

|22 February
2023

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|22 February 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Leader of Opposition, Rajasthan Legislative Assembly

|Droupadi Murmu
{{small|(President)}}

Bihar

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Chhattisgarh

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

! rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

! rowspan="2"| Portrait

! rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

! rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

! rowspan="2" style="width:10em" | Appointed by

! rowspan="2" style="width:10em" | Chief Minister

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

| 70px

| Dinesh Nandan Sahay
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(1936–2018)}}

| Bihar

| {{small|1 November}}
2000

| {{small|1 June}}
2003

| {{ayd|1 November 2000|1 June 2003}}

| K. R. Narayanan

| rowspan="2" style='border-style: none solid solid solid;' | Ajit Jogi

rowspan="2"| 2

| rowspan="2"| 70px

| rowspan="2"| Krishna Mohan Seth {{small|(Retd.)}}
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|AVSM}}
{{small|(born 1939)}}

| rowspan="2"| Uttar Pradesh

| rowspan="2"| {{small|2 June}}
2003

| rowspan="2"| {{small|25 January}}
2007

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|2 June 2003|25 January 2007}}

| rowspan="3"| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam

rowspan="6" style='border-style: none solid solid solid;' | Raman Singh
3

| 70px

| E. S. L. Narasimhan
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(1945)}}

| Tamil Nadu

| {{small|26 January}}
2007

| {{small|23 January}}
2010

| {{ayd|26 January 2007|23 January 2010}}

4

| 70px

| Shekhar Dutt
{{post-nominals|country=IND|SM}} {{small|IAS (Retd.)
(born 1945)}}

| Assam

| {{small|23 January}}
2010

| {{small|19 June}}
2014{{ref label|§|§|§}}

| {{ayd|23 January 2010|19 June 2014}}

| Pratibha Patil

{{ndash}}

| bgcolor="wheat"| 70px

| bgcolor="wheat"| Ram Naresh Yadav
{{small|Governor of Madhya Pradesh
(1928–2016)}}
(Additional Charge)

| Uttar Pradesh

| bgcolor="wheat"| {{small|19 June}}
2014

| bgcolor="wheat"| {{small|14 July}}
2014

| {{ayd|19 June 2014|14 July 2014}}

| rowspan="2"| Pranab Mukherjee

5

| 75px

| Balram Das Tandon
{{small|(1927–2018)}}

| Punjab

| {{small|18 July}}
2014

| {{small|14 August}}
2018{{ref label|†|†|†}}

| {{ayd|18 July 2014|14 August 2018}}

rowspan="2"| {{ndash}}

| rowspan="2" bgcolor="wheat"| 75px

| rowspan="2" bgcolor="wheat"| Anandiben Patel
{{small|Governor of Madhya Pradesh
(born 1941)}}
(Additional Charge)

| rowspan="2"| Gujarat

| rowspan="2" bgcolor="wheat"| 15 August
2018

| rowspan="2" bgcolor="wheat"| 28 July
2019

| rowspan="2"| {{ayd|15 August 2018|28 July 2019}}

| rowspan="3"| Ram Nath Kovind

rowspan="3"| Bhupesh Baghel
6

| 75px

| Anusuiya Uikey
{{small|(born 1957)}}

| Madhya Pradesh

| {{small|29 July}}
2019

| {{small|22 February}}
2023

| {{ayd|29 July 2019|22 February 2023}}

7

| 75px

| Biswabhusan Harichandan
{{small|(born 1934)}}

| Odisha

| {{small|23 February}}
2023{{cite news |last1=ThePrint |title=Biswa Bhusan Harichandan sworn in as Chhattisgarh governor |url=https://theprint.in/india/biswa-bhusan-harichandan-sworn-in-as-chhattisgarh-governor/1392247/ |access-date=14 December 2023 |date=23 February 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231214173022/https://theprint.in/india/biswa-bhusan-harichandan-sworn-in-as-chhattisgarh-governor/1392247/ |archive-date=14 December 2023}}

| {{small|30 July}}
2024

| {{ayd|23 February 2023|30 July 2024}}

| rowspan="2"| Droupadi Murmu

8

| 75px

| Ramen Deka
{{small|(born 1954)}}

| Assam

| {{small|31 July}}
2024

| Incumbent

| {{ayd|31 July 2024}}

Delhi

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

! rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

! rowspan="2"| Portrait

! rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Name
(born{{snd}}died)

! rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

! rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

! rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by
(President)

style="width:7em"| From

! style="width:7em"| To

! style="width:7em"| Time in office

Goa

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Gujarat

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|Mehdi Nawaz Jung
{{small|(1894{{ndash}}1967)}}

|Hyderabad

|1 May
1960

|1 August
1965

!{{ayd|1 May 1960|1 Aug 1965}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Minister, Government of Andhra Pradesh

|Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

2

|75px

|Nityanand Kanungo
{{small|(1900{{ndash}}1988)}}

|Orissa

|1 August
1965

|6 December
1967

!{{ayd|1 August 1965|6 December 1967}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Civil Aviation

|Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
P. N. Bhagwati
{{small|Chief Justice of Gujarat High Court
(1921{{ndash}}2017)}}
(Acting)

|Gujarat

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 7 December
1967

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 26 December
1967

!{{ayd|7 Dec 1967|26 Dec 1967}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Gujarat High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Zakir Husain
{{small|(President)}}

3

|

|Shriman Narayan
{{small|(1912{{ndash}}1974)}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|26 December
1967

|16 March
1973

!{{ayd|26 December 1967|16 March 1973}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Ambassador to Nepal

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
P. N. Bhagwati
{{small|Chief Justice of Gujarat High Court
(1921{{ndash}}2017)}}
(Acting)

|Gujarat

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 March
1973

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 April
1973

!{{ayd|16 Mar 1973|4 Apr 1973}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Gujarat High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| V. V. Giri
{{small|(President)}}

4

|

|K. K. Viswanathan
{{small|(1914{{ndash}}1992)}}

|Kerala

|4 April
1973

|13 August
1978

!{{ayd|4 April 1973|13 August 1978}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| President, Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee

5

|

|Sharda Mukherjee
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}2007)}}

|Maharashtra

|14 August 1978

|6 August 1983

!{{ayd|14 Aug 1978|6 Aug 1983}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Andhra Pradesh

|Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
{{small|(President)}}

6

|75px

|K. M. Chandy
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}1998)}}

|Kerala

|6 August
1983

|26 April
1984

!{{ayd|6 August 1983|26 April 1984}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Madhya Pradesh

|rowspan="3"| Zail Singh
{{small|(Governor)}}

7

|75px

|Braj Kumar Nehru
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1909{{ndash}}2001)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|26 April 1984

|26 February 1986

!{{ayd|26 Apr 1984|26 Feb 1986}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Jammu and Kashmir

8

|

|R. K. Trivedi
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|26 February 1986

|2 May 1990

!{{Ayd|26 Feb 1986|2 May 1990}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Election Commissioner of India

7

|75px

|Mahipal Shastri
{{small|(1924{{ndash}}1994)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|2 May
1990

|20 December
1990

!{{ayd|2 May 1990|20 December 1990}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Leader of Opposition, Uttar Pradesh Legislative Council

|rowspan="2"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman
{{small|(President)}}

Haryana

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Himachal Pradesh

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Jammu and Kashmir

=Governors=

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Jharkhand

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|

|Prabhat Kumar
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(born 1940)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|14 November
2000

|3 February
2002{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|14 November 2000|3 February 2002}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Secretary

|rowspan="3"| K. R. Narayanan
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Vinod Chandra Pande
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
Governor of Bihar
(1932–2005)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 February
2002

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 July
2002

!{{ayd|4 February 2002|14 July 2002}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Bihar {{small|(continued)}}

2

|75px

|{{small|Justice (Retd.)}}
M. Rama Jois
{{small|(1931–2021)}}

|Karnataka

|15 July
2002

|11 June
2003

!{{ayd|15 July 2002|11 June 2003}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana High Court {{small|(until 1992)}}

3

|

|Ved Marwah
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(1934–2020)}}

|Delhi

|12 June
2003

|9 December
2004

!{{ayd|12 June 2003|9 December 2004}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Manipur

|rowspan="2"| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
{{small|(President)}}

4

|75px

|Syed Sibtey Razi
{{small|(1939{{ndash}}2022)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|10 December
2004

|25 July
2009

!{{ayd|10 December 2004|25 July 2009}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha {{small|(until 1998)}}

5

|75px

|K. Sankaranarayanan
{{small|(1932{{ndash}}2022)}}

|Kerala

|25 July
2009

|21 January
2010

!{{ayd|25 July 2009|21 January 2010}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Nagaland

6

|75px

|M. O. H. Farook
{{small|(1937–2012)}}

|Puducherry

|22 January
2010

|4 September
2011

!{{ayd|22 January 2010|4 September 2011}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Ambassador to Saudi Arabia

|rowspan="2"| Pratibha Patil
{{small|(President)}}

7

|75px

|Syed Ahmed
{{small|(1943–2015)}}

|Maharashtra

|4 September
2011

|17 May
2015

!{{ayd|4 September 2011|17 May 2015}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Cabinet Minister, Maharashtra {{small|(until 2004)}}

8

|

|Droupadi Murmu
{{small|(born 1958)}}

|Odisha

|18 May
2015

|12 July
2021

!{{ayd|18 May 2015|12 July 2021}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Fisheries and Animal Resources Development, Odisha {{small|(until 2004)}}

|rowspan="2"| Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

9

|75px

|Ramesh Bais
{{small|(born 1947)}}

|Chhattisgarh

|14 July
2021

|12 February
2023

!{{ayd|14 July 2021|12 February 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Tripura

10

|75px

|C. P. Radhakrishnan
{{small|(born 1957)}}

|Tamil Nadu

|18 February
2023

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|18 February 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Bharatiya Janata Party In-Charge for Kerala

|Droupadi Murmu
{{small|(President)}}

Ladakh

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|R. K. Mathur
{{small|(born 1953)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|31 October
2019

|12 February
2023{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|31 October 2019|12 February 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Information Commissioner {{small|(until 2018)}}

|Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

2

|75px

|{{small|Brigadier (Retd.)}}
B. D. Mishra
{{small|(born 1939)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|19 February
2023

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|19 February 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Arunachal Pradesh

|Droupadi Murmu
{{small|(President)}}

Karnataka

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

colspan="10"| Governor of Mysore State
1

|75px

|Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|GCB|GCSI}}
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}1974)}}

|Mysore

|1 November
1956

|4 May
1964

!{{ayd|1 November 1956|4 May 1964}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Rajpramukh of Mysore

|Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

2

|75px

|{{small|General (Retd.)}}
S. M. Shrinagesh
{{small|(1903{{ndash}}1977)}}

|Bombay

|4 May
1964

|2 April
1965

!{{ayd|4 May 1964|2 April 1965}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Andhra Pradesh

|rowspan="2"| Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
{{small|(President)}}

3

|75px

|V. V. Giri
{{small|(1894{{ndash}}1980)}}

|Madras

|2 April
1965

|13 May
1967

!{{ayd|2 April 1965|13 May 1967}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Kerala

Kerala

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Madhya Pradesh

{{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|Bhogaraju Pattabhi Sitaramayya
{{small|(1880{{ndash}}1959)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|1 November
1956

|13 June
1957

!{{ayd|1 Nov 1956|13 Jun 1957}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

|rowspan="2"| Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

2

|

|Hari Vinayak Pataskar
{{small|(1892{{ndash}}1970)}}

|Maharashtra

|14 June 1957

|10 February 1965

!{{ayd|14 Jun 1957|10 Feb 1965}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister for Legal Affairs and Civil Aviation

3

|75px

|K. Chengalaraya Reddy
{{small|(1902{{ndash}}1976)}}

|Karnataka

|11 February
1965

|2 February
1966

!{{ayd|11 February 1965|2 February 1966}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister for Commerce and Industry

|rowspan="3"| Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|

|{{small|Justice}}
P. V. Dixit
{{small|Chief Justice of Madhya Pradesh High Court}}
(Acting)

|

|2 February
1966

|9 February
1966

!{{ayd|2 February 1966|9 February 1966}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Madhya Pradesh High Court

(3)

|75px

|K. Chengalaraya Reddy
{{small|(1902{{ndash}}1976)}}

|Karnataka

|10 February 1966

|7 March 1971

!{{ayd|10 Feb 1966|7 Mar 1971}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Madhya Pradesh

4

|

|Satya Narayan Sinha
{{small|(1900{{ndash}}1983)}}

|Bihar

|8 March
1971

|13 October
1977

!{{ayd|8 Mar 1971|13 Oct 1977}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister for Communications and Information and Broadcasting

|V. V. Giri
{{small|(President)}}

5

|

|N. N. Wanchoo
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|OBE}} {{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1910{{ndash}}1982)}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|14 October
1977

|17 August
1978

!{{ayd|14 October 1977|17 August 1978}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Kerala

|rowspan="2"| Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
{{small|(President)}}

6

|75px

|C. M. Poonacha
{{small|(1910{{ndash}}1990)}}

|Karnataka

|17 August
1978

|29 April
1980

!{{ayd|17 Aug 1978|29 Apr 1980}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister for Steel and Heavy Engineering

Maharashtra

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

colspan="10"| Governor of Bombay State
1

|75px

|Raja Sir Maharaj Singh
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|CIE|CStJ}}
{{small|(1878{{ndash}}1959)}}

|Punjab

|6 January
1948

|30 May
1952

!{{ayd|6 January 1948|30 May 1952}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| President, All India Conference of Indian Christians

|Lord Louis Mountbatten
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

2

|75px

|Sir Girija Shankar Bajpai
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KBE|CIE}}
{{small|(1891{{ndash}}1954)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|30 May
1952

|5 December
1954{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|30 May 1952|5 December 1954}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Secretary-General, Ministry of External Affairs

|rowspan="6"| Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
M. C. Chagla
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(1900{{ndash}}1981)}}
(Acting)

|Bombay

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 5 December
1954

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 2 March
1955

!{{ayd|5 December 1954|2 March 1955}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued in office)}}

3

|75px

|Harekrushna Mahatab
{{small|(1899{{ndash}}1987)}}

|Orissa

|2 March
1955

|14 October
1956{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|2 March 1955|14 October 1956}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
M. C. Chagla
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(1900{{ndash}}1981)}}
(Acting)

|Bombay

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 14 October
1956

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 10 December
1956

!{{ayd|14 October 1956|10 December 1956}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

4

|75px

|Sri Prakasa
{{small|(1890{{ndash}}1971)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|10 December
1956

|30 April
1960

!{{ayd|10 December 1956|30 April 1960}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Madras State

colspan="10"| Governor of Maharashtra
(4)

|75px

|Sri Prakasa
{{small|(1890{{ndash}}1971)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|1 May
1960

|16 April
1962

!{{ayd|1 May 1960|16 April 1962}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Bombay State

|rowspan="2"| Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

5

|75px

|P. Subbarayan
{{small|(1889{{ndash}}1962)}}

|Madras

|17 April
1962

|6 October
1962{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|17 April 1962|6 October 1962}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Union Cabinet Minister for Transport and Communications

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
H. K. Chainani
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(1904{{ndash}}1965)}}
(Acting)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 6 October
1962

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 28 November
1962

!{{ayd|6 October 1962|28 November 1962}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="4"| Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
{{small|(President)}}

6

|75px

|Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit
{{small|(1900{{ndash}}1990)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|28 November
1962

|18 October
1964{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|28 November 1962|18 October 1964}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| High Commissioner to the United Kingdom;
Ambassador to Ireland and Spain

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
H. K. Chainani
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(1904{{ndash}}1965)}}
(Acting)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 18 October
1964

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 14 November
1964

!{{ayd|18 October 1964|14 November 1964}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

7

|75px

|P. V. Cherian
{{small|(1893{{ndash}}1969)}}

|Madras

|14 November
1964

|8 November
1969{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|14 November 1964|8 November 1969}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chairman of Madras Legislative Council

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
S. P. Kotval
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(1910{{ndash}}1987)}}
(Acting)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 8 November
1969

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| 26 February
1970

!{{ayd|8 November 1969|26 February 1970}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| V. V. Giri
{{small|(President)}}

8

|75px

|Ali Yavar Jung
{{small|(1906{{ndash}}1976)}}

|Telangana

|26 February
1970

|11 December
1976{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|26 February 1970|11 December 1976}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Ambassador to the United States

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
R. M. Kantawala
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(1916{{ndash}}1992)}}
(Acting)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 11 December
1976

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 30 April
1977

!{{ayd|11 December 1976|30 April 1977}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed
{{small|(President)}}

9

|

|Sadiq Ali
{{small|(1910{{ndash}}2001)}}

|Rajasthan

|30 April
1977

|8 November
1980

!{{ayd|30 April 1977|8 November 1980}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| President, Indian National Congress (Organisation) {{small|(until 1973)}}

|B. D. Jatti
{{small|(Acting President)}}

10

|75px

|{{small|Air Chief Marshal (Retd.)}}
Om Prakash Mehra
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM}}
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Punjab

|8 November
1980

|5 March
1982

!{{ayd|8 November 1980|5 March 1982}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief of the Air Staff {{small|(until 1976)}}

|rowspan="2"| Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
{{small|(President)}}

11

|75px

|{{small|Air Chief Marshal (Retd.)}}
Idris Hasan Latif
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM}}
{{small|(1923{{ndash}}2018)}}

|Telangana

|6 March
1982

|16 April
1985{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|6 March 1982|16 April 1985}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief of the Air Staff {{small|(until 1981)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Konda Madhava Reddy
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(1923{{ndash}}1997)}}
(Acting)

|Telangana

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 April
1985

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 30 May
1985

!{{ayd|16 April 1985|30 May 1985}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="3"| Zail Singh
{{small|(President)}}

12

|

|Kona Prabhakara Rao
{{small|(1916{{ndash}}1990)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|31 May
1985

|2 April
1986

!{{ayd|31 May 1985|2 April 1986}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Sikkim

13

|75px

|Shankar Dayal Sharma
{{small|(1918{{ndash}}1999)}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|3 April
1986

|2 September
1987{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|3 April 1986|2 September 1987}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Punjab and
Administrator of Chandigarh

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
S. K. Desai
{{small|Acting Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(1928{{ndash}}2011)}}
(Acting)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 3 September
1987

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 2 November
1987

!{{ayd|3 September 1987|2 November 1987}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Judge of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="5"| R. Venkataraman
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Chittatosh Mookerjee
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(born 1929)}}
(Acting)

|West Bengal

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 2 November
1987

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 20 February
1988

!{{ayd|2 November 1987|20 February 1988}}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

14

|75px

|Kasu Brahmananda Reddy
{{small|(1909{{ndash}}1994)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|20 February
1988

|18 January
1990{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|20 February 1988|18 January 1990}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
{{small|(until 1984)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Chittatosh Mookerjee
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(born 1929)}}
(Acting)

|West Bengal

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 18 January
1990

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 February
1990

!{{ayd|18 January 1990|14 February 1990}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

15

|75px

|Chidambaram Subramaniam
{{small|(1910{{ndash}}2000)}}

|Tamil Nadu

|15 February
1990

|9 January
1993{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|15 February 1990|9 January 1993}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Union Cabinet Minister of Defence {{small|(until 1980)}}

16

|

|P. C. Alexander
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(1921{{ndash}}2011)}}

|Kerala

|12 January
1993

|13 July
2002{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|12 January 1993|13 July 2002}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Tamil Nadu {{small|(until 1990)}}

|Shankar Dayal Sharma
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
C. K. Thakker
{{small|Chief Justice of Bombay High Court
(born 1943)}}
(Acting)

|Gujarat

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 13 July
2002

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 10 October
2002

!{{ayd|13 July 2002|10 October 2002}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Justice of Bombay High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|K. R. Narayanan
{{small|(President)}}

17

|

|Mohammed Fazal
{{small|(1922{{ndash}}2014)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|10 October
2002

|5 December
2004

!{{ayd|10 October 2002|5 December 2004}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Goa

|rowspan="2"| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
{{small|(President)}}

18

|75px

|S. M. Krishna
{{small|(born 1932)}}

|Karnataka

|12 December
2004

|5 March
2008{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|12 December 2004|5 March 2008}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Minister of Karnataka {{small|(until May 2004)}}

rowspan="2"| 19

|rowspan="2"| 75px

|rowspan="2"| S. C. Jamir
{{small|(born 1931)}}
(Additional charge until
8 July 2008)

|rowspan="2"| Nagaland

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 9 March
2008

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 July
2008

!rowspan="2"| {{ayd|9 March 2008|22 January 2010}}

|rowspan="2" style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Goa

|rowspan="4"| Pratibha Patil
{{small|(President)}}

8 July
2008

|22 January
2010

rowspan="2"| 20

|rowspan="2"| 75px

|rowspan="2"| K. Sankaranarayanan
{{small|(1932{{ndash}}2022)}}

|rowspan="2"| Kerala

|22 January
2010

|7 May
2012

!rowspan="2"| {{ayd|22 January 2010|24 August 2014}}

|rowspan="2" style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Jharkhand

7 May
2012

|24 August
2014{{ref label|§|§|§}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Om Prakash Kohli
{{small|Governor of Gujarat
(1935{{ndash}}2023)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Delhi

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 24 August
2014

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 30 August
2014

!{{ayd|24 August 2014|30 August 2014}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Gujarat {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(President)}}

21

|75px

|C. Vidyasagar Rao
{{small|(born 1941)}}

|Telangana

|30 August
2014

|4 September
2019

!{{ayd|30 August 2014|4 September 2019}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Union Minister of State for Commerce and Industry {{small|(until 2004)}}

22

|75px

|Bhagat Singh Koshyari
{{small|(born 1942)}}

|Uttarakhand

|5 September
2019

|17 February
2023{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|5 September 2019|17 February 2023}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha {{small|(until May 2019)}}

|Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

23

|75px

|Ramesh Bais
{{small|(born 1947)}}

|Chhattisgarh

|18 February
2023

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|18 February 2023}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Jharkhand

|Droupadi Murmu
{{small|(President)}}

Manipur

{{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|Braj Kumar Nehru
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
Governor of Assam
(1909{{ndash}}2001)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|21 January
1972

|20 September
1973

!{{ayd|21 January 1972|20 September 1973}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}
Governor of Meghalaya {{small|(additional charge)}}

|rowspan="2"| V. V. Giri
{{small|(President)}}

2

|

|Lallan Prasad Singh
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
Governor of Assam
(1912{{ndash}}1998)}}

|Bihar

|21 September
1973

|11 August
1981

!{{ayd|21 September 1973|11 August 1981}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}
Governor of Meghalaya {{small|(additional charge)}}

3

|

|S. M. H. Burney
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
Governor of Nagaland
(1924{{ndash}}2014)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|18 August
1981

|11 June
1984

!{{ayd|18 August 1981|11 June 1984}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Nagaland {{small|(continued)}}
Governor of Tripura {{small|(additional charge)}}

|Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
{{small|(President)}}

4

|75px

|{{small|General (Retd.)}}
K. V. Krishna Rao
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM}}
{{small|(1923{{ndash}}2016)}}

|Tamil Nadu

|2 June
1984

|7 July
1989

!{{ayd|2 June 1984|7 July 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief of the Army Staff {{small|(until 1993)}}

|Zail Singh
{{small|(Governor)}}

Meghalaya

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|Braj Kumar Nehru
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
Governor of Assam
(1909{{ndash}}2001)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|1 April
1970

|18 September
1973

!{{ayd|1 April 1970|18 September 1973}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| V. V. Giri
{{small|(President)}}

2

|

|Lallan Prasad Singh
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
Governor of Assam
(1912{{ndash}}1998)}}

|Bihar

|19 September
1973

|10 August
1981

!{{ayd|19 September 1973|10 August 1981}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

3

|75px

|Prakash Mehrotra
{{small|Governor of Assam
(1925{{ndash}}1988)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|11 August
1981

|28 March
1984{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|11 August 1981|28 March 1984}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

|Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Tribeni Sahai Misra
{{small|Chief Justice of Gauhati High Court &
Acting Governor of Assam
(1922{{ndash}}2005)}}
(Acting)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 29 March
1984

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 15 April
1984

!{{ayd|29 March 1984|15 April 1984}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Gauhati High Court and
Acting Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Zail Singh
{{small|(President)}}

4

|75px

|Bhishma Narain Singh
{{small|Governor of Assam
(1933{{ndash}}2018)}}

|Bihar

|16 April
1984

|10 May
1989

!{{ayd|16 April 1984|10 May 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

5

|

|Harideo Joshi
{{small|Governor of Assam
(1920{{ndash}}1995)}}

|Rajasthan

|11 May
1989

|21 July
1989

!{{ayd|11 May 1989|21 July 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="3"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman
{{small|(President)}}

6

|75px

|A. A. Rahim
{{small|(1920{{ndash}}1995)}}

|Kerala

|27 July
1989

|8 May
1990

!{{ayd|27 July 1989|8 May 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Minister of State for External Affairs {{small|(until 1984)}}

7

|

|Madhukar Dighe
{{small|(1920{{ndash}}2014)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|9 May
1990

|18 June
1995

!{{ayd|9 May 1990|18 June 1995}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Cabinet Minister of Finance, Uttar Pradesh {{small|(until 1979)}}

8

|75px

|M. M. Jacob
{{small|(1926{{ndash}}2018)}}

|Kerala

|19 June
1995

|11 April
2007

!{{ayd|19 June 1995|11 April 2007}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

|Shankar Dayal Sharma
{{small|(President)}}

9

|75px

|Banwari Lal Joshi
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(1936{{ndash}}2017)}}

|Rajasthan

|12 April
2007

|28 October
2007

!{{ayd|12 April 2007|28 October 2007}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Lieutenant Governor of Delhi

|A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Shivinder Singh Sidhu
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
Governor of Manipur
(1929{{ndash}}2018)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Punjab

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 29 October
2007

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 30 June
2008

!{{ayd|29 October 2007|30 June 2008}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Manipur {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Pratibha Patil
{{small|(President)}}

10

|75px

|Ranjit Shekhar Mooshahary
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(born 1947)}}

|Assam

|1 July
2008

|30 June
2013

!{{ayd|1 July 2008|30 June 2013}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Information Commissioner, Assam

11

|75px

|Krishan Kant Paul
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(born 1948)}}

|Chandigarh

|1 July
2013

|6 January
2015

!{{ayd|1 July 2013|6 January 2015}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member, Union Public Service Commission

|rowspan="4"| Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Keshari Nath Tripathi
{{small|Governor of West Bengal
(1934{{ndash}}2023)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 6 January
2015

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 19 May
2015

!{{ayd|6 January 2015|19 May 2015}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of West Bengal {{small|(continued)}}

12

|75px

|V. Shanmuganathan
{{small|(born 1949)}}

|Tamil Nadu

|20 May
2015

|27 January
2017{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|20 May 2015|27 January 2017}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"|

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Banwarilal Purohit
{{small|Governor of Assam
(born 1940)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 27 January
2017

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 5 October
2017

!{{ayd|27 January 2017|5 October 2017}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{small|(continued)}}

13

|75px

|Ganga Prasad
{{small|(born 1939)}}

|Bihar

|5 October
2017

|25 August
2018

!{{ayd|5 October 2017|25 August 2018}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member, Bihar Legislative Council

|rowspan="6"| Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

14

|75px

|Tathagata Roy
{{small|(born 1945)}}

|West Bengal

|25 August
2018

|18 December
2019

!{{ayd|25 August 2018|18 December 2019}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Tripura

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| R. N. Ravi
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
Governor of Nagaland
(born 1952)}}
(Acting)

|Bihar

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 18 December
2019

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 26 January
2020

!{{ayd|18 December 2019|26 January 2020}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Nagaland {{small|(continued)}}

(14)

|75px

|Tathagata Roy
{{small|(born 1945)}}

|West Bengal

|27 January
2020

|18 August
2020

!{{ayd|27 January 2020|18 August 2020}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Meghalaya

15

|75px

|Satya Pal Malik
{{small|(born 1946)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|18 August
2020

|3 October
2022

!{{ayd|18 August 2020|3 October 2022}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Goa

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Brigadier (Retd.)}}
B. D. Mishra
{{small|Governor of Arunachal Pradesh
(born 1939)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 October
2022

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 13 February
2023

!{{ayd|4 October 2022|13 February 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Arunachal Pradesh {{small|(continued)}}

16

|75px

|Phagu Chauhan
{{small|(born 1948)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|18 February 2023

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|18 February 2023}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Bihar

|Droupadi Murmu
{{small|(President)}}

Mizoram

=Governors=

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|Hiteswar Saikia
{{small|(1934{{ndash}}1996)}}

|Assam

|20 February
1987

|30 April
1989

!{{ayd|20 February 1987|30 April 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Lieutenant Governor of Mizoram

|rowspan="4"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|General (Retd.)}}
K. V. Krishna Rao
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM}}
{{small|Governor of Manipur
(1923{{ndash}}2016)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Tamil Nadu

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 1 May
1989

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 20 July
1989

!{{ayd|1 May 1989|20 July 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Mizoram {{small|(continued)}}

2

|

|{{small|Captain}}
Williamson A. Sangma
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}1990)}}

|Meghalaya

|21 July
1989

|7 February
1990{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|21 July 1989|7 February 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Meghalaya

3

|75px

|Swaraj Kaushal
{{small|(born 1952)}}

|Delhi

|8 February
1990

|9 February
1993

!{{ayd|8 February 1990|9 February 1993}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Senior Advocate, Supreme Court of India

4

|75px

|Paty Ripple Kyndiah
{{small|(1928{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Meghalaya

|10 February
1993

|28 January
1998

!{{ayd|10 February 1993|28 January 1998}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Speaker, Meghalaya Legislative Assembly

|Shankar Dayal Sharma
{{small|(President)}}

5

|

|A. Padmanabhan
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(born 1928)}}

|Tamil Nadu

|2 May
1998

|30 November
2000{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|2 May 1998|30 Nov 2000}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Advisor to Governor of Tamil Nadu

|rowspan="3"| K. R. Narayanan
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Ved Marwah
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
Governor of Manipur
(1934–2020)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Delhi

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 1 December
2000

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 18 May
2001

!{{ayd|1 December 2000|18 May 2001}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Manipur {{small|(continued)}}

7

|

|Amolak Rattan Kohli
{{small|(born 1942)}}

|Punjab

|18 May
2001

|24 July
2006

!{{ayd|18 May 2001|24 July 2006}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member, Planning Commission of India

8

|75px

|{{small|Lieutenant General (Retd.)}}
Madan Mohan Lakhera
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|AVSM|VSM}}
{{small|(born 1937)}}

|Uttarakhand

|25 July
2006

|2 September
2011

!{{ayd|25 July 2006|2 September 2011}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Lieutenant Governor of Pondicherry

|A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
{{small|(President)}}

9

|75px

|Vakkom Purushothaman
{{small|(1928{{ndash}}2023)}}

|Kerala

|2 September
2011

|6 July
2014{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|2 September 2011|6 July 2014}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Speaker, Kerala Legislative Assembly

|Pratibha Patil
{{small|(President)}}

10

|75px

|Kamla Beniwal
{{small|(born 1927)}}

|Rajasthan

|6 July
2014

|6 August
2014{{ref label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}}

!{{ayd|6 July 2014|6 August 2014}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Gujarat

|rowspan="6"| Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Vinod Kumar Duggal
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
Governor of Manipur
(born 1944)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Punjab

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 August
2014

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 September
2014

!{{ayd|8 Aug 2014|16 Sep 2014}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Manipur {{small|(continued)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Krishan Kant Paul
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
Governor of Meghalaya
(born 1948)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Chandigarh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 September
2014

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 January
2015

!{{ayd|16 September 2014|8 January 2015}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Meghalaya {{small|(continued)}}

11

|75px

|Aziz Qureshi
{{small|(born 1941)}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|9 January
2015

|28 March
2015{{ref label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}}

!{{ayd|9 January 2015|28 March 2015}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Uttarakhand

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Keshari Nath Tripathi
{{small|Governor of West Bengal
(1934{{ndash}}2023)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 April
2015

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 25 May
2015

!{{ayd|4 Apr 2015|25 May 2015}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of West Bengal {{small|(continued)}}

12

|75px

|{{small|Lieutenant General (Retd.)}}
Nirbhay Sharma
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|UYSM|AVSM|VSM}}
{{small|(born 1946)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|26 May
2015

|28 May
2018

!{{ayd|26 May 2015|28 May 2018}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Arunachal Pradesh

13

|75px

|Kummanam Rajasekharan
{{small|(born 1952)}}

|Kerala

|29 May
2018

|8 March
2019

!{{ayd|29 May 2018|8 March 2019}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| President, Kerala State Bharatiya Janata Party

|rowspan="6"| Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Professor}}
Jagdish Mukhi
{{small|Governor of Assam
(born 1942)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Delhi

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 29 May
2018

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 25 October
2019

!{{ayd|29 May 2019|25 Oct 2019}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Assam {{Small|(continued)}}

14

|75px

|P. S. Sreedharan Pillai
{{small|(born 1954)}}

|Kerala

|5 November
2019

|6 July
2021

!{{ayd|5 November 2019|6 July 2021}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| President, Kerala State Bharatiya Janata Party

15

|75px

|Kambhampati Hari Babu
{{small|(born 1953)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|19 July
2021

|10 August
2021

!{{ayd|19 July 2021|10 August 2021}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Brigadier (Retd.)}}
B. D. Mishra
{{small|Governor of Arunachal Pradesh
(born 1939)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 11 August
2021

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 5 November
2021

!{{ayd|11 August 2021|5 November 2021}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Arunachal Pradesh {{Small|(continued)}}

(15)

|75px

|Kambhampati Hari Babu
{{small|(born 1953)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|6 November
2021

| Incumbent

!{{ayd|6 November 2021}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

Nagaland

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

|}

Odisha

=Before independence=

{{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by
{{small|(Viceroy and Governor-General)}}

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|

|Sir John Hubback
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI}}
{{small|(1878{{ndash}}1968)}}

|1 April
1936

|11 August
1938

!{{ayd|1 April 1936|11 August 1938}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Member of Executive Council, Bihar and Orissa

|The Earl of Willingdon

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| George Townsend Boag
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|CSI}}
{{small|(1884–1969)}}
(Acting)

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 11 August
1938

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 December
1938

!{{ayd|11 August 1938|8 December 1938}}

|

|rowspan="3"| The Marquess of Linlithgow

(1)

|

|Sir John Hubback
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI}}
{{small|(1878{{ndash}}1968)}}

|8 December
1938

|31 March
1941

!{{ayd|8 December 1938|31 March 1941}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Orissa

2

|

|Sir Hawthorne Lewis
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1888{{ndash}}1970)}}

|1 April
1941

|31 March
1946

!{{ayd|1 April 1941|31 March 1946}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"|

3

|75px

|Sir Chandulal Madhavlal Trivedi
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE|OBE|ICS}}
{{small|(1888{{ndash}}1970)}}

|1 April
1946

|14 August
1947

!{{ayd|1 April 1946|14 August 1947}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Secretary, Department of War

|The Viscount Wavell

=After independence=

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|Kailash Nath Katju
{{small|(1887{{ndash}}1968)}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|15 August
1947

|20 June
1948

!{{ayd|15 August 1947|20 June 1948}}

|

|The Viscount Mountbatten of Burma
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

2

|75px

|Asaf Ali
{{small|(1988{{ndash}}1953)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|21 June
1948

|5 May
1951

!{{ayd|21 June 1948|5 May 1951}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Ambassador to the United States

|C. Rajagopalachari
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| V. P. Menon
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|CSI}} {{post-nominals|list=ICS}}
{{small|(1893{{ndash}}1965)}}
(Acting)

|Madras

|6 May
1951

|17 July
1951

!{{ayd|6 May 1951|17 July 1951}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Secretary, Ministry of States

|rowspan="6"| Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

(2)

|75px

|Asaf Ali
{{small|(1988{{ndash}}1953)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|18 July
1951

|6 June
1952

!{{ayd|18 July 1951|6 June 1952}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Orissa

3

|

|Sir Sayyid Fazal Ali
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|OBE}}
{{small|(1886{{ndash}}1959)}}

|Bihar

|7 June
1952

|9 February
1954

!{{ayd|7 June 1952|9 February 1954}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Judge, Supreme Court of India

4

|75px

|P. S. Kumaraswamy Raja
{{small|(1898{{ndash}}1957)}}

|Madras

|10 February
1954

|11 September
1956

!{{ayd|10 February 1954|11 September 1956}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Madras {{small|(until 1952)}}

5

|75px

|Bhim Sen Sachar
{{small|(1894{{ndash}}1978)}}

|Punjab

|12 September
1956

|31 July
1957

!{{ayd|12 September 1956|31 July 1957}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Punjab

6

|75px

|Y. N. Sukthankar
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|CIE}} {{post-nominals|list=ICS (Retd.)}}
{{small|(1897{{ndash}}1973)}}

|Maharashtra

|31 July
1957

|15 September
1962

!{{ayd|31 July 1957|15 September 1962}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Cabinet Secretary

7

|

|Ajudhiya Nath Khosla
{{small|(1892{{ndash}}1984)}}

|Delhi

|16 September
1962

|5 August
1966

!{{ayd|16 September 1962|5 August 1966}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha (Nominated)

|rowspan="3"| Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Khaleel Ahmed
{{small|Chief Justice of Orissa High Court}}
(Acting)

|

|5 August
1966

|11 September
1966

!{{ayd|5 August 1966|11 September 1966}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Orissa High Court
{{small|(continued in office)}}

(7)

|

|Ajudhiya Nath Khosla
{{small|(1892{{ndash}}1984)}}

|Delhi

|12 September
1966

|30 January
1968

!{{ayd|12 September 1966|30 January 1968}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Orissa

8

|

|Shaukatullah Shah Ansari
{{small|(1908{{ndash}}1972)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|31 January
1968

|20 September
1971

!{{ayd|31 January 1968|20 September 1971}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Ambassador to Sudan and Congo

|Zakir Husain
{{small|(President)}}

Puducherry

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

! rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

! rowspan="2"| Portrait

! rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Name
(born{{snd}}died)

! rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

! rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

! rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by
(President)

style="width:7em"| From

! style="width:7em"| To

! style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

| 70px

| S. L. Silam

| Maharashtra

| 14 October 1963

| 13 October 1968

| {{ayd|14 Oct 1963|13 Oct 1968}}

|

| Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan

2

| 70px

| B. D. Jatti
{{small|(1912{{snd}}2002)}}

| Mysore

| 14 October
1968

| 7 November
1972

| {{ayd|14 Oct 1968|7 Nov 1972}}

|

| Zakir Husain

3

| 70px

| Chhedi Lal

|

| 8 November
1972

| 29 August
1976

| {{ayd|8 Nov 1972|29 Aug 1976}}

|

| V. V. Giri

4

| 70px

| Bidesh Tukaram Kulkarni
{{small|(1909{{snd}}1988)}}

| Maharashtra

| 30 August
1976

| 31 October
1980

| {{ayd|30 Aug 1976|31 Oct 1980}}

|

| Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed

5

| 70px

| Ram Kishore Vyas

| Rajasthan

| 1 November
1980

| 15 April
1981

| {{ayd|1 Nov 1980|15 Apr 1981}}

|

| rowspan="2"| Neelam Sanjiva Reddy

bgcolor="wheat"

! {{ndash}}

| 70px

| Sadiq Ali
{{small|(1910{{snd}}2001)
Governor of Tamil Nadu}}
(Administrator)

| Rajasthan

| 16 April
1981

| 26 July
1981

| {{Ayd|16 Apr 1981|26 Jul 1981}}

|

7

| 70px

| R. N. Haldipur

|

|

Punjab

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|Sir Chandulal Madhavlal Trivedi
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE|OBE}} {{post-nominals|list=ICS (Retd.)}}
{{small|(1893{{ndash}}1980)}}

|Gujarat

|15 August
1947

|11 March
1953

!{{ayd|15 Aug 1947|11 Mar 1953}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Orissa

|The Viscount Mountbatten of Burma
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

2

|75px

|Chandeshwar Prasad Narayan Singh
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|CIE}}
{{small|(1901{{ndash}}1994)}}

|Bihar

|11 March
1953

|15 September
1958

!{{ayd|11 Mar 1953|15 September 1958}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Ambassador to Nepal

|rowspan="2"| Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

3

|75px

|Narhar Vishnu Gadgil
{{small|(1896{{ndash}}1966)}}

|Maharashtra

|15 September
1958

|1 October
1962

!{{ayd|15 September 1958|1 October 1962}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister for Mines, Power and Supply {{small|(until 1952)}}

4

|75px

|Pattom A. Thanu Pillai
{{small|(1885{{ndash}}1970)}}

|Kerala

|1 October
1962

|4 May
1964

!{{ayd|1 October 1962|4 May 1964}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Kerala

|rowspan="4"| Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
{{small|(President)}}

5

|

|Hafiz Mohamad Ibrahim
{{small|(1889{{ndash}}1968)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|4 May
1964

|1 September
1965{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|4 May 1964|1 September 1965}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister for Irrigation and Power {{small|(until 1963)}}

6

|

|Sardar Ujjal Singh
{{small|(1895{{ndash}}1983)}}

|Punjab

|1 September
1965

|26 June
1966

!{{ayd|1 Sep 1965|26 Jun 1966}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member, Finance Commission of India {{small|(until 1957)}}

7

|75px

|Dharma Vira
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1906{{ndash}}2000)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|27 June
1966

|1 June
1967

!{{ayd|27 Jun 1966|1 Jun 1967}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Cabinet Secretary of India

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Mehar Singh
{{small|Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana High Court}}
(Acting)

|Punjab, India

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 1 June
1967

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 October
1967

!{{ayd|1 Jun 1967|16 Oct 1967}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Zakir Husain
{{small|(President)}}

8

|

|D. C. Pavate
{{small|(1899{{ndash}}1978)}}

|Karnataka

|16 October
1967

|21 May
1973

!{{ayd|16 October 1967|21 May 1973}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Vice-Chancellor of Karnatak University

9

|

|Mahendra Mohan Choudhry
{{small|(1908{{ndash}}1982)}}

|Assam

|21 May
1973

|1 September
1977

!{{ayd|21 May 1973|1 Sep 1977}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Assam

|V. V. Giri
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Ranjit Singh Narula
{{small|Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana High Court
(1908{{ndash}}2005}}
(Acting)

|Punjab, India

|1 September
1977

|24 September
1977

!{{ayd|1 Sep 1977|24 Sep 1977}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="4"| Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
{{small|(President)}}

10

|75px

|Jaisukhlal Hathi
{{small|(1909{{ndash}}1982)}}

|Gujarat

|24 September
1977

|26 August
1981

!{{ayd|24 Sep 1977|26 Aug 1981}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

11

|

|Amin ud-din Ahmad Khan
{{small|(1911{{ndash}}1983)}}

|Delhi

|26 August
1981

|21 April
1982

!{{ayd|26 Aug 1981|21 Apr 1982}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Himachal Pradesh

12

|75px

|Marri Chenna Reddy
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}1996)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|21 April
1982

|7 February
1983{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|21 Apr 1982|7 Feb 1983}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Surjit Singh Sandhawalia
{{small|Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana High Court
(1925{{ndash}}2007)}}
(Acting)

|Punjab

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 7 February
1983

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 21 February
1983

!{{ayd|7 Feb 1983|21 Feb 1983}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="8"| Zail Singh
{{small|(President)}}

13

|

|Anant Sharma
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}1988)}}

|Bihar

|21 February
1983

|10 October
1983

!{{ayd|21 Feb 1983|10 Oct 1983}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister for Communications

14

|

|Bhairab Dutt Pande
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1917{{ndash}}2009)}}

|Uttarakhand

|10 October
1983

|3 July
1984

!{{ayd|10 Oct 1983|3 Jul 1984}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of West Bengal

15

|

|Kershasp Tehmurasp Satarawala
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(1916{{ndash}}2001)}}

|Maharashtra

|3 July
1984

|14 March
1985

!{{ayd|3 July 1984|14 March 1985}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Lieutenant Governor of Goa, Daman and Diu

16

|75px

|Arjun Singh
{{small|(1930{{ndash}}2011)}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|14 March
1985

|14 November
1985{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|14 Mar 1985|14 Nov 1985}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Hokishe Sema
{{small|Governor of Himachal Pradesh
(1921{{ndash}}2007)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Nagaland

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 November
1985

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 26 November
1985

!{{ayd|14 Nov 1985|26 Nov 1985}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Himachal Pradesh {{small|(continued)}}

17

|75px

|Shankar Dayal Sharma
{{small|(1918{{ndash}}1999)}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|26 November
1985

|2 April
1986

!{{ayd|26 Nov 1985|2 Apr 1986}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Andhra Pradesh

18

|

|Siddhartha Shankar Ray
{{small|(1920{{ndash}}2010)}}

|West Bengal

|2 April
1986

|8 December
1989{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|2 Apr 1986|8 Dec 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of West Bengal {{small|(until 1977)}}

19

|

|Nirmal Kumar Mukarji
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1921{{ndash}}2002)}}

|Delhi

|8 December
1989

|14 June
1990{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|8 Dec 1989|14 Jun 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Cabinet Secretary of India {{small|(until 1977)}}

|rowspan="3"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman
{{small|(President)}}

20

|

|Virendra Verma
{{small|(1916{{ndash}}2009)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|14 June
1990

|18 December
1990

!{{ayd|14 Jun 1990|18 Dec 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

21

|75px

|{{small|General (Retd.)}}
Om Prakash Malhotra
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM}}
{{small|(1922{{Ndash}}2015)}}

|Jammu and Kashmir

|18 December
1990

|7 August
1991{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|18 Dec 1990|7 Aug 1991}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Ambassador to India {{small|(until 1982)}}

22

|

|Surendra Nath
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(1926{{ndash}}1994)}}

|

|7 August
1991

|9 July
1994{{note label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|7 Aug 1991|9 Jul 1994}}

|

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Sudhakar Panditrao Kurdukar
{{small|Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana High Court
(born 1935)}}
(Acting)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 10 July
1994

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 18 September
1994

!{{ayd|10 Jul 1994|18 Sep 1994}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Shankar Dayal Sharma
{{small|(President)}}

23

|

|{{small|Lieutenant General (Retd.)}}
B. K. N. Chhibber
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|AVSM|VSM}}
{{small|(born 1936)}}

|Punjab

|18 September
1994

|27 November
1999

!{{ayd|18 Sep 1994|27 Nov 1999}}

|

24

|75px

|{{small|Lieutenant General (Retd.)}}
J. F. R. Jacob
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM}}
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}2016)}}

|West Bengal

|27 November
1999

|8 May
2003

!{{ayd|27 November 1999|8 May 2003}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Goa

|K. R. Narayanan
{{small|(President)}}

25

|

|{{small|Justice (Retd.)}}
Om Prakash Verma
{{small|(1937{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|8 May
2003

|3 November
2004{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|8 May 2003|3 Nov 2004}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Lokayukta of Himachal Pradesh

|rowspan="2"| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
{{small|(President)}}

26

|75px

|{{small|General (Retd.)}}
Sunith Francis Rodrigues
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|VSM}}
{{small|(1933{{ndash}}2022)}}

|Maharashtra

|16 November
2004

|22 January
2010

!{{ayd|16 Nov 2004|22 Jan 2010}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief of the Army Staff {{small|(until 1993)}}

27

|75px

|Shivraj Patil
{{small|(born 1935)}}

|Maharashtra

|22 January
2010

|22 January
2015

!{{ayd|22 Jan 2010|22 Jan 2015}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Cabinet Minister for Home Affairs

|Pratibha Patil
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Kaptan Singh Solanki
{{small|Governor of Haryana
(born 1939)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Madhya Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 22 January
2015

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 22 August
2016

!{{ayd|22 Jan 2015|22 Aug 2016}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Haryana {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(President)}}

28

|75px

|V. P. Singh Badnore
{{small|(born 1948)}}

|Rajasthan

|22 August
2016

|30 August
2021

!{{ayd|22 Aug 2016|30 Aug 2021}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

{{ndash}}

|rowspan="2"| 75px

|rowspan="2"| Banwarilal Purohit
{{small|(born 1940)}}
(Additional Charge until
11 September 2021)

|rowspan="2"| Maharashtra

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 31 August
2021

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 11 September
2021

!rowspan="2"| {{ayd|31 Aug 2021}}

|rowspan="2" align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Tamil Nadu

|rowspan="2"| Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

29

|11 September 2021

|Incumbent

Rajasthan

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

colspan="9"| Rajpramukh of Rajasthan
1

|75px

|{{small|Brigadier His Highness}}
Sir Bhim Singh II
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI}}
{{small|(1909{{ndash}}1991)}}

|Kotah

|25 March
1948

|18 April
1948

!{{ayd|25 March 1948|18 April 1948}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Maharao of Kotah

|rowspan="2"| The Viscount Mountbatten of Burma
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

2

|75px

|{{small|Shri Maharana}}
Sir Bhupal Singh
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCIE}}
{{small|(1884{{ndash}}1955)}}

|Udaipur

|18 April
1948

|1 April
1949

!{{ayd|18 April 1948|1 April 1949}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Maharana of Udaipur

3

|75px

|{{small|Major General Maharaja}}
Sawai Man Singh II
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|GCSI|GCIE}}
{{small|(1912{{ndash}}1970)}}

|Jaipur

|30 March
1949

|31 October
1956

!{{ayd|30 March 1949|31 October 1956}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Maharaja of Jaipur

|C. Rajagopalachari
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

colspan="9"| Maha-Rajpramukh
(2)

|75px

|{{small|Shri Maharana}}
Sir Bhupal Singh
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCIE}}
{{small|(1884{{ndash}}1955)}}

|Udaipur

|1 April
1949

|4 July
1955{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|1 April 1949|4 July 1955}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Rajpramukh of Rajasthan

|C. Rajagopalachari
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

colspan="9"| Governor of Rajasthan
1

|75px

|Gurmukh Nihal Singh
{{small|(1895{{ndash}}1969)}}

|Delhi

|1 November
1956

|16 April
1962

!{{ayd|1 November 1956|16 April 1962}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Delhi

|rowspan="2"| Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

2

|75px

|Sampurnanand
{{small|(1891{{ndash}}1969)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|16 April
1962

|16 April
1967

!{{ayd|16 April 1962|16 April 1967}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh

3

|

|Sardar Hukam Singh
{{small|(1895{{ndash}}1973)}}

|Punjab

|16 April
1967

|19 November
1970

!{{ayd|16 April 1967|19 November 1970}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Speaker of the Lok Sabha

|Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Jagat Narain
{{small|Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court}}
(Acting)

|Rajasthan

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 20 November
1970

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 23 December
1970

!{{ayd|20 November 1970|23 December 1970}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="3"| V. V. Giri
{{small|(President)}}

(3)

|

|Sardar Hukam Singh
{{small|(1895{{ndash}}1973)}}

|Punjab

|24 December
1970

|30 June
1972

!{{ayd|24 December 1970|30 June 1972}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Rajasthan

4

|75px

|Jogendra Singh
{{small|(1903{{ndash}}1979)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|1 July
1972

|15 February
1977{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|1 July 1972|15 February 1977}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Acting Governor of Orissa

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Vedpal Tyagi
{{small|Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court
(1915{{ndash}}1979)}}
(Acting)

|Rajasthan

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 15 February
1977

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 11 May
1977

!{{ayd|15 February 1977|11 May 1977}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| B. D. Jatti
{{small|(Acting President)}}

5

|

|Raghukul Tilak
{{small|(1900{{ndash}}1989)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|17 May
1977

|8 August
1981{{ref label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}}

!{{ayd|17 May 1977|8 August 1981}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Vice-Chancellor of Kashi Vidyapeeth {{small|(until 1974)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
K. D. Sharma
{{small|Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court}}
(Acting)

|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 August
1981

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 6 March
1982

!{{ayd|8 August 1981|6 March 1982}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
{{small|(President)}}

6

|75px

|{{small|Air Chief Marshal (Retd.)}}
Om Prakash Mehra
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM}}
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Punjab

|6 March
1982

|4 January
1985

!{{ayd|6 March 1982|4 January 1985}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Maharashtra

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{Small|Justice}}
P. K. Banerjee
{{small|Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court}}
(Acting)

|West Bengal

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 5 January
1985

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 31 January
1985

!{{ayd|5 January 1985|31 January 1985}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="4"| Zail Singh
{{small|(President)}}

(6)

|75px

|{{small|Air Chief Marshal (Retd.)}}
Om Prakash Mehra
{{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM}}
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Punjab

|1 February
1985

|3 November
1985

!{{ayd|1 February 1985|3 November 1985}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Rajasthan

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{Small|Justice}}
D. P. Gupta
{{small|Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court}}
(Acting)

|Rajasthan

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 November
1985

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 19 November
1985

!{{ayd|4 Nov 1985|19 Nov 1985}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court {{small|(continued)}}

7

|75px

|Vasantdada Patil
{{small|(1917{{ndash}}1989)}}

|Maharashtra

|20 November
1985

|15 October
1987{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|20 Nov 1985|15 Oct 1987}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Maharashtra

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
J. S. Verma
{{small|Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court
(1933{{ndash}}2013)}}
(Acting)

|Madhya Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 November
1987

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 20 February
1988

!{{ayd|16 Nov 1987|20 Feb 1988}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="8"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman
{{small|(President)}}

8

|

|Sukhdev Prasad
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}1995)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|20 February
1988

|2 February
1989

!{{ayd|20 Feb 1988|2 Feb 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Cabinet Minister for Dalit and Social Welfare, Uttar Pradesh {{small|(until 1985)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
J. S. Verma
{{small|Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court
(1933{{ndash}}2013)}}
(Acting)

|Madhya Pradesh

|3 February
1989

|19 February
1989

!{{ayd|3 Feb 1989|19 Feb 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court {{small|(continued)}}

(8)

|

|Sukhdev Prasad
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}1995)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|20 February
1989

|2 February
1990{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|20 Feb 1989|2 Feb 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Rajasthan

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Milap Chand Jain
{{small|Acting Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court
(1929{{ndash}}2015)}}
(Acting)

|Rajasthan

|3 February
1990

|13 February
1990

!{{ayd|3 Feb 1990|13 Feb 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Acting Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court {{small|(continued)}}

9

|75px

|Debi Prasad Chattopadhyaya
{{small|(1933{{ndash}}2022)}}

|West Bengal

|14 February
1990

|25 August
1991{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|14 Feb 1990|25 Aug 1991}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha {{small|(until 1981)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Sarup Singh
{{small|Governor of Gujarat
(1917{{ndash}}2003)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Haryana

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 26 August
1991

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 February
1992

!{{ayd|26 August 1991|4 February 1992}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Gujarat {{small|(continued)}}

10

|75px

|Marri Chenna Reddy
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}1996)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|5 February
1992

|31 May
1993

!{{ayd|5 February 1992|31 May 1993}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh {{small|(until 1990)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Dhanik Lal Mandal
{{small|Governor of Haryana
(1932{{ndash}}2022)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Bihar

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 31 May
1993

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 29 June
1993

!{{ayd|31 May 1993|29 Jun 1993}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Haryana {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Shankar Dayal Sharma
{{small|(President)}}

11

|75px

|Bali Ram Bhagat
{{small|(1922{{ndash}}2011)}}

|Bihar

|30 June
1993

|1 May
1998

!{{ayd|30 Jun 1993|1 May 1998}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Himachal Pradesh

12

|

|Darbara Singh
{{small|(1927{{ndash}}1998)}}

|Punjab

|1 May
1998

|24 May
1998{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|1 May 1998|24 May 1998}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

|rowspan="3"| K. R. Narayanan
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Navrang Lal Tibrewal
{{small|Acting Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court
(born 1937)}}
(Acting)

|Rajasthan

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 25 May
1998

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 January
1999

!{{ayd|25 May 1998|16 Jan 1999}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Acting Chief Justice of Rajasthan High Court {{small|(continued)}}

13

|

|{{small|Justice (Retd.)}}
Anshuman Singh
{{small|(1935{{ndash}}2021)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|16 January
1999

|13 May
2003

!{{ayd|16 Jan 1999|13 May 2003}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Acting Chairman of State Legal Services Tribunal, Rajasthan

14

|

|Nirmal Chandra Jain
{{small|(1924{{ndash}}2003)}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|14 May
2003

|22 September
2003{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|14 May 2003|22 September 2003}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member, Finance Commission of India

|rowspan="6"| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Kailashpati Mishra
{{small|Governor of Gujarat
(1923{{ndash}}2012)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Bihar

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 22 September
2003

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 January
2004

!{{ayd|22 September 2003|14 January 2004}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Gujarat {{small|(continued)}}

15

|75px

|Madan Lal Khurana
{{small|(1936{{ndash}}2018)}}

|Delhi

|14 January
2004

|1 November
2004{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|14 January 2004|1 November 2004}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| T. V. Rajeswar
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
Governor of Uttar Pradesh
(1926{{ndash}}2018)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Tamil Nadu

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 1 November
2004

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 November
2004

!{{ayd|1 November 2004|8 November 2004}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Uttar Pradesh {{small|(continued)}}

16

|75px

|Pratibha Patil
{{small|(born 1934)}}

|Maharashtra

|8 November
2004

|23 June
2007{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|8 November 2004|23 June 2007}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha {{small|(until 1996)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Akhlaqur Rahman Kidwai
{{small|Governor of Haryana
(1921{{ndash}}2016)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Uttar Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 21 June
2007

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 6 September
2007

!{{ayd|21 June 2007|6 September 2007}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Haryana {{small|(continued)}}

17

|75px

|Shilendra Kumar Singh
{{small|(1932{{ndash}}2009)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|6 September
2007

|1 December
2009{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|6 September 2007|1 December 2009}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Arunachal Pradesh

|rowspan="5"| Pratibha Patil
{{small|(President)}}

rowspan="2"| 18

|rowspan="2"| 75px

|rowspan="2"| Prabha Rau
{{small|(1935{{ndash}}2010)}}
(Additional Charge until
24 January 2010)

|rowspan="2"| Maharashtra

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 2 December
2009

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 24 January
2010

!rowspan="2"| {{ayd|2 Dec 2009|26 Apr 2010}}

|rowspan="2" align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Himachal Pradesh

25 January
2010

|26 April
2010{{ref label|†|†|†}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Shivraj Patil
{{small|Governor of Punjab
(born 1935)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 26 April
2010

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 12 May
2012

!{{ayd|26 April 2010|12 May 2012}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Punjab {{small|(continued)}}

19

|75px

|Margaret Alva
{{small|(born 1942)}}

|Karnataka

|12 May
2012

|7 August
2014

!{{ayd|12 May 2012|7 Aug 2014}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Uttarakhand

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Ram Naik
{{small|Governor of Uttar Pradesh
(born 1934)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 August
2014

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 3 September
2014

!{{ayd|8 August 2014|3 September 2014}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Uttar Pradesh {{small|(continued)}}

|rowspan="2"| Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(President)}}

20

|75px

|Kalyan Singh
{{small|(1932{{ndash}}2021)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|4 September
2014

|8 September
2019

!{{ayd|4 September 2014|8 September 2019}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

21

|75px

|Kalraj Mishra
{{small|(born 1941)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|9 September
2019

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|9 September 2019}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Himachal Pradesh

|Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

Sikkim

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Tamil Nadu

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Telangana

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|E. S. L. Narasimhan
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
Governor of Andhra Pradesh
(born 1945)}}

|Tamil Nadu

|2 June
2014

|7 September
2019

!{{ayd|2 June 2014|7 September 2019}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Andhra Pradesh {{small|(held charge until 23 July 2019)}}

|Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(President)}}

2

|75px

|Tamilisai Soundararajan
{{small|(born 1961)}}

|Tamil Nadu

|8 September
2019

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|8 Sep 2019}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| President, Tamil Nadu State Bharatiya Janata Party

|Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

Tripura

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

Uttar Pradesh

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

West Bengal

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office
  • {{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned from office
  • {{note label|ẟ|ẟ|ẟ}} Removed from office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

!rowspan="2" style="width:7em" | Home state

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|75px

|C. Rajagopalachari
{{small|(1878{{ndash}}1972)}}

|Madras

|15 August
1947

|21 June
1948

!{{ayd|15 August 1947|21 June 1948}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Minister of Education, Interim Government

|rowspan="2"| Lord Louis Mountbatten
{{small|(Governor-General)}}

2

|75px

|Kailash Nath Katju
{{small|(1887{{ndash}}1968)}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|21 June
1948

|1 November
1951

!{{ayd|21 June 1948|1 November 1951}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Orissa

3

|

|Harendra Coomar Mookerjee
{{small|(1887{{ndash}}1956)}}

|West Bengal

|1 November
1951

|7 August
1956{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|1 November 1951|7 August 1956}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Vice President of Constituent Assembly

|rowspan="3"| Rajendra Prasad
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Phani Bhusan Chakravartti
{{small|Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court
(1898{{ndash}}1981)}}
(Acting)

|West Bengal

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 August
1956

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 3 November
1956

!{{ayd|8 August 1956|3 November 1956}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court {{small|(continued in office)}}

4

|

|Padmaja Naidu
{{small|(1900{{ndash}}1975)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|3 November
1956

|1 June
1967

!{{ayd|3 November 1956|1 June 1967}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member, Constituent Assembly

5

|75px

|Dharma Vira
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1906{{ndash}}2000)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|1 June
1967

|1 April
1969

!{{ayd|1 June 1967|1 April 1969}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Punjab

|rowspan="2"| Zakir Hussain
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Deep Narayan Sinha
{{small|Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court}}
(Acting)

|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 1 April
1969

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 19 September
1969

!{{ayd|1 April 1969|19 September 1969}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court {{small|(continued in office)}}

6

|

|Shanti Swaroop Dhavan
{{small|(1906{{ndash}}1978)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|19 September
1969

|21 August
1971

!{{ayd|19 September 1969|21 August 1971}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| High Commissioner to the United Kingdom

|rowspan="2"| V. V. Giri
{{small|(President)}}

7

|

|Anthony Lancelot Dias
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1910{{ndash}}2002)}}

|Maharashtra

|21 August
1971

|6 November
1979

!{{ayd|21 August 1971|6 November 1979}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Lieutenant Governor of Tripura

8

|

|Tribhuvan Narain Singh
{{small|(1904{{ndash}}1982)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|6 November
1979

|12 September
1981

!{{ayd|6 November 1979|12 September 1981}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh {{small|(until 1971)}}

|rowspan="2"| Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
{{small|(President)}}

9

|

|Bhairab Dutt Pande
{{small|ICS (Retd.)
(1917{{ndash}}2009)}}

|Uttarakhand

|12 September
1981

|10 October
1983

!{{ayd|12 September 1981|10 October 1983}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Cabinet Secretary {{Small|(until 1977)}}

10

|

|Anant Sharma
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}1988)}}

|Bihar

|10 October
1983

|14 August
1984{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|10 October 1983|14 August 1984}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

|rowspan="4"| Zail Singh
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Satish Chandra
{{small|Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court}}
(Acting)

|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 16 August
1984

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 1 October
1984

!{{ayd|16 August 1984|1 October 1984}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court {{small|(continued in office)}}

11

|

|Uma Shankar Dikshit
{{small|(1901{{ndash}}1991)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|2 October
1984

|5 August
1986{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|2 October 1984|5 August 1986}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Karnataka {{small|(until 1977)}}

12

|75px

|Saiyid Nurul Hasan
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}1993)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|12 August
1986

|1 March
1989

!{{ayd|12 August 1986|1 March 1989}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Ambassador to the Soviet Union

13

|75px

|T. V. Rajeswar
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(1926{{ndash}}2018)}}

|Tamil Nadu

|2 March
1989

|6 February
1990

!{{ayd|2 March 1989|6 February 1990}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Sikkim

|rowspan="2"| R. Venkataraman
{{small|(President)}}

(12)

|75px

|Saiyid Nurul Hasan
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}1993)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|6 February
1990

|12 July
1993{{ref label|†|†|†}}

!{{ayd|6 February 1990|12 July 1993}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Orissa

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| B. Satya Narayan Reddy
{{small|Governor of Orissa
(1927{{ndash}}2012)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Andhra Pradesh

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 13 July
1993

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 August
1993

!{{ayd|13 July 1993|14 August 1993}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Orissa {{small|(continued in office)}}

|rowspan="2"| Shankar Dayal Sharma
{{small|(President)}}

14

|75px

|K. V. Raghunatha Reddy
{{small|(1924{{ndash}}2002)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|14 August
1993

|27 April
1998

!{{ayd|14 August 1993|27 April 1998}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Tripura

15

|75px

|Akhlaqur Rahman Kidwai
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}2016)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|27 April
1998

|18 May
1999{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|27 April 1998|18 May 1999}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Bihar

|rowspan="3"| K. R. Narayanan
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| {{small|Justice}}
Shyamal Kumar Sen
{{small|Acting Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court
(born 1940)}}
(Acting)

|West Bengal

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 18 May
1999

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 December
1999

!{{ayd|18 May 1999|4 December 1999}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Acting Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court {{small|(continued in office)}}

16

|75px

|Viren J. Shah
{{small|(1926{{ndash}}2013)}}

|Gujarat

|4 December
1999

|14 December
2004

!{{ayd|4 December 1999|14 December 2004}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha {{small|(until 1996)}}

17

|75px

|Gopalkrishna Gandhi
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(born 1945)}}

|Delhi

|14 December
2004

|14 December
2009

!{{ayd|14 December 2004|14 December 2009}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Ambassador to Norway and Iceland {{small|(until 2002)}}

|A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Devanand Konwar
{{small|Governor of Bihar
(1934{{ndash}}2020)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Assam

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 December
2009

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 23 January
2010

!{{ayd|14 December 2009|23 January 2010}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Bihar {{small|(continued in office)}}

|rowspan="2"| Pratibha Patil
{{small|(President)}}

18

|75px

|M. K. Narayanan
{{small|IPS (Retd.)
(born 1934)}}

|Tamil Nadu

|24 January
2010

|30 June
2014{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|24 January 2010|30 June 2014}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| National Security Advisor

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| D. Y. Patil
{{small|Governor of Bihar
(born 1935)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Maharashtra

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 3 July
2014

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 17 July
2014

!{{ayd|3 July 2014|17 July 2014}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Bihar {{small|(continued in office)}}

|rowspan="2"| Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(President)}}

19

|75px

|Keshari Nath Tripathi
{{small|(1934{{ndash}}2023)}}

|Uttar Pradesh

|24 July
2014

|29 July
2019

!{{ayd|24 July 2014|29 July 2019}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Speaker of Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly {{small|(until 2004)}}

20

|75px

|Jagdeep Dhankhar
{{small|(born 1951)}}

|Rajasthan

|30 July
2019

|18 July
2022{{ref label|§|§|§}}

!{{ayd|30 July 2019|18 July 2022}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Union Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs {{small|(until 1991)}}

|rowspan="2"| Ram Nath Kovind
{{small|(President)}}

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 75px

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| La. Ganesan
{{small|Governor of Manipur
(born 1945)}}
(Additional Charge)

|Tamil Nadu

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 18 July
2022

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 17 November
2022

!{{ayd|18 July 2022|17 November 2022}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"| Governor of Manipur {{small|(continued in office)}}

21

|75px

|C. V. Ananda Bose
{{small|IAS (Retd.)
(born 1951)}}

|Kerala

|23 November
2022

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|23 November 2022}}

|align="left" style="font-size:93%"|

|Droupadi Murmu
{{small|(President)}}

=Governors (pre-independence)=

Assam

=Governors 1921{{ndash}}1947=

{{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:18em"| Immediate prior position held

!rowspan="2" style="width:12em" | Appointed by
{{small|(Viceroy and Governor-General)}}

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

colspan="8"| Chief Commissioner of Assam
1

|

|Sir Archdale Earle
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCIE}}
{{small|(1861{{ndash}}1934)}}

|1 April
1912

|12 May
1914

!{{ayd|1 April 1912|12 May 1914}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Secretary, Department of Home, Government of India

|The Baron Hardinge of Penshurst

colspan="8"| Governor of Assam
1

|

|Sir Nicholas Beatson-Bell
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1867{{ndash}}1936)}}

|3 January
1921

|2 April
1921

!{{ayd|3 January 1921|2 April 1921}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Commissioner of Assam

|The Viscount Chelmsford

2

|75px

|Sir William Sinclair Marris
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1873{{ndash}}1945)}}

|3 April
1921

|10 October
1922

!{{ayd|3 April 1921|10 October 1922}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Reforms Commissioner

|rowspan="6"| The Marquess of Reading

3

|

|Sir John Henry Kerr
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1871{{ndash}}1934)}}

|10 October
1922

|11 April
1925

!{{ayd|10 October 1922|11 April 1925}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Member (Finance), Bengal Executive Council

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Sir William James Reid
{{small|(1871{{ndash}}1939)}}
(Acting)

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 11 April
1925

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 5 August
1925

!{{ayd|11 April 1925|5 August 1925}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Magistrate

(3)

|

|Sir John Henry Kerr
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1871{{ndash}}1934)}}

|5 August
1925

|11 August
1925

!{{ayd|5 August 1925|11 August 1925}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Assam

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Sir William James Reid
{{small|(1871{{ndash}}1939)}}
(Acting)

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 12 August
1925

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 8 December
1925

!{{ayd|12 August 1925|8 December 1925}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Magistrate

(3)

|

|Sir John Henry Kerr
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1871{{ndash}}1934)}}

|9 December
1925

|27 June
1927

!{{ayd|9 December 1925|27 June 1927}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Assam

4

|

|Sir Egbert Laurie Lucas Hammond
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CBE}}
{{small|(1873{{ndash}}1939)}}

|28 June
1927

|11 May
1932

!{{ayd|28 June 1927|11 May 1932}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"|

|The Lord Irwin

5

|

|Sir Michael Keane
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE}}
{{small|(1874{{ndash}}1937)}}

|11 May
1932

|2 June
1935

!{{ayd|11 May 1932|2 June 1935}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"|

|rowspan="3"| The Earl of Willingdon

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Sir Abraham James Laine
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE}}
{{small|Member of Governor's Executive Council}}
(Acting)

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 3 June
1935

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 10 October
1935

!{{ayd|3 June 1935|10 October 1935}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Member, Governor of Assam's Executive Council

(5)

|

|Sir Michael Keane
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE}}
{{small|(1874{{ndash}}1937)}}

|11 October
1935

|3 March
1937

!{{ayd|11 October 1935|3 March 1937}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"|

6

|

|Sir Robert Niel Reid
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1883{{ndash}}1964)}}

|4 March
1937

|24 June
1938

!{{ayd|4 March 1937|24 June 1938}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Member, Governor of Bengal's Executive Council

|rowspan="6"| The Marquess of Linlithgow

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Gilbert Pitcairn Hogg
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|CSI|CIE}}
{{small|Chief Secretary of Bengal}}
(Acting)

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 25 June
1938

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 24 October
1938

!{{ayd|25 June 1938|24 October 1938}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Chief Secretary of Government of Bengal

(6)

|

|Sir Robert Niel Reid
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1883{{ndash}}1964)}}

|25 October
1938

|24 February
1939

!{{ayd|24 October 1938|24 February 1939}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Assam

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Sir Henry Joseph Twynam
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE}}
{{small|(1887{{ndash}}1966)}}
(Acting)

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 24 February
1939

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 October
1939

!{{ayd|24 February 1939|4 October 1939}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"|

(6)

|

|Sir Robert Niel Reid
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1883{{ndash}}1964)}}

|5 October
1939

|3 May
1942

!{{ayd|5 October 1939|3 May 1942}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Assam

7

|

|Sir Andrew Gourlay Clow
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE}}
{{small|(1890{{ndash}}1957)}}

|4 May
1942

|24 April
1946

!{{ayd|4 May 1942|24 April 1946}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Member (Communications), Viceroy's Executive Council

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Sir Frederick Chalmers Bourne
{{post-nominals|KCSI|CIE}} {{post-nominals|list=ICS}}
{{small|(1891{{ndash}}1977)}}
(Acting)

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 25 April
1946

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 3 September
1946

!{{ayd|25 April 1946|3 September 1946}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Acting Governor of Central Provinces and Berar

|rowspan="3"| The Viscount Wavell

{{ndash}}

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"|

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| Sir Henry Foley Knight
{{post-nominals|KCSI|CIE}} {{post-nominals|list=ICS}}
{{small|(1886{{ndash}}1960)}}
(Acting)

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 4 September
1946

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 23 December
1946

!{{ayd|4 September 1946|23 December 1946}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Acting Governor of Madras Presidency

(7)

|

|Sir Andrew Gourlay Clow
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|CIE}}
{{small|(1890{{ndash}}1957)}}

|24 December
1946

|3 May
1947

!{{ayd|24 December 1946|3 May 1947}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Assam

8

|

|Sir Muhammad Saleh Akbar Hydari
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCIE|CSI}} {{post-nominals|list=ICS}}
{{small|(1894{{ndash}}1948)}}

|4 May
1947

|15 August
1947

!{{ayd|4 May 1947|15 August 1947}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Member (Labour, Health, Arts), Interim Government

|The Viscount Mountbatten of Burma

Bihar

=Pre-Independence=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid;"

!rowspan="2"| {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:17em"| Name
(born{{spaced ndash}}died)

! colspan="3"| Tenure in office

!rowspan="2" style="width:17em"| Immediate prior position held

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!style="width:7em"| Time in office

1

|

|Sir James David Sifton
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCSI|KCIE}}
{{small|(1878{{ndash}}1952)}}

|1 April
1936

|10 March
1937

!{{ayd|1 April 1936|10 March 1937}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Governor of Bihar and Orissa

2

|

|Sir Maurice Garnier Hallett
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|GCIE|KCSI}}
{{small|(1883–1969)}}

|11 March
1937

|15 May
1938

!{{ayd|11 March 1937|15 May 1938}}

|style="font-size:93%" align="left"| Home Secretary to Government of British India

{{ndash}}

|

|Sir Thomas Alexander Stewart
{{post-nominals|country=GBR|KCIE}}
{{small|(1888{{ndash}}1964)}}
(Acting)

|15 May
1938

|16 September
1938

!{{ayd|15 May 1938|16 September 1938}}

=State visits=

Misc

Sharma

class="wikitable"

!{{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!Date(s)

!style="width:12em"| Visiting country

!Visiting dignitary(s)

|4{{ndash}}7 January 1993

|{{flag|Bhutan}}

|King Jigme Singye Wangchuck

|27{{ndash}}29 January 1993

|{{flag|Russia}}

|President Boris Yeltsin and First Lady Naina Yeltsina

|17{{ndash}}19 March 1993

|{{flag|Moldova}}

|President Mircea Snegur

|2{{ndash}}9 April 1993

|{{flag|Mauritius}}

|President Cassam Uteem and First Lady Zohra Uteem

|6{{ndash}}12 May 1993

|{{flag|Nepal}}

|King Birendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev and Queen Aishwarya Rajya Laxmi Devi Shah

|10{{ndash}}15 May 1993

|{{flag|Tanzania}}

|President Ali Hassan Mwinyi and First Lady Siti Mwinyi

|30 May{{ndash}}3 June 1993

|{{flag|Burkina Faso}}

|President Blaise Compaoré

|26 September{{ndash}}3 October 1993

|{{flag|Ireland}}

|President Mary Robinson

|5{{ndash}}8 October 1993

|{{flag|Zambia}}

|President Frederick Chiluba and First Lady Vera Tembo

|10{{ndash}}18 October 1993

|{{flag|Sweden}}

|King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia

|December 1993

|{{flag|Guyana}}

|President Cheddi Jagan and his daughter Nadira Jagan-Brancier

|3{{ndash}}5 January 1994

|{{flag|Uzbekistan}}

|President Islam Karimov

|6{{ndash}}11 February 1994

|{{flag|Czech Republic}}

|President Václav Havel

|21{{ndash}}25 February 1994

|{{flag|Mongolia}}

|President Punsalmaagiin Ochirbat and First Lady Sharav Tsevelmaa

|2{{ndash}}8 March 1994

|{{flag|Poland}}

|President Lech Wałęsa and First Lady Danuta Wałęsa

|21{{ndash}}25 March 1994

|{{flag|Maldives}}

|President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom and First Lady Nasreena Ibrahim

|rowspan="4"| 27{{ndash}}30 March 1994

|{{flag|Indonesia}}

|President Suharto

|{{flag|Zimbabwe}}

|President Robert Mugabe

|{{flag|Nigeria}}

|President General Sani Abacha

|{{flag|Senegal}}

|President Abdou Diouf

|31 March{{ndash}}2 April 1994

|{{flag|Argentina}}

|President Carlos Menem

|2{{ndash}}3 May 1994

|{{flag|Kenya}}

|President Daniel arap Moi

|6{{ndash}}7 September 1994

|{{flag|Uganda}}

|President Yoweri Museveni

|26{{ndash}}29 September 1994

|{{flag|Togo}}

|President Gnassingbé Eyadéma

|25{{ndash}}28 January 1995

|{{flag|South Africa}}

|President Nelson Mandela and his daughter Zenani Mandela-Dlamini

|9{{ndash}}12 February 1995

|{{flag|Italy}}

|President Oscar Luigi Scalfaro and his daughter Marianna Scalfaro

|25{{ndash}}28 March 1995

|{{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|President Chandrika Kumaratunga

|17{{ndash}}19 April 1995

|{{flag|Iran}}

|President Akbar Rafsanjanī

|28{{ndash}}31 August 1995

|{{flag|Mali}}

|President Alpha Oumar Konaré and First Lady Adame Ba Konaré

|11{{ndash}}15 December 1995

|{{flag|Tajikistan}}

|President Emomali Rahmon

|14{{ndash}}16 December 1995

|{{flag|Armenia}}

|President Levon Ter-Petrosyan and First Lady Lyudmila Ter-Petrosyan

|24{{ndash}}27 January 1996

|{{flag|Brazil}}

|President Fernando Henrique Cardoso

|24{{ndash}}27 February 1996

|{{flag|South Korea}}

|President Kim Young-sam

|25{{ndash}}28 November 1996

|{{flag|Finland}}

|President Martti Ahtisaari

|28 November{{ndash}}1 December 1996

|{{flag|China}}

|President Jiang Zemin

|9{{Ndash}}11 December 1996

|{{flag|Kazakhstan}}

|President Nursultan Nazarbayev

|29 December 1996{{ndash}}5 January 1997

|{{flag|Israel}}

|President Ezer Weizman and First Lady Reuma Weizman

|9{{ndash}}15 February 1997

|{{flag|Cyprus}}

|President Glafcos Clerides and First Lady Lila Irene Clerides

|13{{ndash}}18 February 1997

|{{flag|Namibia}}

|President Sam Nujoma

|16{{ndash}}19 February 1997

|{{flag|Senegal}}

|President Abdou Diouf

|25{{ndash}}26 February 1997

|{{flag|Turkmenistan|1992}}

|President Saparmurat Niyazov

|2{{ndash}}5 March 1997

|{{flag|Philippines}}

|President Fidel V. Ramos

|27{{ndash}}29 March 1997

|{{flag|South Africa}}

|President Nelson Mandela and his daughter Zenani Mandela-Dlamini

|1{{ndash}}4 April 1997

|{{flag|Oman}}

|Sultan Qaboos bin Said

|25{{ndash}}28 May 1997

|{{flag|Peru}}

|President Alberto Fujimori and his daughter First Lady Keiko Fujimori

Narayanan

class="wikitable"

!{{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!style="width:15em"| Date(s)

!style="width:12em"| Visiting country

!Visiting dignitary(s)

1

|25{{ndash}}28 September 1997

|{{flag|Belarus}}

|President Alexander Lukashenko

2

|12{{ndash}}18 October 1997

|{{flag|United Kingdom}}

|Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh

3

|19{{ndash}}21 October 1997

|{{flag|Latvia}}

|President Guntis Ulmanis

4

|10{{ndash}}13 November 1997

|{{flag|Burkina Faso}}

|President Blaise Compaoré and First Lady Chantal Compaoré

5

|16{{ndash}}19 November 1997

|{{flag|Romania}}

|President Emil Constantinescu

6

|19{{ndash}}22 November 1997

|{{flag|Palestine}}

|President of the Palestinian National Authority Yasser Arafat

7

|1{{ndash}}4 December 1997

|{{flag|Mauritius}}

|President Cassam Uteem and First Lady Zohra Uteem

8

|8{{ndash}}12 January 1998

|{{flag|Poland}}

|President Aleksander Kwaśniewski and First Lady Jolanta Kwaśniewska

9

|12{{ndash}}18 January 1998

|{{flag|Greece}}

|President Konstantinos Stephanopoulos

10

|24{{ndash}}26 January 1998

|{{flag|France}}

|President Jacques Chirac

11

|26 March{{ndash}}1 April 1998

|{{flag|Canada}}

|Governor General Roméo LeBlanc and Viceregal consort Diana Fowler LeBlanc

12

|25{{Ndash}}28 October 1998

|{{flag|Bulgaria}}

|President Petar Stoyanov and First Lady Antonina Stoyanova

13

|20{{ndash}}25 November 1998

|{{flag|Switzerland}}

|President Flavio Cotti and First Lady Renata Cotti

14

|27{{ndash}}30 December 1998

|{{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|President Chandrika Kumaratunga

15

|24{{ndash}}29 January 1999

|{{flag|Nepal}}

|King Birendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev and Queen Aishwarya Rajya Lakshmi Devi Shah

16

|3{{ndash}}10 February 1999

|{{flag|Estonia}}

|President Lennart Meri and First Lady Helle Meri

17

|6{{ndash}}8 April 1999

|{{flag|Qatar}}

|Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani

18

|12{{ndash}}16 April 1999

|{{flag|Kyrgyzstan}}

|President Askar Akayev and First Lady Mayram Akayeva

19

|21{{ndash}}24 July 1999

|{{flag|Namibia}}

|President Sam Nujoma and First Lady Kovambo Nujoma

20

|5{{ndash}}8 November 1999

|{{flag|Vatican City}}

|Pope John Paul II

21

|1{{ndash}}5 December 1999

|{{flag|Vietnam}}

|President Trần Đức Lương and First Lady Nguyễn Thị Vinh

22

|24{{ndash}}28 January 2000

|{{flag|Nigeria}}

|President Olusegun Obasanjo

23

|8{{ndash}}9 February 2000

|{{flag|Indonesia}}

|President Abdurrahman Wahid and First Lady Sinta Nuriyah Wahid

24

|19{{ndash}}25 March 2000

|{{flag|United States}}

|President Bill Clinton and his daughter Chelsea Clinton

25

|1{{ndash}}3 May 2000

|{{flag|Uzbekistan}}

|President Islam Karimov and First Lady Tatyana Karimova

26

|21{{Ndash}}25 August 2000

|{{flag|Maldives}}

|President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom and First Lady Nasreena Ibrahim

27

|2{{ndash}}5 October 2000

|{{flag|Russia}}

|President Vladimir Putin and First Lady Lyudmila Putina

28

|28 October{{ndash}}3 November 2000

|{{flag|Iceland}}

|President Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson and First Lady Dorrit Moussaieff

29

|1{{ndash}}5 January 2001

|{{flag|Mongolia}}

|President Natsagiin Bagabandi and First Lady Azadsurengiin Oyunbileg

30

|24{{Ndash}}29 January 2001

|{{flag|Algeria}}

|President Abdelaziz Bouteflika

31

|19{{ndash}}23 February 2001

|{{flag|Lithuania}}

|President Valdas Adamkus and First Lady Alma Adamkienė

32

|26 February{{ndash}}3 March 2001

|{{flag|Morocco}}

|King Mohammed VI

33

|4{{ndash}}8 March 2001

|{{flag|Colombia}}

|President Andrés Pastrana Arango and First Lady Nohra Puyana de Pastrana

34

|9{{ndash}}12 May 2001

|{{flag|Tajikistan}}

|President Emomali Rahmon

35

|14{{ndash}}16 July 2001

|{{flag|Pakistan}}

|President Pervez Musharraf and First Lady Begum Sehba Musharraf

36

|24 January{{ndash}}2 February 2002

|{{flag|Mauritius}}

|President Cassam Uteem and First Lady Zohra Uteem

37

|11{{ndash}}15 February 2002

|{{flag|Kazakhstan}}

|President Nursultan Nazarbayev and First Lady Sara Nazarbayeva

38

|1{{ndash}}5 April 2002

|{{flag|Indonesia}}

|President Megawati Sukarnoputri

39

|22{{ndash}}29 June 2002

|{{flag|Nepal}}

|King Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev and Queen Komal Rajya Lakshmi Devi Shah

Kalam

class="wikitable"

!{{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!style="width:15em"| Date(s)

!style="width:12em"| Visiting country

!Visiting dignitary(s)

1

|4{{ndash}}8 August 2002

|{{flag|Ghana}}

|President John Kufuor and First Lady Theresa Kufuor

2

|2{{ndash}}5 October 2002

|{{flag|Ukraine}}

|President Leonid Kuchma and First Lady Lyudmyla Kuchma

3

|12{{ndash}}16 November 2002

|{{flag|Croatia}}

|President Stjepan Mesić and First Lady Milka Mesić

4

|3{{ndash}}5 December 2002

|{{flag|Russia}}

|President Vladimir Putin and First Lady Lyudmila Putina

5

|15{{ndash}}20 December 2002

|{{flag|Tanzania}}

|President Benjamin Mkapa and First Lady Anna Mkapa

6

|3{{ndash}}11 January 2003

|{{flag|Singapore}}

|President S. R. Nathan and First Lady Urmila Nathan

7

|24{{ndash}}28 January 2003

|{{flag|Iran}}

|President Muhammad Khatami

8

|26 February{{ndash}}1 March 2003

|{{flag|Namibia}}

|President Sam Nujoma

9

|28 February{{ndash}}4 March 2003

|{{flag|Afghanistan|2002}}

|President Hamid Karzai

10

|1{{ndash}}6 March 2003

|{{flag|Germany}}

|President Johannes Rau and First Lady Christina Rau

11

|16{{ndash}}20 March 2003

|{{flag|Suriname}}

|President Ronald Venetiaan and First Lady Liesbeth Venetiaan

12

|20{{ndash}}27 April 2003

|{{flag|Zambia}}

|President Levy Mwanawasa and First Lady Maureen Mwanawasa

13

|10{{ndash}}15 May 2003

|{{flag|Mozambique}}

|President Joaquim Chissano

14

|18{{ndash}}23 May 2003

|{{flag|Djibouti}}

|President Ismaïl Omar Guelleh

15

|24{{ndash}}29 August 2003

|{{flag|Guyana}}

|President Bharrat Jagdeo

16

|14{{ndash}}19 September 2003

|{{flag|Bhutan}}

|King Jigme Singye Wangchuck

17

|12{{ndash}}15 October 2003

|{{flag|Senegal}}

|President Abdoulaye Wade and First Lady Viviane Wade

18

|16{{ndash}}18 October 2003

|{{flag|South Africa}}

|President Thabo Mbeki and First Lady Zanele Dlamini Mbeki

19

|27{{ndash}}31 October 2003

|{{flag|Armenia}}

|President Robert Kocharyan and First Lady Bella Kocharyan

20

|6{{ndash}}11 November 2003

|{{flag|Switzerland}}

|President Pascal Couchepin and First Lady Brigitte Couchepin

21

|6{{ndash}}13 January 2004

|{{flag|Guyana}}

|President Bharrat Jagdeo

22

|25{{ndash}}28 January 2004

|{{flag|Brazil}}

|President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and First Lady Marisa Letícia Lula da Silva

23

|28 January{{ndash}}1 February 2004

|{{flag|Romania}}

|President Ion Iliescu

24

|4{{ndash}}6 October 2004

|{{flag|South Korea}}

|President Roh Moo-hyun and First Lady Kwon Yang-sook

25

|24{{ndash}}29 October 2004

|{{flag|Union of Myanmar|name=Myanmar}}

|Chairman of State Peace and Development Council Than Shwe

26

|11{{ndash}}16 December 2004

|{{flag|Slovakia}}

|President Ivan Gašparovič and First Lady Silvia Gašparovičová

27

|18{{ndash}}22 January 2005

|{{flag|Chile}}

|President Ricardo Lagos and First Lady Luisa Durán

28

|24{{ndash}}29 January 2005

|{{flag|Bhutan}}

|King Jigme Singye Wangchuck and Crown Prince Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck

29

|12{{ndash}}16 February 2005

|{{flag|Italy}}

|President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi and First Lady Franca Pilla

30

|16{{ndash}}22 February 2005

|{{flag|Austria}}

|President Heinz Fischer and First Lady Margit Fischer

31

|4{{ndash}}7 March 2005

|{{flag|Venezuela}}

|President Hugo Chávez

32

|4{{ndash}}6 April 2005

|{{flag|Uzbekistan}}

|President Islam Karimov and First Lady Tatyana Karimova

33

|13{{ndash}}15 April 2005

|{{flag|Qatar}}

|Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani

34

|31 July{{ndash}}2 August 2005

|{{flag|Seychelles}}

|President James Michel

35

|6{{ndash}}12 November 2005

|{{flag|Czech Republic}}

|President Václav Klaus and First Lady Livia Klausová

36

|21{{ndash}}24 November 2005

|{{flag|Indonesia}}

|President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and First Lady Ani Yudhoyono

37

|27{{ndash}}30 December 2005

|{{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|President Mahinda Rajapaksa and First Lady Shiranthi Rajapaksa

38

|24{{ndash}}27 January 2006

|{{flag|Saudi Arabia}}

|Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud

39

|19{{ndash}}21 February 2006

|{{flag|France}}

|President Jacques Chirac and First Lady Bernadette Chirac

40

|1{{ndash}}3 March 2006

|{{flag|United States}}

|President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush

41

|9{{ndash}}13 April 2006

|{{flag|Islamic Republic of Afghanistan|2004|name=Afghanistan}}

|President Hamid Karzai

42

|11{{ndash}}16 April 2006

|{{flag|Cyprus}}

|President Tassos Papadopoulos and First Lady Fotini Papadopoulou

43

|14{{ndash}}19 June 2006

|{{flag|Kuwait}}

|Amir Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah

44

|6{{ndash}}10 August 2006

|{{flag|Tajikistan}}

|President Emomali Rahmon

45

|22{{ndash}}24 October 2006

|{{flag|Romania}}

|President Traian Băsescu and First Lady Maria Băsescu

46

|20{{ndash}}23 November 2006

|{{flag|China}}

|President Hu Jintao and First Lady Liu Yongqing

47

|30 November{{ndash}}2 December 2006

|{{flag|Jordan}}

|King Abdullah II and Queen Rania

48

|7{{ndash}}13 December 2006

|{{flag|Botswana}}

|President Festus Mogae and First Lady Barbara Mogae

49

|10{{ndash}}17 January 2007

|{{flag|Portugal}}

|President Aníbal Cavaco Silva and First Lady Maria Cavaco Silva

50

|15{{ndash}}17 April 2007

|{{flag|Belarus}}

|President Alexander Lukashenko

51

|3{{ndash}}5 June 2007

|{{flag|Brazil}}

|President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva

Patil

class="wikitable"

!{{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!style="width:15em"| Date(s)

!style="width:12em"| Visiting country

!Visiting dignitary(s)

1

|10{{ndash}}11 September 2007

|{{flag|Mexico}}

|President Felipe Calderón and First Lady Margarita Zavala

2

|3{{ndash}}6 October 2007

|{{flag|Philippines}}

|President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo

3

|22{{ndash}}27 October 2007

|{{flag|Netherlands}}

|Queen Beatrix
Prince of Orange Willem-Alexander and Princess of Orange Máxima

4

|4{{ndash}}8 November 2007

|{{flag|Switzerland}}

|President Micheline Calmy-Rey

5

|25{{ndash}}26 January 2008

|{{flag|France}}

|President Nicholas Sarkozy

6

|6{{ndash}}12 February 2008

|{{flag|Maldives}}

|President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom and First Lady Nasreena Ibrahim

7

|7{{ndash}}11 April 2008

|{{flag|Uganda}}

|President Yoweri Museveni and First Lady Janet Museveni

8

|20{{ndash}}23 May 2008

|{{flag|Brunei}}

|Sultan and Yang di-Pertuan Hassanal Bolkiah

9

|17{{ndash}}21 June 2008

|{{flag|Syria}}

|President Bashar al-Assad and First Lady Asma al-Assad

10

|3{{ndash}}5 August 2008

|{{flag|Islamic Republic of Afghanistan|name=Afghanistan|2004}}

|President Hamid Karzai

11

|8{{ndash}}14 September 2008

|{{flag|New Zealand}}

|Governor-General Sir Anand Satyanand and Viceregal Consort Susan Satyanand

12

|6{{ndash}}9 October 2008

|{{flag|Palestine}}

|President Mahmoud Abbas

13

|3{{ndash}}12 November 2008

|{{flag|Belgium}}

|King Albert II and Queen Paola

14

|17{{ndash}}19 November 2008

|{{flag|Egypt}}

|President Hosni Mubarak and First Lady Suzanne Mubarak

15

|4{{ndash}}6 December 2008

|{{flag|Russia}}

|President Dmitry Medvedev

16

|23{{ndash}}26 January 2009

|{{flag|Kazakhstan}}

|President Nursultan Nazarbayev

17

|3{{ndash}}7 March 2009

|{{flag|Benin}}

|President Thomas Boni Yayi and First Lady Chantal Yayi

18

|16{{ndash}}20 March 2009

|{{flag|Chile}}

|President Michelle Bachelet

19

|30 August{{ndash}}3 September 2009

|{{flag|Namibia}}

|President Hifikepunye Pohamba and First Lady Penehupifo Pohamba

20

|13{{ndash}}16 September 2009

|{{flag|Mongolia}}

|President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj and First Lady Khajidsuren Bolormaa

21

|13{{ndash}}15 October 2009

|{{flag|Argentina}}

|President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner

22

|21{{ndash}}26 December 2009

|{{flag|Bhutan}}

|King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck and Queen Jetsun Pema

23

|11{{ndash}}17 January 2010

|{{flag|Iceland}}

|President Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson and First Lady Dorrit Moussaieff

24

|24{{ndash}}27 January 2010

|{{flag|South Korea}}

|President Lee Myung-bak and First Lady Kim Yoon-ok

25

|1{{ndash}}7 February 2010

|{{flag|Germany}}

|President Horst Köhler and First Lady Eva Köhler

26

|7{{ndash}}11 February 2010

|{{flag|Turkey}}

|President Abdullah Gül and First Lady Hayrünnisa Gül

27

|15{{ndash}}18 February 2010

|{{flag|Nepal}}

|President Ram Baran Yadav

28

|24{{ndash}}26 May 2010

|{{flag|Turkmenistan}}

|President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow

29

|1{{ndash}}3 June 2010

|{{flag|Seychelles}}

|President James Michel

30

|2{{ndash}}4 June 2010

|{{flag|South Africa}}

|President Jacob Zuma and First Lady Nompumelelo Ntuli Zuma

31

|8{{ndash}}11 June 2010

|{{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|President Mahinda Rajapaksa and First Lady Shiranthi Rajapaksa

32

|25{{ndash}}27 July 2010

|{{flag|Union of Myanmar|name=Myanmar}}

|Chairman of the State Peace and Development Council Than Shwe and First Lady Kyaing Kyaing

33

|29 September{{ndash}}4 October 2010

|{{flag|Mozambique}}

|President Armando Guebuza

34

|3{{ndash}}7 November 2010

|{{flag|Malawi|2010}}

|President Bingu wa Mutharika and First Lady Callista Chimombo

35

|6{{ndash}}9 November 2010

|{{flag|United States}}

|President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama

36

|24{{ndash}}26 January 2011

|{{flag|Indonesia}}

|President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and First Lady Ani Yudhoyono

37

|17{{ndash}}18 May 2011

|{{flag|Uzbekistan}}

|President Islam Karimov and First Lady Tatyana Karimova

38

|11{{ndash}}13 October 2011

|{{flag|Vietnam}}

|President Trương Tấn Sang and First Lady Mai Thị Hạnh

39

|12{{ndash}}15 October 2011

|{{flag|Myanmar}}

|President Thein Sein and First Lady Khin Khin Win

40

|23{{ndash}}31 October 2011

|{{flag|Bhutan}}

|King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck and Queen Jetsun Pema

41

|10{{ndash}}13 January 2012

|{{flag|Mali}}

|President Amadou Toumani Touré and First Lady Toure Lobbo Traore

42

|30{{ndash}}31 March 2012

|{{flag|Brazil}}

|President Dilma Rousseff

43

|8{{ndash}}10 April 2012

|{{flag|Qatar}}

|Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani and First Lady Moza bint Nasser

Mukherjee

class="wikitable"

!{{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!style="width:15em"| Date(s)

!style="width:12em"| Visiting country

!Visiting dignitary(s)

1

|1{{ndash}}4 September 2012

|{{flag|Tajikistan}}

|President Emomali Rahmon

2

|10{{ndash}}12 September 2012

|{{flag|Palestine}}

|President Mahmoud Abbas

3

|17{{ndash}}19 September 2012

|{{flag|Burundi}}

|President Pierre Nkurunziza and First Lady Denise Bucumi-Nkurunziza

4

|24{{ndash}}27 October 2012

|{{flag|Spain}}

|King Juan Carlos I

5

|9{{ndash}}13 November 2012

|{{flag|Afghanistan|2004}}

|President Hamid Karzai

6

|9{{ndash}}12 December 2012

|{{flag|Ukraine}}

|President Viktor Yanukovych

7

|7{{ndash}}10 January 2013

|{{flag|Mauritius}}

|President Kailash Purryag and First Lady Aneetah Purryag

8

|23{{ndash}}30 January 2013

|{{flag|Bhutan}}

|King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck and Queen Jetsun Pema

9

|14{{ndash}}15 February 2013

|{{flag|France}}

|President François Hollande and Miss Valérie Trierweiler

10

|18{{ndash}}20 March 2013

|{{flag|Egypt}}

|President Mohamed Morsi

11

|9{{ndash}}13 September 2013

|{{flag|Liberia}}

|President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf

12

|30 November{{ndash}}5 December 2013

|{{flag|Japan}}

|Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko

13

|1{{ndash}}4 January 2014

|{{flag|Maldives}}

|President Abdulla Yameen and First Lady Fathimath Yameen

14

|15{{ndash}}18 January 2014

|{{flag|South Korea}}

|President Park Geun-hye

15

|4{{ndash}}9 February 2014

|{{flag|Germany}}

|President Joachim Gauck and Mrs. Daniela Schadt

16

|18{{ndash}}20 February 2014

|{{flag|Bahrain}}

|King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa

17

|22 February{{ndash}}2 March 2014

|{{flag|Canada}}

|Governor General David Johnston and Viceregal Consort Sharon Johnston

18

|17{{ndash}}19 September 2014

|{{flag|China}}

|President Xi Jinping and First Lady Peng Liyuan

19

|24{{ndash}}27 January 2015

|{{flag|United States}}

|President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama

20

|8{{ndash}}11 February 2015

|{{flag|Singapore}}

|President Tony Tan and First Lady Mary Tan

21

|15{{ndash}}18 February 2015

|{{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|President Maithripala Sirisena and First Lady Jayanthi Sirisena

22

|24{{ndash}}25 March 2015

|{{flag|Qatar}}

|Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani

23

|27{{ndash}}29 April 2015

|{{flag|Afghanistan|2013}}

|President Ashraf Ghani

24

|17{{ndash}}20 June 2015

|{{flag|Tanzania}}

|President Jakaya Kikwete and First Lady Salma Kikwete

25

|4{{ndash}}7 August 2015

|{{flag|Mozambique}}

|President Filipe Nyusi and First Lady Isaura Nyusi

26

|25{{ndash}}27 August 2015

|{{flag|Seychelles}}

|President James Michel

27

|24{{ndash}}26 January 2016

|{{flag|France}}

|President François Hollande

28

|27{{ndash}}30 August 2016

|{{flag|Myanmar}}

|President Htin Kyaw and First Lady Su Su Lwin

29

|1{{ndash}}3 September 2016

|{{flag|Egypt}}

|President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi

30

|14{{ndash}}21 November 2016

|{{flag|Israel}}

|President Reuven Rivlin and First Lady Nechama Rivlin

31

|11{{ndash}}13 December 2016

|{{flag|Indonesia}}

|President Joko Widodo and First Lady Iriana Widodo

32

|14{{ndash}}18 December 2016

|{{flag|Tajikistan}}

|President Emomali Rahmon

33

|18{{ndash}}21 December 2016

|{{flag|Kyrgyzstan}}

|President Almazbek Atambayev and First Lady Raisa Atambayeva

34

|10{{ndash}}12 January 2017

|{{flag|Kenya}}

|President Uhuru Kenyatta

35

|24{{ndash}}26 January 2017

|{{flag|United Arab Emirates}}

|Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi

36

|17{{ndash}}21 April 2017

|{{flag|Nepal}}

|President Bidya Devi Bhandari

37

|24{{ndash}}28 April 2017

|{{flag|Cyprus}}

|President Nicos Anastasiades

38

|30 April{{ndash}}1 May 2017

|{{flag|Turkey}}

|President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

39

|14{{ndash}}17 May 2017

|{{flag|Palestine}}

|President Mahmoud Abbas

Kovind

class="wikitable"

!{{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!style="width:15em"| Date(s)

!style="width:12em"| Visiting country

!Visiting dignitary(s)

1

|30 August{{ndash}}2 September 2017

|{{flag|Switzerland}}

|President Doris Leuthard

2

|11{{ndash}}12 September 2017

|{{flag|Belarus}}

|President Alexander Lukashenko

3

|5{{ndash}}11 November 2017

|{{flag|Belgium}}

|King Philippe and Queen Mathilde

4

|15{{ndash}}18 February 2018

|{{flag|Iran}}

|President Hassan Rouhani

5

|27 February{{ndash}}1 March 2018

|{{flag|Jordan}}

|King Abdullah II

6

|2{{ndash}}4 March 2018

|{{flag|Vietnam}}

|President Trần Đại Quang and First Lady Nguyễn Thị Hiền

7

|9{{ndash}}12 March 2018

|{{flag|France}}

|President Emmanuel Macron and First Lady Brigitte Macron

8

|22{{ndash}}25 March 2018

|{{flag|Germany}}

|President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and First Lady Elke Büdenbender

9

|22{{ndash}}27 June 2018

|{{flag|Seychelles}}

|President Danny Faure

10

|8{{ndash}}11 July 2018

|{{flag|South Korea}}

|President Moon Jae-in and First Lady Kim Jung-sook

11

|30 September{{ndash}}1 October 2018

|{{flag|Uzbekistan}}

|President Shavkat Mirziyoyev and First Lady Ziroatkhon Hoshimova

12

|16{{ndash}}18 December 2018

|{{flag|Maldives}}

|President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih and First Lady Fazna Ahmed

13

|25{{ndash}}26 January 2019

|{{flag|South Africa}}

|President Cyril Ramaphosa and First Lady Tshepo Motsepe

14

|17{{ndash}}19 February 2019

|{{flag|Argentina}}

|President Mauricio Macri and First Lady Juliana Awada

15

|19{{ndash}}20 February 2019

|{{flag|Saudi Arabia}}

|Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman

16

|20{{ndash}}22 August 2019

|{{flag|Zambia}}

|President Edgar Lungu

17

|19{{ndash}}23 September 2019

|{{flag|Mongolia}}

|President Khaltmaagiin Battulga

18

|13{{ndash}}18 October 2019

|{{flag|Netherlands}}

|King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima

19

|28{{ndash}}30 November 2019

|{{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|President Gotabaya Rajapaksa

20

|2{{ndash}}6 December 2019

|{{flag|Sweden}}

|King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia

21

|24{{ndash}}27 January 2020

|{{flag|Brazil}}

|President Jair Bolsonaro

22

|13{{ndash}}16 February 2020

|{{flag|Portugal}}

|President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa

23

|24{{ndash}}25 February 2020

|{{flag|United States}}

|President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump

24

|26{{ndash}}29 February 2020

|{{flag|Myanmar}}

|President Win Myint and First Lady Cho Cho

Murmu

class="wikitable"

!{{Abbr|No.|Number}}

!style="width:13em"| Date(s)

!style="width:12em"| Visiting country

!style="width:30em"| Visiting dignitary(s)

1

|24{{ndash}}26 January 2023

|{{flag|Egypt}}

|President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi

2

|29{{ndash}}31 May 2023

|{{flag|Cambodia}}

|King Norodom Sihamoni

3

|9{{ndash}}11 September 2023

|{{flag|Saudi Arabia}}

|Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman

4

|8{{ndash}}10 October 2023

|{{flag|Tanzania}}

|President Samia Suluhu Hassan

5

|4{{ndash}}6 December 2023

|{{flag|Kenya}}

|President William Ruto

6

|16 December 2023

|{{flag|Oman}}

|Sultan Haitham bin Tariq

=Speakers, Assam LA=

Note:

:{{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office

:{{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! rowspan="2"| {{abbr|No.|Number}}

! rowspan="2"| Portrait

! rowspan="2" style="width:15em" |Speaker
{{small|(Birth-Death)}}

! rowspan="2" style="width:9em"| Constituency

! colspan="3" |Term of office

! rowspan="2" style="width:8em" |Political party

! rowspan="2" style="width:6em"| Legislature

! colspan="2" rowspan="2"| Deputy Speaker

style="width:7em"| From

!style="width:7em"| To

!Period

bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"| 1

|70px

|Kuladhar Chaliha
{{small|(1887{{ndash}}1963)}}

|Jorhat South

|5 March
1952

|7 June
1957

!{{ayd|5 Mar 1952|7 Jun 1957}}

|rowspan="9"| Indian National Congress

|1st
{{small|(1952)}}

|rowspan="3" bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|rowspan="3"| R. N. Baruah

bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"| 2

|70px

|Devakanta Barooah
{{small|(1914{{ndash}}1996)}}

|Nowgong

|8 June
1957

|15 September
1959

!{{ayd|8 Jun 1957|15 Sep 1959}}

|rowspan="2"| 2nd
{{small|(1957)}}

rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"| 3

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Mahendra Mohan Choudhry
{{small|(1908{{ndash}}1982)}}

|rowspan="2"| Hajo

|9 December
1959

|28 February
1962

!rowspan="2"| {{ayd|9 Dec 1959|19 Mar 1967}}

31 March
1962

|19 March
1967

|3rd
{{small|(1962)}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|D. Hazarika

bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"| 4

|

|Hareswar Goswami

|Chaygaon

|20 March
1967

|10 May
1968

!{{ayd|20 Mar 1967|10 May 1968}}

|rowspan="4"| 4th
{{small|(1967)}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|M. K. Das

rowspan="3" bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"| 5

|rowspan="3"|

|rowspan="3"| Mahi Kanta Das

|rowspan="3"| Missamari

|rowspan="3"| 27 August
1968

|rowspan="3"| 21 March
1972

!rowspan="3"| {{ayd|27 Aug 1968|21 Mar 1972}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|A. Saikia

bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|J. Saikia

bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|R. N. Sen

bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"| 6

|

|Ramesh Chandra Barooah

|Dibrugarh

|22 March
1972

|20 March
1978

!{{ayd|22 Mar 1972|20 Mar 1978}}

|5th
{{small|(1972)}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Golok Rajbanshi

=Indian female ministers=

Female prime ministers

class="wikitable sortable"
Image

! style="width:13em"| Minister

! colspan="2"| Party

! Constituency

! Roles held concurrently

! From

! To

! Ministry

rowspan="5"| 60px

|rowspan="5"| Indira Gandhi

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|Uttar Pradesh
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|

|rowspan="4"| 24 January 1966

|rowspan="4"| 24 March 1977

|Indira I

rowspan="3"| Raebareli

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Indira II

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (R)|rowspan=2}}
* Minister of Home Affairs (1971{{ndash}}1973)

|Indira III

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Medak

|

|14 January 1980

|31 December 1984

|Indira IV

Female cabinet members

{{color box|#FFFF99}} denotes incumbent female ministers.

class="wikitable sortable"
Image

! style="width:13em"| Minister

! colspan="2"| Party

! Constituency

! Position

! From

! To

! Ministry

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Amrit Kaur

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Mandi-Mahasu

|rowspan="2"| Minister of Health

|rowspan="2"| 15 August 1947

|rowspan="2"| 16 April 1957

|Nehru I

Nehru II
rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Indira Gandhi

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Uttar Pradesh
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|rowspan="2"| Minister of Information and Broadcasting

|rowspan="2"| 2 July 1964

|rowspan="2"| 24 January 1966

|Shastri

Nanda II
60px

|Sathyavani Muthu

|{{party name with color|AIADMK}}

|Tamil Nadu
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of Social Welfare

|19 August 1979

|23 December 1979

|Charan Singh

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Mohsina Kidwai

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| Meerut

|Minister of Health and Family Welfare

|31 December 1984

|24 June 1986

|rowspan="4"| Rajiv II

Minister of Transport

|24 June 1986

|22 October 1986

Minister of Urban Development

|22 October 1986

|2 December 1989

Minister of Tourism

|14 February 1988

|25 June 1988

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Sheila Kaul

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Raebareli

|Minister of Urban Development

|21 June 1991

|3 May 1995

|rowspan="2"| Rao

Minister of Urban Affairs and Employment

|3 May 1995

|10 September 1995

rowspan="8"| 60px

|rowspan="8"| Sushma Swaraj

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=8}}

|rowspan="3"| South Delhi

|rowspan="2"| Minister of Information and Broadcasting

|16 May 1996

|1 June 1996

|Vajpayee I

19 March 1998

|11 October 1998

|rowspan="2"| Vajpayee II

Minister of Communications

|20 April 1998

|11 October 1998

rowspan="3"| Uttar Pradesh
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of Information and Broadcasting

|30 September 2000

|29 January 2003

|rowspan="3"| Vajpayee III

Minister of Health and Family Welfare

|rowspan="2"| 29 January 2003

|rowspan="2"| 22 May 2004

Minister of Parliamentary Affairs
rowspan="2"| Vidisha

|Minister of External Affairs

|27 May 2014

|30 May 2014

|rowspan="2"| Modi I

Minister of Overseas Indian Affairs

|27 May 2014

|7 January 2016

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Mamata Banerjee

|{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="3"| Calcutta South

|Minister of Railways

|13 October 1999

|16 March 2001

|rowspan="3"| Vajpayee III

Minister without portfolio

|8 September 2003

|9 January 2004

Minister of Coal and Mines

|9 January 2004

|22 May 2004

Kolkata Dakshin

|Minister of Railways

|23 May 2009

|19 May 2011

|Manmohan II

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Uma Bharti

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="2"| Bhopal

|Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports

|7 November 2000

|26 August 2002

|rowspan="2"| Vajpayee III

Minister of Coal and Mines

|26 August 2002

|29 January 2003

rowspan="2"| Jhansi

|Minister of Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation

|27 May 2014

|3 September 2017

|rowspan="2"| Modi I

Minister of Drinking Water and Sanitation

|3 September 2017

|30 May 2019

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Meira Kumar

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Sasaram

|Minister of Social Justice and Empowerment

|23 May 2004

|22 May 2009

|Manmohan I

Minister of Water Resources

|28 May 2009

|31 May 2009

|Manmohan II

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Ambika Soni

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Punjab
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of Culture

|rowspan="2"| 29 January 2006

|rowspan="2"| 22 May 2009

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan I

Minister of Tourism
Minister of Information and Broadcasting

|28 May 2009

|27 October 2012

|Manmohan II

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Selja Kumari

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| Ambala

|Minister of Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation

|28 May 2009

|28 October 2012

|rowspan="4"| Manmohan II

Minister of Tourism

|28 May 2009

|19 October 2011

Minister of Culture

|19 October 2011

|28 October 2012

Minister of Social Justice and Empowerment

|28 October 2012

|26 May 2014

60px

|Chandresh Kumari Katoch

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|Jodhpur

|Minister of Culture

|28 October 2012

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan II

60px

|Girija Vyas

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|Chittorgarh

|Minister of Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation

|17 June 2013

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan II

60px

|Najma Heptulla

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Madhya Pradesh
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of Minority Affairs

|27 May 2014

|12 July 2016

|Modi I

60px

|Maneka Gandhi

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Pilibhit

|Minister of Women and Child Development

|27 May 2014

|30 May 2019

|Modi I

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Harsimrat Kaur Badal

|{{party name with color|Shiromani Akali Dal|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Bathinda

|rowspan="2"| Minister of Food Processing Industries

|rowspan="2"| 27 May 2014

|rowspan="2"| 18 September 2020

|Modi I

Modi II
rowspan="5" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|rowspan="5" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Smriti Irani

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=5}}

|rowspan="3"| Gujarat
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of Human Resource Development

|27 May 2014

|5 July 2016

|rowspan="3"| Modi I

Minister of Textiles

|5 July 2016

|30 May 2019

Minister of Information and Broadcasting

|18 July 2017

|14 May 2018

rowspan="2"| Amethi

|Minister of Textiles

|31 May 2019

|7 July 2019

|rowspan="2"| Modi II

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of Women and Child Development

|31 May 2019

|9 June 2020

rowspan="3" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|rowspan="3" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Nirmala Sitharaman

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Karnataka
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of Defence

|3 September 2017

|30 May 2019

|Modi I

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of Finance

|rowspan="2"| 31 May 2019

|rowspan="2"| Incumbent

|rowspan="2"| Modi II

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of Corporate Affairs

State

{{color box|#FFFF99}} denotes incumbent female ministers.

class="wikitable sortable"
Image

! style="width:13em"| Minister

! colspan="2"| Party

! Constituency

! Position

! From

! To

! Ministry

rowspan="5"| 60px

|rowspan="5"| Sushila Nayyar

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=5}}

|rowspan="5"| Jhansi

|rowspan="4"| Minister of State for Health

|rowspan="4"| 10 April 1962

|rowspan="4"| 24 January 1966

|Nehru IV

Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Minister of State for Health and Family Planning

|24 January 1966

|13 March 1967

|Indira I

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Lakshmi N. Menon

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| Bihar
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|rowspan="4"| Minister of State for External Affairs

|rowspan="4"| 16 April 1962

|rowspan="4"| 24 January 1966

|Nehru IV

Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Phulrenu Guha

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|rowspan="2"| West Bengal
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State for Social Welfare

|13 March 1967

|14 February 1969

|rowspan="2"| Indira II

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (R)}}

|Minister of State for Law and Social Welfare

|14 February 1969

|26 June 1970

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Nandini Satpathy

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (R)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Orissa
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State without portfolio

|26 June 1970

|18 March 1971

|Indira II

Minister of State for Information and Broadcasting

|18 March 1971

|14 June 1972

|Indira III

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Sarojini Mahishi

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (R)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Dharwad North

|Minister of State for Tourism and Civil Aviation

|2 May 1971

|10 October 1974

|rowspan="2"| Indira III

Minister of State for Law, Justice and Company Affairs

|10 October 1974

|3 January 1976

60px

|Abha Maiti

|{{party name with color|Janata Party}}

|Panskura

|Minister of State for Industry

|14 August 1977

|28 July 1979

|Desai

60px

|Renuka Devi Barkataki

|{{party name with color|Janata Party}}

|Gauhati

|Minister of State for Education, Culture and Social Welfare

|16 August 1977

|28 July 1979

|Desai

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Rashida Haque Choudhury

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (U)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Silchar

|Minister of State for Education, Culture and Social Welfare

|30 July 1979

|24 August 1979

|rowspan="2"| Charan

Minister of State for Education and Culture

|24 August 1979

|14 January 1980

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Sheila Kaul{{efn|name=CabMin|Later served as a cabinet minister.}}

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| Lucknow

|Minister of State for Culture and Social Welfare

|19 October 1980

|8 August 1981

|rowspan="3"| Indira IV

Minister of State for Education

|24 November 1980

|8 August 1981

rowspan="2"| Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Education, Culture and Social Welfare

|rowspan="2"| 8 August 1981

|rowspan="2"| 31 December 1984

Rajiv I
rowspan="9"| 60px

|rowspan="9"| Ram Dulari Sinha

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=9}}

|rowspan="9"| Sheohar

|Minister of State for Information and Broadcasting

|8 June 1980

|19 October 1980

|rowspan="6"| Indira IV

Minister of State for Labour and Rehabilitation

|19 October 1980

|15 January 1982

Minister of State for Industry

|rowspan="2"| 15 January 1982

|rowspan="2"| 14 February 1983

Minister of State for Steel and Mines
Minister of State for Commerce

|14 February 1983

|7 February 1984

rowspan="3"| Minister of State for Home Affairs

|rowspan="3"| 7 February 1984

|rowspan="3"| 25 September 1985

Rajiv I
rowspan="2"| Rajiv II
Minister of State for Steel and Mines

|25 September 1985

|14 February 1988

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Mohsina Kidwai{{efn|name=CabMin}}

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| Meerut

|Minister of State for Labour and Rehabilitation

|11 September 1982

|29 January 1983

|rowspan="3"| Indira IV

Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare

|29 January 1983

|2 August 1984

rowspan="2"| Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Rural Development

|rowspan="2"| 2 August 1984

|rowspan="2"| 31 December 1984

Rajiv I
60px

|Maragatham Chandrasekar

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Nominated
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Women and Social Welfare

|31 December 1984

|25 September 1985

|Rajiv II

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Margaret Alva

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| Karnataka
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs

|31 December 1984

|25 September 1985

|rowspan="2"| Rajiv II

Minister of State for Human Resource Development
(in Department of Women and Child Development and Youth Affairs and Sports)

|25 September 1985

|2 December 1989

Minister of State for Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions

|21 May 1991

|16 May 1995

|rowspan="2"| Rao

Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs

|19 January 1993

|16 May 1996

60px

|Rajendra Kumari Bajpai

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Sitapur

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Welfare

|25 September 1985

|2 December 1989

|Rajiv II

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Sushila Rohatgi

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Uttar Pradesh
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development
(in Department of Education and Culture)

|25 September 1985

|12 May 1986

|rowspan="3"| Rajiv II

Minister of State for Energy (in Department of Power)

|12 May 1986

|9 May 1988

Minister of State for Petroleum and Natural Gas

|24 June 1986

|22 October 1986

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Sheila Dikshit

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Kannauj

|Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs

|12 May 1986

|2 December 1989

|rowspan="2"| Rajiv II

Minister of State in the Prime Minister's Office

|25 June 1986

|2 December 1989

rowspan="6"| 60px

|rowspan="6"| Krishna Sahi

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=6}}

|rowspan="6"| Begusarai

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development
(in Department of Education and Culture)

|12 May 1986

|14 February 1988

|rowspan="3"| Rajiv II

Minister of State for Water Resources

|14 February 1988

|4 July 1989

Minister of State for Human Resource Development (in Department of Culture)

|4 July 1989

|2 December 1989

Minister of State for Industry (in Department of Industrial Development)

|2 July 1992

|15 September 1995

|rowspan="3"| Rao

Minister of State for Heavy Industries

|19 February 1993

|15 September 1995

Minister of State for Civil Supplies, Consumer Affairs and Public Distribution

|15 September 1995

|16 May 1996

60px

|Sumati Oraon

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Lohardaga

|Minister of State for Environment and Forests

|4 July 1989

|2 December 1989

|Rajiv II

rowspan="8"| 60px

|rowspan="8"| Maneka Gandhi{{efn|name=CabMin}}

|{{party name with color|Janata Dal|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="8"| Pilibhit

|Minister of State for Environment and Forests

|6 December 1989

|6 November 1990

|rowspan="2"| Vishwanath

Minister of State for Programme Implementation

|20 January 1990

|23 April 1990

{{party name with color|Samajwadi Janata Party (Rashtriya)}}

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Environment and Forests

|21 November 1990

|21 June 1991

|Chandra Shekhar

{{party name with color|Independent politician|shortname=IND|rowspan=5}}

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Welfare

|19 March 1998

|23 May 1998

|rowspan="2"| Vajpayee II

rowspan="2"| Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Social Justice and Empowerment

|23 May 1998

|13 October 1999

13 October 1999

|1 September 2001

|rowspan="3"| Vajpayee III

Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Culture

|1 September 2001

|18 November 2001

Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Statistics and Programme Implementation

|18 November 2001

|1 July 2002

60px

|Usha Sinha

|{{party name with color|Samajwadi Janata Party (Rashtriya)}}

|Vaishali

|Minister of State for Tourism

|21 November 1990

|10 April 1991

|Chandra Shekhar

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Mamata Banerjee{{efn|name=CabMin}}

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Calcutta South

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development
(in Department of Youth Affairs and Sports)

|21 June 1991

|17 January 1993

|rowspan="2"| Rao

Minister of State for Human Resource Development
(in Department of Women and Child Development)

|26 June 1991

|17 January 1993

60px

|Taradevi Siddhartha

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Chikmagalur

|Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare

|26 June 1991

|18 January 1993

|Rao

60px

|Basavarajeshwari

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Bellary

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development
(in Department of Women and Child Development)

|19 January 1993

|15 September 1995

|Rao

60px

|Sukhbans Kaur Bhinder

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Gurdaspur

|Minister of State for Civil Aviation and Tourism (in Department of Tourism)

|2 July 1992

|16 May 1996

|Rao

60px

|Urmilaben Chimanbhai Patel

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Gujarat
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State for Power

|10 February 1995

|16 May 1996

|Rao

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Selja Kumari{{efn|name=CabMin}}

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="3"| Sirsa

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development
(in Department of Education and Culture)

|15 September 1995

|16 May 1996

|Rao

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Urban Employment and Poverty Allevation

|23 May 2004

|1 June 2006

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan I

Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation

|1 June 2006

|22 May 2009

60px

|Vimla Verma

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Seoni

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development
(in Department of Women and Child Development)

|15 September 1995

|16 May 1996

|Rao

rowspan="7"| 60px

|rowspan="7"| Kanti Singh

|{{party name with color|Janata Dal|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Bikramganj

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development

|1 June 1996

|29 June 1996

|rowspan="2"| Deve Gowda

rowspan="2"| Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Coal

|29 June 1996

|21 April 1997

21 April 1997

|10 January 1998

|Gujral

{{party name with color|Rashtriya Janata Dal|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| Arrah

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development

|23 May 2004

|29 January 2006

|rowspan="4"| Manmohan I

Minister of State in the Ministry of Heavy Industries and Public Enterprises
(in Department of Heavy Industries)

|29 January 2006

|6 April 2008

Minister of State for Tourism

|rowspan="2"| 6 April 2008

|rowspan="2"| 22 May 2009

Minister of State for Culture
rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Renuka Chowdhury

|{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}}

|Andhra Pradesh
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare

|9 June 1997

|19 March 1998

|Gujral

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Khammam

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Tourism

|23 May 2004

|29 January 2006

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan I

Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Women and Child Development

|29 January 2006

|22 May 2009

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Jayanthi Natarajan

|{{party name with color|Tamil Maanila Congress|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="4"| Tamil Nadu
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State for Civil Aviation

|rowspan="2"| 9 June 1997

|rowspan="2"| 19 March 1998

|rowspan="3"| Gujral

Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs
Minister of State for Coal

|10 January 1998

|19 March 1998

{{party name with color|INC}}

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Environment and Forests

|12 July 2011

|21 December 2013

|Manmohan II

60px

|Kamala Sinha

|{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|Bihar
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State for External Affairs

|9 June 1997

|19 March 1998

|Gujral

|Ratnamala Savanur

|{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|Chikkodi

|Minister of State for Planning and Programme Implementation

|9 June 1997

|19 March 1998

|Gujral

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Uma Bharti{{efn|name=CabMin}}

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="2"| Khajuraho

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development

|19 March 1998

|13 October 1999

|rowspan="2"| Vajpayee II

Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Youth Affairs, Sports, Women and Child Development

|1 March 1999

|13 October 1999

Bhopal

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Tourism

|13 October 1999

|2 February 2000

|Vajpayee III

rowspan="8"| 60px

|rowspan="8"| Vasundhara Raje

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=8}}

|rowspan="8"| Jhalawar

|Minister of State for External Affairs

|20 October 1998

|13 October 1999

|rowspan="2"| Vajpayee II

rowspan="2"| Minister of State for Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions

|9 April 1999

|13 October 1999

13 October 1999

|22 November 1999

|rowspan="6"| Vajpayee III

Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Small Scale Industries, Agro and Rural Industries

|13 October 1999

|1 September 2001

Minister of State in the Department of Atomic Energy and Department of Space

|13 October 1999

|29 January 2003

Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Small Scale Industries

|rowspan="2"| 1 September 2001

|rowspan="2"| 29 January 2003

Minister of State for Personnel, Training, Pensions, Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances
Minister of State for Planning

|2 November 2001

|29 January 2003

60px

|Bijoya Chakravarty

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Gauhati

|Minister of State for Water Resources

|13 October 1999

|22 May 2004

|Vajpayee III

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Sumitra Mahajan

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Indore

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development

|13 October 1999

|1 July 2002

|rowspan="3"| Vajpayee III

Minister of State for Communications and Information Technology

|1 July 2002

|24 May 2003

Minister of State for Petroleum and Natural Gas

|24 May 2003

|22 May 2004

60px

|Jayawantiben Mehta

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Mumbai South

|Minister of State for Power

|13 October 1999

|22 May 2004

|Vajpayee III

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Rita Verma

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| Dhanbad

|Minister of State for Mines and Minerals

|13 October 1999

|27 May 2000

|rowspan="4"| Vajpayee III

MInister of State for Health and Family Welfare

|27 May 2000

|30 September 2000

Minister of State for Rural Development

|30 September 2000

|1 September 2001

Minister of State for Human Resource Development

|1 September 2001

|29 January 2003

|Jaskaur Meena

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Sawai Madhopur

|Minister of State for Human Resource Development

|29 January 2003

|22 May 2004

|Vajpayee III

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Bhavna Chikhalia

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Junagadh

|Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs

|rowspan="2"| 29 January 2003

|rowspan="2"| 22 May 2004

|rowspan="2"| Vajpayee III

Minister of State for Tourism and Culture
rowspan="5"| 60px

|rowspan="5"| Panabaka Lakshmi

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=5}}

|rowspan="2"| Nellore

|Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare

|23 May 2004

|29 March 2009

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan I

Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Health and Family Welfare

|29 March 2009

|22 May 2009

rowspan="3"| Bapatla

|Minister of State for Textiles

|28 May 2009

|30 October 2012

|rowspan="3"| Manmohan II

Minister of State for Petroleum and Natural Gas

|30 October 2012

|26 May 2014

Minister of State for Textiles

|5 March 2013

|26 May 2014

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Suryakanta Patil

|{{party name with color|Nationalist Congress Party|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Hingoli

|Minister of State for Rural Development

|rowspan="2"| 23 May 2004

|rowspan="2"| 22 May 2009

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan I

Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs
60px

|Subbulakshmi Jagadeesan

|{{party name with color|DMK}}

|Tiruchengode

|Minister of State for Social Justice and Empowerment

|23 May 2004

|22 May 2009

|Manmohan I

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Daggubati Purandeswari

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=3}}

|Bapatla

|rowspan="2"| Minister of State for Human Resource Development

|29 January 2006

|22 May 2009

|Manmohan I

rowspan="2"| Visakhapatnam

|28 May 2009

|28 October 2012

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan II

Minister of State for Commerce and Industry

|28 October 2012

|11 March 2014

60px

|V. Radhika Selvi

|{{party name with color|DMK}}

|Tiruchendur

|Minister of State for Home Affairs

|18 May 2007

|22 May 2009

|Manmohan I

60px

|Krishna Tirath

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|North West Delhi

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Women and Child Development

|28 May 2009

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan II

60px

|Preneet Kaur

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Patiala

|Minister of State for External Affairs

|28 May 2009

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan II

60px

|Agatha Sangma

|{{party name with color|Nationalist Congress Party}}

|Tura

|Minister of State for Rural Development

|28 May 2009

|27 October 2012

|Manmohan II

60px

|Ranee Narah

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Lakhimpur

|Minister of State for Tribal Affairs

|28 October 2012

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan II

60px

|Killi Krupa Rani

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Srikakulam

|Minister of State for Communications and Information Technology

|28 October 2012

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan II

60px

|Deepa Dasmunsi

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Raiganj

|Minister of State for Urban Development

|28 October 2012

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan II

60px

|Santosh Chowdhary

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Hoshiarpur

|Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare

|17 June 2013

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan II

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Nirmala Sitharaman{{efn|name=CabMin}}

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Karnataka
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Commerce and Industry

|27 May 2014

|3 September 2017

|rowspan="3"| Modi I

Minister of State for Finance

|rowspan="2"| 27 May 2014

|rowspan="2"| 9 November 2014

Minister of State for Corporate Affairs
rowspan="3" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|rowspan="3" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Niranjan Jyoti

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Fatehpur

|Minister of State for Food Processing Industries

|9 November 2014

|30 May 2019

|Modi I

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Rural Development

|31 May 2019

|Incumbent

|rowspan="2"| Modi II

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution

|7 July 2021

|Incumbent

rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Krishna Raj

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Shahjahanpur

|Minister of State for Women and Child Development

|5 July 2016

|3 September 2017

|rowspan="2"| Modi I

Minister of State for Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare

|3 September 2017

|30 May 2019

rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Anupriya Patel

|{{party name with color|Apna Dal (Sonelal)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Mirzapur

|Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare

|5 July 2016

|30 May 2019

|Modi I

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Commerce and Industry

|7 July 2021

|Incumbent

|Modi II

60px

|Renuka Singh Saruta

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Sarguja

|Minister of State for Tribal Affairs

|31 May 2019

|7 December 2023

|Modi II

60px

|Debasree Chaudhuri

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Raiganj

|Minister of State for Women and Child Development

|31 May 2019

|7 July 2021

|Modi II

rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Darshana Jardosh

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Surat

|bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Railways

|rowspan="2"| 7 July 2021

|rowspan="2"| Incumbent

|rowspan="2"| Modi II

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Textiles
rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Meenakshi Lekhi

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| New Delhi

|bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for External Affairs

|rowspan="2"| 7 July 2021

|rowspan="2"| Incumbent

|rowspan="2"| Modi II

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Culture
bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Annpurna Devi

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Kodarma

|bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Education

|7 July 2021

|Incumbent

|Modi II

rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Shobha Karandlaje

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Udupi Chikmagalur

|bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare

|7 July 2021

|Incumbent

|rowspan="2"| Modi II

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Food Processing Industries

|7 December 2023

|Incumbent

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Pratima Bhoumik

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Tripura West

|bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Social Justice and Empowerment

|7 July 2021

|Incumbent

|Modi II

rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| 60px

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Bharati Pawar

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Dindori

|bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare

|7 July 2021

|Incumbent

|rowspan="2"| Modi II

bgcolor="#FFFF99"| Minister of State for Tribal Affairs

|7 December 2023

|Incumbent

{{notelist}}

Deputy

class="wikitable sortable"
Image

! style="width:13em"| Minister

! colspan="2"| Party

! Constituency

! Position

! From

! To

! Ministry

rowspan="5"| 60px

|rowspan="5"| Maragatham Chandrasekar

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=5}}

|Tiruvallur

|Deputy Minister for Health

|12 August 1952

|16 May 1957

|Nehru II

rowspan="4"| Mayiladuthurai

|rowspan="2"| Deputy Minister for Home Affairs

|rowspan="2"| 8 May 1962

|rowspan="2"| 9 June 1964

|Nehru IV

Nanda I
Deputy Minister for Social Security

|15 June 1964

|11 January 1966

|Shastri

Deputy Minister for Social Welfare

|24 January 1966

|13 March 1967

|Indira I

60px

|Lakshmi N. Menon

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|Bihar
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Deputy Minister for External Affairs

|17 April 1957

|10 April 1962

|Nehru III

60px

|Violet Alva

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|Mysore
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Deputy Minister for Home Affairs

|23 April 1957

|10 April 1962

|Nehru III

rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Tarkeshwari Sinha

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| Barh

|Deputy Minister for Economic Affairs

|2 April 1958

|10 May 1958

|rowspan="2"| Nehru III

rowspan="3"| Deputy Minister for Finance

|rowspan="3"| 10 May 1958

|rowspan="3"| 9 June 1964

Nehru IV
Nanda I
rowspan="5"| 60px

|rowspan="5"| T. S. Soundaram

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=5}}

|rowspan="5"| Dindigul

|rowspan="5"| Deputy Minister for Education

|rowspan="5"| 16 May 1962

|rowspan="5"| 13 March 1967

|Nehru IV

Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Nandini Satpathy

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Orissa
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Deputy Minister for Information and Broadcasting

|29 January 1966

|13 March 1967

|Indira I

Deputy Minister without portfolio

|14 February 1969

|26 June 1970

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Jahanara Jaipal Singh

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="3"| Bihar
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Deputy Minister for Transport and Civil Aviation

|15 February 1966

|13 March 1967

|Indira I

Deputy Minister for Tourism and Civil Aviation

|18 March 1967

|14 February 1969

|rowspan="2"| Indira II

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (R)}}

|Deputy Minister for Education and Youth Services

|14 February 1969

|27 June 1970

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Sarojini Mahishi

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="3"| Dharwad North

|Deputy Minister attached to the Prime Minister

|18 March 1967

|14 February 1969

|rowspan="2"| Indira II

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (R)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Deputy Minister for Tourism and Civil Aviation

|rowspan="2"| 14 February 1969

|rowspan="2"| 2 May 1971

Indira III
60px

|Sushila Rohatgi

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (R)}}

|Bilhaur

|Deputy Minister for Finance

|2 May 1971

|24 March 1977

|Indira III

rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Kumudben Joshi

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Gujarat
{{small|(Rajya Sabha)}}

|Deputy Minister for Information and Broadcasting

|19 October 1980

|15 January 1982

|rowspan="2"| Indira IV

rowspan="2"| Deputy Minister for Health and Family Welfare

|rowspan="2"| 15 January 1982

|rowspan="2"| 31 December 1984

Rajiv I
rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Kamla Kumari

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Palamu

|Deputy Minister for Agriculture

|19 October 1980

|29 January 1983

|rowspan="2"| Indira IV

Deputy Minister for Rural Reconstruction

|24 November 1980

|29 January 1983

60px

|Sumati Oraon

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Lohardaga

|Deputy Minister of Welfare

|14 February 1988

|4 July 1989

|Rajiv II

60px

|Usha Sinha

|{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|Vaishali

|Deputy Minister of Welfare
(in Department of Women and Child Development)

|23 April 1990

|5 November 1990

|Vishwanath

60px

|Girija Vyas

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Udaipur

|Deputy Minister for Information and Broadcasting

|21 June 1991

|17 January 1993

|Rao

60px

|Kamala Kumari Karredula

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Bhadrachalam

|Deputy Minister of Welfare

|21 June 1991

|17 January 1993

|Rao

60px

|Selja Kumari{{efn|name=CabMin}}

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Sirsa

|Deputy Minister for Human Resource Development
(in Department of Education and Culture)

|2 July 1992

|15 September 1995

|Rao

=Female speakers=

Parliament

=Speakers of Lok Sabha=

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"

!{{abbr|No.|Number}}

!Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name
{{small|(birth{{ndash}}death)}}

!Constituency

!style="width:8em"| Assumed office

!style="width:8em"| Left office

!Tenure

!colspan="2"| Political party

1

|75px

|Meira Kumar
{{small|(born 1945)}}

|Sasaram

|4 June 2009

|18 May 2014

|{{ayd|4 Jun 2009|18 May 2014}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

|Indian National Congress

2

|75px

|Sumitra Mahajan
{{small|(born 1943)}}

|Indore

|6 June 2014

|17 June 2019

|{{ayd|6 Jun 2014|17 Jun 2019}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

=Deputy Chairpersons of Rajya Sabha=

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"

!{{abbr|No.|Number}}

!Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name
{{small|(birth{{ndash}}death)}}

!Constituency

!style="width:8em"| Assumed office

!style="width:8em"| Left office

!Tenure

!colspan="2"| Political party

rowspan="2"| 1

|rowspan="2"| 75px

|rowspan="2"| Violet Alva
{{small|(1908{{ndash}}1969)}}

|Mysore

|19 April 1962

|2 April 1966

|{{ayd|19 Apr 1962|2 Apr 1966}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|rowspan="2"| Indian National Congress

Karnataka

|7 April 1966

|16 November 1969

|{{ayd|7 Apr 1966|16 Nov 1969}}

rowspan="4"| 2

|rowspan="4"| 75px

|rowspan="4"| Najma Heptulla
{{small|(born 1940)}}

|rowspan="4"| Maharashtra

|25 January 1985

|20 January 1986

|{{ayd|25 Jan 1985|20 Jan 1986}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}"|

|rowspan="2"| Indian National Congress (Indira)

18 November 1988

|4 July 1992

|{{ayd|18 Nov 1988|4 Jul 1992}}

10 July 1992

|4 July 1998

|{{ayd|10 Jul 1992|4 Jul 1998}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|rowspan="2"| Indian National Congress

9 July 1998

|10 June 2004

|{{ayd|9 Jul 1998|10 Jun 2004}}

3

|75px

|Pratibha Patil
{{small|(born 1934)}}

|Maharashtra

|18 November 1986

|5 November 1988

|{{ayd|18 Nov 1986|5 Nov 1988}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}"|

|Indian National Congress (Indira)

Legislative Assemblies

=Speakers=

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"

!{{abbr|No.|Number}}

!Portrait

!style="width:14em"| Name
{{small|(birth{{ndash}}death)}}

!State

!Constituency

!style="width:8em"| Assumed office

!style="width:8em"| Left office

!Tenure

!colspan="2"| Political party

|

|Shanno Devi
{{small|(1901{{ndash}}1978)}}

|Haryana

|Jagadhri

|6 December 1966

|17 March 1967

|{{ayd|6 Dec 1966|17 Mar 1967}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|75px

|Vidya Stokes
{{small|(born 1927)}}

|Himachal Pradesh

|Theog

|11 March 1985

|19 March 1990

|{{ayd|11 Mar 1985|19 Mar 1990}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|

|K. Pratibha Bharati
{{small|(born 1956)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Etcherla

|11 November 1999

|30 May 2004

|{{ayd|11 Nov 1999|30 May 2004}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|Telugu Desam Party}}"|

|Telugu Desam Party

|

|Sumitra Singh
{{small|(born 1930)}}

|Rajasthan

|Jhunjhunu

|16 January 2004

|1 January 2009

|{{ayd|16 Jan 2004|1 Jan 2009}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

|

|Nimaben Acharya
{{small|(born 1947)}}

|Gujarat

|Bhuj

|27 September 2021

|10 December 2022

|{{ayd|27 Sep 2021|10 Dec 2022}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

bgcolor="lightyellow"

!

|75px

|Ritu Khanduri Bhushan
{{small|(born 1965)}}

|Uttarakhand

|Kotdwar

|26 March 2022

|Incumbent

|{{ayd|26 Mar 2022}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

bgcolor="lightyellow"

!

|75px

|Pramila Mallik

|Odisha

|Binjharpur

|22 September 2023

|Incumbent

|{{ayd|22 Sep 2023}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|Biju Janata Dal}}"|

|Biju Janata Dal

=Deputy Speakers=

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"

!{{abbr|No.|Number}}

!Portrait

!style="width:14em"| Name
{{small|(birth{{ndash}}death)}}

!style="width:9em"| State

!Constituency

!style="width:8em"| Assumed office

!style="width:8em"| Left office

!Tenure

!colspan="2"| Political party

|

|K. O. Aysha Bai
{{small|(1926{{ndash}}2005)}}

|Kerala

|Kayamkulam

|6 May 1957

|31 July 1959

|{{ayd|6 May 1957|31 Jul 1959}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|Communist Party of India}}"|

|Communist Party of India

|

|A. Nafeesath Beevi
{{small|(1924{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Kerala

|Alappuzha

|15 March 1960

|10 September 1964

|{{ayd|15 Mar 1960|10 Sep 1964}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|

|T. N. Sadalakshmi
{{small|(1928{{ndash}}2004)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Kamareddy

|15 March 1960

|1 March 1962

|{{ayd|15 Mar 1960|1 Mar 1962}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

rowspan="3"|

|rowspan="3"|

|rowspan="3"| Shanno Devi
{{small|(1901{{ndash}}1978)}}

|rowspan="2"| Punjab

|Amritsar City West

|20 March 1951

|26 March 1951

|{{ayd|20 Mar 1951|26 Mar 1951}}

|rowspan="3" bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|rowspan="3"| Indian National Congress

rowspan="2"| Jagadhri

|19 March 1962

|31 October 1966

|rowspan="2"| {{ayd|19 Mar 1962|5 Dec 1966}}

Haryana

|1 November 1966

|5 December 1966

rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Lekhwati Jain

|rowspan="2"| Haryana

|rowspan="2"| Ambala City

|22 July 1968

|21 January 1972

|{{ayd|22 Jul 1968|21 Jan 1972}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|rowspan="2"| Indian National Congress

5 April 1972

|30 April 1977

|{{ayd|5 Apr 1972|30 Apr 1977}}

|

|Renupoma Rajkhowa
{{small|(born 1955)}}

|Assam

|Teok

|14 May 1999

|17 May 2001

|{{ayd|14 May 1999|17 May 2001}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|75px

|Krishna Tirath
{{small|(born 1955)}}

|Delhi

|Baljit Nagar

|23 December 2003

|28 June 2004

|{{ayd|23 Dec 2003|28 Jun 2004}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|

|Victoria Fernandes
{{small|(born 1934)}}

|Goa

|St. Cruz

|8 July 2005

|8 June 2007

|{{ayd|8 Jul 2005|8 Jun 2007}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|75px

|Pranati Phukan
{{small|(born 1963)}}

|Assam

|Naharkatia

|31 May 2006

|16 May 2011

|{{Ayd|31 May 2006|16 May 2011}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|

|Gummadi Kuthuhalamma
{{small|(1949{{ndash}}2023)}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Gangadhara Nellore

|24 July 2007

|19 May 2009

|{{ayd|24 Jul 2007|19 May 2009}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|

|Vijaya Barthwal
{{small|(born 1952)}}

|Uttarakhand

|Yamkeshwar

|20 December 2008

|27 June 2009

|{{ayd|20 Dec 2008|27 Jun 2009}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

|

|Sonali Guha
{{small|(born 1968)}}

|West Bengal

|Satgachhia

|17 June 2011

|23 June 2016

|{{ayd|17 Jun 2011|23 Jun 2016}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|Trinamool Congress}}"|

|All India Trinamool Congress

|

|Bandana Kumari
{{small|(born 1974)}}

|Delhi

|Shalimar Bagh

|23 February 2015

|4 June 2016

|{{ayd|23 Feb 2015|4 Jun 2016}}

|bgcolor="{{party color|Aam Aadmi Party}}"|

|Aam Aadmi Party

rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"|

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Rakhi Birla
{{small|(born 1987)}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Delhi

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Mangol Puri

|10 June 2016

|11 February 2020

|{{ayd|10 Jun 2016|11 Feb 2020}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|Aam Aadmi Party}}"|

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Aam Aadmi Party

bgcolor="lightyellow"| 26 February 2020

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Incumbent

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| {{ayd|26 Feb 2020}}

  • Kiran Choudhry: Delhi

=Female chief justices=

Chief Justices of High Courts

;Notes

:{{note label|‡|‡|‡}} Promoted as judge of the Supreme Court of India

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"

!{{abbr|No.|Number}}

!Portrait

!style="width:14em"| Name
{{small|(birth{{ndash}}death)}}

!style="width:15em"| High Court

!style="width:8em"| Assumed office

!style="width:8em"| Left office

!style="width:8em"| Tenure

!style="width:10em"| Appointer
(President of India)

1

|70px

|Leila Seth
{{small|(1930{{ndash}}2017)}}

|Himachal Pradesh

|5 August 1991

|20 October 1992

!{{ayd|5 Aug 1991|20 Oct 1992}}

|rowspan="2"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman

2

|

|Kanta Kumari Bhatnagar
{{small|(1930{{ndash}}2011)}}

|Madras

|15 June 1992

|14 November 1992

!{{ayd|15 Jun 1992|14 Nov 1992}}

rowspan="2"| 3

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Sujata Manohar
{{small|(born 1935)}}

|Bombay

|15 January 1994

|20 April 1994

!rowspan="2"| {{ayd|15 Jan 1994|7 Nov 1994}}

|rowspan="2"| Shankar Dayal Sharma

Kerala

|21 April 1994

|7 November 1994{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

4

|70px

|K. K. Usha
{{small|(1939{{ndash}}2020)}}

|Kerala

|25 February 2001

|3 July 2001

!{{ayd|25 Feb 2001|3 Jul 2001}}

|K. R. Narayanan

|

|Gyan Sudha Misra
{{small|(born 1949)}}

|Jharkhand

|13 July 2008

|29 April 2010

!{{ayd|13 Jul 2008|29 Apr 2010}}

|rowspan="3"| Pratibha Patil

|

|Rekha Doshit
{{small|(born 1952)}}

|Patna

|21 June 2010

|13 December 2014

!{{ayd|21 Jun 2010|13 Dec 2014}}

rowspan="4"|

|rowspan="4"| 70px

|rowspan="4"| Manjula Chellur
{{small|(born 1955)}}

|rowspan="2"| Kerala

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 9 November 2011

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 26 September 2012

!rowspan="4"| {{ayd|9 Nov 2011|4 Dec 2017}}

26 September 2012

|5 August 2014

|rowspan="8"| Pranab Mukherjee

Calcutta

|6 August 2014

|21 August 2016

Bombay

|22 August 2016

|4 December 2017

|

|T. Meena Kumari
{{small|(born 1951)}}

|Meghalaya

|23 March 2013

|3 August 2013

!{{ayd|23 Mar 2013|3 Aug 2013}}

|70px

|R. Banumathi
{{small|(born 1955)}}

|Jharkhand

|16 November 2013

|13 August 2014{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

!{{ayd|16 Nov 2013|13 Aug 2014}}

|

|G. Rohini
{{small|(born 1955)}}

|Delhi

|21 April 2014

|13 April 2017

!{{ayd|21 Apr 2014|13 Apr 2017}}

|70px

|Indira Banerjee
{{small|(born 1957)}}

|Madras

|5 April 2017

|6 August 2018{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

!{{ayd|5 Apr 2017|6 Aug 2018}}

rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Gita Mittal
{{small|(born 1958)}}

|Delhi

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 14 April 2017

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 10 August 2018

!rowspan="2"| {{ayd|14 Apr 2017|8 Dec 2020}}

Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh

|11 August 2018

|8 December 2020

|rowspan="6"| Ram Nath Kovind

rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Vijaya Tahilramani
{{small|(born 1958)}}

|Bombay

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 5 December 2017

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 3 August 2018

!rowspan="2"| {{ayd|5 Dec 2017|6 Sep 2019}}

Madras

|4 August 2018

|6 September 2019

|

|Abhilasha Kumari
{{small|(born 1956)}}

|Manipur

|9 February 2018

|22 February 2018

!{{ayd|9 Feb 2018|22 Feb 2018}}

|70px

|Hima Kohli
{{small|(born 1959)}}

|Telangana

|7 January 2021

|30 August 2021{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

!{{ayd|7 Jan 2021|30 Aug 2021}}

bgcolor="#DCDCDC"

!

|

|Meenakshi Madan Rai
{{small|(born 1964)}}

|Sikkim

|31 August 2021

|11 October 2021

!{{ayd|31 Aug 2021|11 Oct 2021}}

rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Sonia Gokani
{{small|(born 1961)}}

|rowspan="2"| Gujarat

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 13 February 2023

|bgcolor="#DCDCDC"| 15 February 2023

!rowspan="2"| {{ayd|13 Feb 2023|25 Feb 2023}}

|rowspan="3"| Droupadi Murmu

16 February 2023

|25 February 2023

bgcolor="lightyellow"

!

|

|Sunita Agarwal
{{small|(born 1966)}}

|Gujarat

|23 July 2023

|Incumbent

!{{ayd|23 Jul 2023}}

Judges of High Courts

=Female, Lok Sabha=

1952 to 1980

class="wikitable sortable"

!colspan="2"| Party

!class="unsortable"| Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name

!style="width:16em"| Constituency (State)

!Year elected

!Year left

!Reason

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Renu Chakravartty

|Basirhat (West Bengal)

|1952

|1962

|Transferred constituency

Barrackpore (West Bengal)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Maragatham Chandrasekar

|Tiruvallur (Tamil Nadu)

|1952

|1957

|Did not contest

Mayuram (Tamil Nadu)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|Sriperumbudur (Tamil Nadu)

|1984

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Ganga Devi

|Lucknow District cum Barabanki District (Uttar Pradesh)

|1952

|1957

|Transferred constituency

Unnao (Uttar Pradesh)

|1957

|1962

|Transferred constituency

rowspan="2"| Mohanlalganj (Uttar Pradesh)

|1962

|1977

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (R)}}

|1977

|1977

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Subhadra Joshi

|Karnal (Punjab)

|1952

|1957

|Transferred constituency

Ambala (Punjab)

|1957

|1962

|Transferred constituency

Balrampur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

Chandni Chowk (Delhi)

|1971

|1977

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Anasuyabai Kale

|Nagpur (Bombay)

|1952

|1959

|Died

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Amrit Kaur

|Mandi{{ndash}}Mahasu (Himachal Pradesh)

|1952

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Bonily Khongmen

|Autonomous District (Assam)

|1952

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Kisan Mazdoor Praja Party}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Sucheta Kripalani

|rowspan="2"| New Delhi (Delhi)

|1952

|1957

|Left party

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|1957

|1961

|Resigned

Gonda (Uttar Pradesh)

|1967

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|

|Annie Mascarene

|Trivandrum (Kerala)

|1952

|1957

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Indira Anant Maydeo

|Poona South (Bombay)

|1952

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Hindu Mahasabha}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Shakuntala Nayar

|Gonda (Uttar Pradesh)

|1952

|1957

|Did not contest

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Jana Sangh}}

|Kaiserganj (Uttar Pradesh)

|1967

|1977

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Uma Nehru

|Sitapur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1952

|1962

|Retired

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit

|Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh)

|1952

|1955

|Resigned

Phulpur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1964

|1969

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="4"|

|rowspan="4"| Maniben Patel

|Kaira South (Gujarat)

|1952

|1957

|Transferred constituency

Anand (Gujarat)

|1957

|1962

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Organization)}}

|Sabarkantha (Gujarat)

|1973

|1977

|Transferred constituency

{{party name with colour|Janata Party}}

|Mehsana (Gujarat)

|1977

|1980

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Jayashri Raiji

|Bombay Suburban (Bombay)

|1952

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Sushama Sen

|Bhagalpur South

|1952

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|

|Kamalendumati Shah

|Garhwal Distt. (West) cum Tehri Garhwal Distt. cum Bijnor Distt. (North) (Uttar Pradesh)

|1952

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Tarkeshwari Sinha

|Patna East (Bihar)

|1952

|1957

|Transferred constituency

Barh (Bihar)

|1957

|1971

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Ammu Swaminathan

|Dindigul (Madras)

|1952

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Ansuyabai Borkar

|Bhandara (Madhya Pradesh)

|1955

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Ila Pal Choudhury

|Nabadwip (West Bengal)

|1955

|1962

|Defeated

Krishnanagar (West Bengal)

|1968

|1971

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="4"|

|rowspan="4"| Minimata Agam Dass Guru

|Bilaspur Durg Raipur (Madhya Pradesh)

|1955

|1957

|Transferred constituency

Baloda Bazar (Madhya Pradesh)

|1957

|1967

|Transferred constituency

rowspan="2"| Janjgir (Madhya Pradesh)

|1967

|1971

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (R)}}

|1971

|1973

|Died

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Sheorajvati Nehru

|Lucknow District (Central) (Uttar Pradesh)

|1955

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Sushila Ganesh Mavalankar

|Ahmedabad (Gujarat)

|1956

|1957

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Mofida Ahmed

|Jorhat (Assam)

|1957

|1962

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Keshar Kumari Devi

|Raipur (Madhya Pradesh)

|1957

|1963

|Death

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Shakuntala Devi

|Banka (Bihar)

|1957

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Parvathi Krishnan

|rowspan="2"| Coimbatore Lok Sabha constituency (Tamil Nadu)

|1957

|1962

|Defeated

1974

|1980

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Sangam Laxmi Bai

|Vicarabad (Andhra Pradesh)

|1957

|1967

|Transferred constituency

Medak (Andhra Pradesh)

|1967

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Sushila Nayyar

|rowspan="2"| Jhansi (Uttar Pradesh)

|1957

|1971

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Party}}

|1977

|1980

|Defeated

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="4"|

|rowspan="4"| Sahodrabai Rai

|Sagar (Madhya Pradesh)

|1957

|1962

|Transferred constituency

Damoh (Madhya Pradesh)

|1962

|1967

|Transferred constituency

rowspan="2"| Sagar (Madhya Pradesh)

|1971

|1977

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|1980

|1981

|Death

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Renuka Ray

|Malda (West Bengal)

|1957

|1967

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Satyabhama Devi

|Jehanabad (Bihar)

|1957

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="5"| 60px

|rowspan="5"| Vijaya Raje Scindia

|Guna (Madhya Pradesh)

|1957

|1962

|Transferred constituency

Gwalior (Madhya Pradesh)

|1962

|1967

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Swatantra Party}}

|Guna (Madhya Pradesh)

|1967

|1967

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|Bhind (Madhya Pradesh)

|1971

|1977

|Did not contest

Guna (Madhya Pradesh)

|1989

|1999

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Jayaben Shah

|Amreli (Gujarat)

|1957

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Maimoona Sultan

|Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh)

|1957

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Mothey Vedakumari

|1957

|1962

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Chota Nagpur Santhal Parganas Janata Party|shortname=CNSPJP}}

|rowspan="3"|

|rowspan="3"| Vijaya Raje

|rowspan="3"| Chatra (Bihar)

|1957

|1962

|Left party

{{party name with color|Swatantra Party}}

|1962

|1967

|Left party

{{party name with color|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|1967

|1971

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Renuka Devi Barkataki

|Barpeta (Assam)

|1962

|1967

|Did not contest

bgcolor="{{party color|Janata Party}}"|

|JP

|Gauhati (Assam)

|1977

|1980

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Jyotsna Chanda

|Cachar (Assam)

|1962

|1971

|Died

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Kamla Chaudhry

|Hapur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Zohraben Chavda

|Banaskantha (Gujarat)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Swatantra Party}}

|60px

|Rajmata Gayatri Devi

|Jaipur (Rajasthan)

|1962

|1977

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Jamuna Devi

|Jhabua (Madhya Pradesh)

|1962

|1967

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Lakshmi Kantamma

|Khammam (Andhra Pradesh)

|1962

|1977

|Retired

{{party name with color|Swatantra Party}}

|

|Basant Kunwari

|Kaisarganj (Uttar Pradesh)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Sarojini Mahishi

|Dharwad North (Karnataka)

|1962

|1980

|Left party

{{party name with color|Swatantra Party}}

|

|Shashank Manjari

|Palamau (Bihar)

|1962

|1967

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Sharda Mukherjee

|Ratnagiri (Maharashtra)

|1962

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Savitri Nigam

|Banda (Uttar Pradesh)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Yasoda Reddy

|Kurnool (Andhra Pradesh)

|1962

|1967

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Ram Dulari Sinha

|Patna (Bihar)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|Sheohar (Bihar)

|1980

|1989

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|T. S. Soundaram

|Dindigul (Madras)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Communist Party of India}}

|

|Viramachaneni Vimla Devi

|Eluru (Andhra Pradesh)

|1962

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Shyamkumari Devi

|Raipur (Madhya Pradesh)

|1963

|1967

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|G. M. (Tai) Kannamwar

|Chanda (Maharashtra)

|1964

|1967

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Vimal Punjab Deshmukh

|Amravati (Maharashtra)

|1965

|1967

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Peasants and Workers Party of India}}

|

|Maharani Vijayamala Rajaram Chhatrapati Bhonsle

|Hatkanangale (Maharashtra)

|1967

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Maitreyee Bose

|Darjeeling (West Bengal)

|1967

|1971

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Padmawati Devi

|Rajnandgaon (Madhya Pradesh)

|1967

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Rajni Gandha Devi

|Raigarh (Madhya Pradesh)

|1967

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Indira Gandhi

|rowspan="2"| Raebareli (Uttar Pradesh)

|1967

|1971

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (R)}}

|1971

|1975

|Disqualified

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)|rowspan=2}}

|Chikmagalur (Karnataka)

|1978

|1980

|Transferred constituency

Medak (Andhra Pradesh)

|1980

|1984

|Died

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Girja Kumari

|Shahdol (Madhya Pradesh)

|1967

|1971

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"|

|rowspan="3"| Susheela Gopalan

|Ambalappuzha (Kerala)

|1967

|1971

|Defeated

Alleppey (Kerala)

|1980

|1984

|Defeated

Chirayinkil (Kerala)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Kamla Kumari

|rowspan="2"| Palamau (Bihar)

|1967

|1977

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Mohinder Kaur

|Patiala (Punjab)

|1967

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with color|Akali Dal – Sant Fateh Singh Group|shortname=AD(S)}}

|

|Nirlep Kaur

|Sangrur (Punjab)

|1967

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| B. Radhabai Ananda Rao

|rowspan="2"| Bhadrachalam (Andhra Pradesh)

|1967

|1980

|Party renamed

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|1980

|1984

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|V. Sudha Reddy

|Madhugiri (Mysore)

|1967

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Sushila Rohatgi

|Bilhaur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1967

|1977

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Uma Roy

|Malda (West Bengal)

|1967

|1971

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Savitri Shyam

|Aonla (Uttar Pradesh)

|1967

|1977

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Tara Govind Sapre

|Bombay North East

|1967

|1971

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Mukul Banerjee

|New Delhi (Delhi)

|1971

|1977

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|

|Bibha Ghosh Goswami

|Nabadwip (West Bengal)

|1971

|1989

|Retired

{{party name with color|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Marjorie Godfrey

|Anglo{{ndash}}Indian (Nominated)

|1971

|1977

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|V. Jeyalakshmi

|Sivakasi (Tamil Nadu)

|1971

|1980

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Sheila Kaul

|rowspan="2"| Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh)

|1971

|1977

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)|rowspan=2}}

|1980

|1989

|Transferred constituency

Raebareli (Uttar Pradesh)

|1989

|1995

|Resigned

{{party name with color|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Rajmata Krishna Kumari

|1971

|1977

|Retired

{{party name with color|Communist Party of India}}

|

|Bhargavi Thankappan

|Adoor (Kerala)

|1971

|1977

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Maya Ray

|Raiganj (West Bengal)

|1971

|1977

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Premala Chavan

|rowspan="2"| Karad (Maharashtra)

|1973

|1980

|Did not contest

1984

|1991

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India}}

|

|Roza Vidyadhar Deshpande

|Bombay Central (Maharashtra)

|1973

|1977

|Retired

{{party name with color|Jammu and Kashmir National Conference|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Begum Akbar Jehan Abdullah

|Srinagar (Jammu and Kashmir)

|1977

|1980

|Did not contest

Anantnag (Jammu and Kashmir)

|1984

|1989

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Janata Party}}

|

|Kamala Bahuguna

|Phulpur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1977

|1980

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Party}}

|

|Chandrawati

|Bhiwani (Haryana)

|1977

|1980

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Rashida Haque Choudhury

|rowspan="2"| Silchar (Assam)

|1977

|1979

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Urs)}}

|1979

|1980

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Parvati Devi

|Ladakh (Jammu and Kashmir)

|1977

|1980

|Retired

{{party name with color|Bharatiya Lok Dal}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Shanti Devi

|rowspan="2"| Sambhal (Uttar Pradesh)

|1977

|1980

|Left party and defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Party}}

|

|Mrinal Gore

|Bombay North (Maharashtra)

|1977

|1980

|Left party and defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Party}}

|60px

|Abha Maiti

|Panskura (West Bengal)

|1977

|1980

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|

|Ahilya Rangnekar

|Bombay North Central (Maharashtra)

|1977

|1980

|Defeated

style="background-color: maroon" |

|UDF

|

|Rano M. Shaiza

|Nagaland (Nagaland)

|1977

|1980

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Mohsina Kidwai

|Azamgarh (Uttar Pradesh)

|1978

|1980

|Transferred constituency

Meerut (Uttar Pradesh)

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

1980 to 1991

class="wikitable sortable"

!colspan="2"| Party

!class="unsortable"| Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name

!style="width:16em"| Constituency (State)

!Year elected

!Year left

!Reason

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)|shortname=INC(I)}}

|60px

|Rajendra Kumari Bajpai

|Sitapur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1980

|1991

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)|shortname=INC(I)}}

|

|Gurbinder Kaur Brar

|Faridkot (Punjab)

|1980

|1984

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Vidyawati Chaturvedi

|Khajuraho (Madhya Pradesh)

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Chennupati Vidya

|rowspan="2"| Vijayawada (Andhra Pradesh)

|1980

|1984

|Defeated

1989

|1991

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Usha Choudhari

|Amravati (Maharashtra)

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Party}}

|

|Pramila Dandavate

|Mumbai North Central (Maharashtra)

|1980

|1984

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal (Secular)}}

|

|Gayatri Devi

|Kairana (Uttar Pradesh)

|1980

|1984

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal (Secular)}}

|

|Indra Kumari

|Aligarh (Uttar Pradesh)

|1980

|1984

|Left party and defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Kailash Pati

|Mohanlalganj (Uttar Pradesh)

|1980

|1984

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Kesharbai Kshirsagar

|rowspan="2"| Beed (Maharashtra)

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

1991

|1996

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India}}

|

|Geeta Mukherjee

|Panskura (West Bengal)

|1980

|2000

|Died

{{party name with color|Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party}}

|

|Sanyogita Rane

|Panaji (Goa)

|1980

|1984

|Left party and defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Krishna Sahi

|Begusarai (Bihar)

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Nirmla Kumari Shaktawat

|Chittorgarh (Rajasthan)

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Pushpa Devi Singh

|Raigarh (Madhya Pradesh)

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Madhuri Singh

|Purnea (Bihar)

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Party}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Kishori Sinha

|rowspan="2"| Vaishali (Bihar)

|1980

|1984

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Sukhbans Kaur Bhinder

|rowspan="2"| Gurdaspur (Punjab)

|1980

|1996

|Party renamed

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Usha Verma

|Kheri (Uttar Pradesh)

|1980

|1991

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Jayanti Patnaik

|Cuttack (Odisha)

|1980

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|Berhampur (Odisha)

|1998

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)|shortname=INC(I)}}

|60px

|Begum Abida Ahmed

|Bareilly (Uttar Pradesh)

|1981

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)|shortname=INC(I)}}

|60px

|Sumati Oraon

|Lohardaga (Bihar)

|1982

|1991

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Shalini Patil

|Sangli (Maharashtra)

|1983

|1984

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Vyjayanthimala Bali

|Chennai South (Tamil Nadu)

|1984

|1991

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="5"| 60px

|rowspan="5"| Mamata Banerjee

|Jadavpur (West Bengal)

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

rowspan="3"| Calcutta South (West Bengal)

|1991

|1996

|Party renamed

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|1996

|1998

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress|rowspan=2}}

|1998

|2009

|Constituency renamed

Kolkata Dakshin (West Bengal)

|2009

|2011

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Basavarajeshwari

|Bellary (Karnataka)

|1984

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Indumati Bhattacharya

|Hooghly (West Bengal)

|1984

|1989

|Resigned

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Chanra Bhanu Devi

|Balia (Bihar)

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Sheila Dikshit

|Kannauj (Uttar Pradesh)

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Phulrenu Guha

|Contai (West Bengal)

|1984

|1989

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Prabhawati Gupta

|Motihari (Bihar)

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}}

|

|N. P. Jhansi Lakshmi

|Chittoor (Andhra Pradesh)

|1984

|1989

|Retired

{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}}

|

|T. Kalpana Devi

|Warangal (Andhra Pradesh)

|1984

|1989

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Chandresh Kumari Katoch

|Kangra (Himachal Pradesh)

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|Jodhpur (Rajasthan)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Sundarwati Nawal Prabhakar

|Karol Bagh (Delhi)

|1984

|1989

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Ramaben Patel

|Rajkot (Gujarat)

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Indubala Sukhadia

|Udaipur (Rajasthan)

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Usha Thakker

|Kutch (Gujarat)

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Taradevi Siddhartha

|rowspan="2"| Chikmagalur (Karnataka)

|1984

|1989

|Did not contest

1991

|1996

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Usha Rani Tomar

|Aligarh (Uttar Pradesh)

|1984

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Chandra Tripathi

|Chandauli (Uttar Pradesh)

|1984

|1989

|Died

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Meira Kumar

|Bijnor (Uttar Pradesh)

|1985

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|Karol Bagh (Delhi)

|1996

|1999

|Defeated

Sasaram (Bihar)

|2004

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Sikkim Sangram Parishad|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Dil Kumari Bhandari

|rowspan="2"| Sikkim

|1985

|1989

|Did not contest

1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Manorama Singh

|Banka (Bihar)

|1986

|1989

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|T. Manemma

|Secunderabad (Andhra Pradesh)

|1987

|1991

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|60px

|Subhashini Ali

|Kanpur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1989

|1991

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Uma Bharti

|Khajuraho (Madhya Pradesh)

|1989

|1999

|Transferred constituency

Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh)

|1999

|2003

|Resigned

Jhansi (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|

|Malini Bhattacharya

|Jadavpur (West Bengal)

|1989

|1996

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Shiromani Akali Dal (Amritsar)|shortname=SAD(M)}}

|

|Rajinder Kaur Bulara

|Ludhiana (Punjab)

|1989

|1991

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal}}

|rowspan="6"| 60px

|rowspan="6"| Maneka Gandhi

|rowspan="3"| Pilibhit (Uttar Pradesh)

|1989

|1991

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|1996

|2004

|Became partisan

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=4}}

|2004

|2009

|Transferred constituency

Aonla (Uttar Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Transferred constituency

Pilibhit (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Transferred constituency

Sultanpur (Uttar Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Jamuna Juluri

|Rajahmundry (Andhra Pradesh)

|1989

|1991

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Kamala Kumari Karredula

|Bhadrachalam (Andhra Pradesh)

|1989

|1996

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Shiromani Akali Dal (Amritsar)|shortname=SAD(M)}}

|

|Bimal Kaur Khalsa

|Ropar (Punjab)

|1989

|1991

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Savithri Lakshmanan

|Mukundapuram (Kerala)

|1989

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Sumitra Mahajan

|Indore (Madhya Pradesh)

|1989

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bahujan Samaj Party|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Mayawati

|Bijnor (Uttar Pradesh)

|1989

|1991

|Defeated

rowspan="2"| Akbarpur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1998

|2002

|Resigned

2004

|2004

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Jayawantiben Mehta

|Mumbai North East (Maharashtra)

|1989

|1991

|Defeated

rowspan="2"| Mumbai South (Maharashtra)

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

1999

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Vasundhara Raje

|Jhalawar (Rajasthan)

|1989

|2003

|Resigned

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Uma Gajapathi Raju

|Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh)

|1989

|1991

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|60px

|Usha Sinha

|Vaishali (Bihar)

|1989

|1991

|Defeated

1991 to 2004

class="wikitable sortable"

!colspan="2"| Party

!class="unsortable"| Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name

!style="width:16em"| Constituency (State)

!Year elected

!Year left

!Reason

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Bhavna Chikhalia

|Junagadh (Gujarat)

|1991

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Dipika Chikhlia

|Baroda (Gujarat)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Santosh Chowdhary

|rowspan="2"| Phillaur (Punjab)

|1991

|1996

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|1999

|2004

|Defeated

Hoshiarpur (Punjab)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Bibhu Kumari Devi

|Tripura East (Tripura)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|

|Girija Devi

|Maharajganj (Bihar)

|1991

|1996

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal}}

|

|Saroj Dubey

|Allahabad (Uttar Pradesh)

|1991

|1996

|Defeated

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Sheela Gautam

|Aligarh (Uttar Pradesh)

|1991

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Krishnendra Kaur (Deepa)

|Bharatpur (Rajasthan)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Padmashree Kudumula

|Nellore (Andhra Pradesh)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Mahendra Kumari

|Alwar (Rajasthan)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

| rowspan="4"| 60px

| rowspan="4"| Selja Kumari

| rowspan="2"| Sirsa (Haryana)

| 1991

| 1996

| Party renamed

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

| 1996

| 1998

| Defeated

Ambala (Haryana)

| 2004

| 2014

| Resigned

Sirsa (Haryana)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|

|Padma

|Nagapattinam (Tamil Nadu)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Pratibha Patil

|Amravati (Maharashtra)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Suryakanta Patil

|Nanded (Maharashtra)

|1991

|1996

|Did not contest

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="2"| Hingoli (Maharashtra)

|1998

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Nationalist Congress Party}}

|2004

|2009

|Defeated

{{party name with color|All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|

|K. S. Soundaram

|Tiruchengode (Tamil Nadu)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Frida Topno

|rowspan="2"| Sundargarh (Odisha)

|1991

|1996

|Party renamed

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|1996

|1998

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Chandraprabha Urs

|Mysore (Karnataka)

|1991

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Vimla Verma

|rowspan="2"| Seoni (Madhya Pradesh)

|1991

|1996

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|1998

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Rita Verma

|Dhanbad (Jharkhand)

|1991

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Girija Vyas

|rowspan="3"| Udaipur (Rajasthan)

|1991

|1996

|Party renamed

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

1999

|2004

|Defeated

Chittorgarh (Rajasthan)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Sushila Tiriya

|rowspan="2"| Mayurbhanj (Odisha)

|1993

|1996

|Party renamed

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Samata Party|shortname=SAP}}

| rowspan="2"|

| rowspan="2"| Lovely Anand

| Vaishali (Bihar)

| 1994

| 1996

| Did not contest

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal (United)}}

| Sheohar (Bihar)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Sheila F. Irani

|Anglo{{ndash}}Indian (Nominated)

|1995

|1996

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|

|Sandhya Bauri

|Bishnupur (West Bengal)

|1996

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Krishna Bose

|rowspan="2"| Jadavpur (West Bengal)

|1996

|1998

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|1998

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Nisha Chaudhary

|Sabarkantha (Gujarat)

|1996

|2001

|Died

{{party name with color|Rashtriya Janata Dal}}

|

|Bhagwati Devi

|Gaya (Bihar)

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

{{Party name with color|Samajwadi Party|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Phoolan Devi

|rowspan="2"| Mirzapur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

1999

|2001

|Died

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Usha Meena

|Sawai Madhopur (Rajasthan)

|1996

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Alka Nath

|Chhindwara (Madhya Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Retired

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Chhabila Netam

|Kanker (Madhya Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Retired

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Begum Noor Bano

|rowspan="2"| Rampur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

1999

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Panabaka Lakshmi

|rowspan="2"| Nellore (Andhra Pradesh)

|1996

|1999

|Defeated

2004

|2009

|Transferred constituency

Bapatla (Andhra Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Rajani Patil

|Beed (Maharashtra)

|1996

|1998

|Left party

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Kamal Rani Varun

|Ghatampur (Uttar Pradesh)

|1996

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Magunta Parvathamma

|Ongole (Andhra Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Retired

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Hedwig Rego

|Anglo{{ndash}}Indian (Nominated)

|1996

|1998

|Retired

{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|

|Ratnamala Savanur

|Chikkodi (Karnataka)

|1996

|1998

|Retired

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Maharani Divya Singh

|Bharatpur (Rajasthan)

|1996

|1998

|Retired

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Rajkumari Ratna Singh

|rowspan="3"| Pratapgarh (Uttar Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

1999

|2004

|Defeated

2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Kanti Singh

|rowspan="2"| Bikramganj (Bihar)

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Rashtriya Janata Dal|rowspan=2}}

|1999

|2004

|Transferred constituency

Arrah (Bihar)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|60px

|Ketki Devi Singh

|Gonda (Uttar Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Retired

{{party name with color|Samajwadi Party}}

|

|Subhawati Paswan

|Bansgaon (Uttar Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Sushma Swaraj

|South Delhi (Delhi)

|1996

|1999

|Resigned

Vidisha (Madhya Pradesh)

|2009

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}}

|

|Sarada Tadiparthi

|Tenali (Andhra Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Purnima Verma

|Mohanlalganj (Uttar Pradesh)

|1996

|1998

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Shiromani Akali Dal}}

|

|Satwinder Kaur Dhaliwal

|Ropar (Punjab)

|1997

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Rani Chitralekha Bhonsle

|Ramtek

|1998

|1999

|Retired

{{party name with color|Samajwadi Party}}

|

|Reena Choudhary

|Mohanlalganj (Uttar Pradesh)

|1998

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with color|Samata Party|shortname=SAP}}

|

|Beatrix D'Souza

|Anglo{{ndash}}Indian (Nominated)

|1998

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Bhavna Kardam Dave

|Surendranagar (Gujarat)

|1998

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Indian National Lok Dal}}

|

|Kailasho Devi

|Kurukshetra (Haryana)

|1998

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with color|Samajwadi Party}}

|

|Omvati Devi

|Bijnor (Uttar Pradesh)

|1998

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Rashtriya Janata Dal}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Rama Devi

|Motihari (Bihar)

|1998

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|Sheohar (Bihar)

|2009

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India}}

|

|Kim Gangte

|Outer Manipur (Manipur)

|1998

|1999

|Left party and defeated

{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Abha Mahato

|Jamshedpur (Bihar)

|1998

|2000

|State bifurcated

Jamshedpur (Jharkhand)

|2000

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Rashtriya Janata Dal}}

|

|Malti Devi

|Nawada (Bihar)

|1998

|1999

|Died

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Sukhda Misra

|Etawah (Uttar Pradesh)

|1998

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Ranee Narah

|rowspan="2"| Lakhimpur (Assam)

|1998

|2004

|Defeated

2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Ila Pant

|Nainital (Uttar Pradesh)

|1998

|1999

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|

|A. K. Premajam

|Badagara (Kerala)

|1998

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with colour|AIADMK}}

|60px

|V. Saroja

|Rasipuram (Tamil Nadu)

|1998

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|

|Minati Sen

|Jalpaiguri (West Bengal)

|1998

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Sangeeta Kumari Singh Deo

|rowspan="2"| Bolangir (Odisha)

|1998

|2009

|Defeated

2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}}

|

|Chellamalla Suguna Kumari

|Peddapalli (Andhra Pradesh)

|1998

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Jayaben Thakkar

|Baroda (Gujarat)

|1998

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Prabha Thakur

|Ajmer (Rajasthan)

|1998

|1999

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Samajwadi Party|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Usha Verma

|rowspan="2"| Hardoi (Uttar Pradesh)

|1998

|1999

|Defeated

2004

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Margaret Alva

|Kanara (Karnataka)

|1999

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Anita Arya

|Karol Bagh (Delhi)

|1999

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Jayashree Banerjee

|Jabalpur (Madhya Pradesh)

|1999

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Bijoya Chakravarty

|rowspan="2"| Gauhati (Assam)

|1999

|2004

|Defeated

2009

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Renuka Chowdhury

|Khammam (Andhra Pradesh)

|1999

|2009

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Hema Gamang

|Koraput (Odisha)

|1999

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Sonia Gandhi

|Amethi (Uttar Pradesh)

|1999

|2004

|Transferred constituency

rowspan="2"| Raebareli (Uttar Pradesh)

|2004

|2006

|Resigned

2006

|2024

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|Shiv Sena|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Bhavana Gawali

|Washim (Maharashtra)

|1999

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

Yavatmal–Washim (Maharashtra)

|2009

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Preneet Kaur

|rowspan="3"| Patiala (Punjab)

|1999

|2014

|Defeated

2019

|2023

|Suspended from party

{{party name with colour|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|2023

|2024

|Joined BJP and defeated

{{party name with colour|Nationalist Congress Party}}

|

|Nivedita Sambhajirao Mane

|Ichalkaranji (Maharashtra)

|1999

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Jaskaur Meena

|Sawai Madhopur (Rajasthan)

|1999

|2004

|Defeated

Dausa (Rajasthan)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}}

|

|Vukkala Rajeswaramma

|Nellore (Andhra Pradesh)

|1999

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Prabha Rau

|Wardha (Maharashtra)

|1999

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Samajwadi Party|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Sushila Saroj

|Misrikh (Uttar Pradesh)

|1999

|2004

|Defeated

Mohanlalganj (Uttar Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with color|Samata Party|shortname=SAP}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Renu Kumari Singh

|rowspan="2"| Khagaria (Bihar)

|1999

|2003

|Left party

{{party name with color|Janata Dal (United)}}

|2003

|2004

|Defeated

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Shyama Singh

|Aurangabad (Bihar)

|1999

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}}

|

|Dumpa Mary Vijayakumari

|Bhadrachalam (Andhra Pradesh)

|1999

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|60px

|Sudha Yadav

|Mahendragarh (Haryana)

|1999

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Kumudini Patnaik

|Aska (Odisha)

|2000

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Rama Pilot

|Dausa (Rajasthan)

|2001

|2004

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Telugu Desam Party}}

|

|Vijaya Kumari Ganti

|Amalapuram (Andhra Pradesh)

|2002

|2004

|Retired

2004 to 2014

class="wikitable sortable"

!colspan="2"| Party

!class="unsortable"| Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name

!style="width:16em"| Constituency (State)

!Year elected

!Year left

!Reason

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Susheela Laxman Bangaru

|Jalore (Rajasthan)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|

|Susmita Bauri

|Bishnupur (West Bengal)

|2004

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|

|M. S. K. Bhavani Rajenthiran

|Ramanathapuram (Tamil Nadu)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Rashtriya Lok Dal}}

|

|Anuradha Choudhary

|Kairana (Uttar Pradesh)

|2004

|2009

|Transferred constituency and defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Tejashwini Gowda

|Kanakapura (Karnataka)

|2004

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

{{party name with colour|Shiromani Akali Dal|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Paramjit Kaur Gulshan

|Bathinda (Punjab)

|2004

|2009

|Transferred constituency

Faridkot (Punjab)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|60px

|Subbulakshmi Jagadeesan

|Tiruchengode (Tamil Nadu)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Sushila Kerketta

|Khunti (Jharkhand)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Manorama Madhwaraj

|Udupi (Karnataka)

|2004

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Kiran Maheshwari

|Udaipur (Rajasthan)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Ingrid Mcleod

|Anglo{{ndash}}Indian (Nominated)

|2004

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Jammu and Kashmir People's Democratic Party|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Mehbooba Mufti

|rowspan="2"| Anantnag (Jammu and Kashmir)

|2004

|2009

|Did not contest

2014

|2016

|Resigned

{{Party name with colour|Samajwadi Party}}

|60px

|Jaya Prada

|Rampur (Uttar Pradesh)

|2004

|2014

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Shiv Sena}}

|

|Kalpana Ramesh Narhire

|Osmanabad (Maharashtra)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Archana Nayak

|Kendrapara (Odisha)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Neeta Pateriya

|Seoni (Madhya Pradesh)

|2004

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Rupatai Patil Nilangekar

|Latur (Maharashtra)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

| rowspan="3"| 60px

| rowspan="3"| Daggubati Purandeswari

| Bapatla (Andhra Pradesh)

| 2004

| 2009

| Transferred constituency

Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh)

| 2009

| 2014

| Left party

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

| Rajahmundry (Andhra Pradesh)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|K. Rani

|Rasipuram (Tamil Nadu)

|2004

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

{{party name with colour|Lok Janshakti Party}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Ranjeet Ranjan

|Saharsa (Bihar)

|2004

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|Supaul (Bihar)

|2014

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|

|P. Sathidevi

|Badagara (Kerala)

|2004

|2009

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Samajwadi Party}}

|

|Rubab Sayda

|Bahraich (Uttar Pradesh)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|60px

|V. Radhika Selvi

|Tiruchendur (Tamil Nadu)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Karuna Shukla

|Jangjir (Chhattisgarh)

|2004

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|

|Jyotirmoyee Sikdar

|Krishnanagar (West Bengal)

|2004

|2009

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"|

|rowspan="3"| Pratibha Singh

|rowspan="3"| Mandi (Himachal Pradesh)

|2004

|2009

|Did not contest

2013

|2014

|Defeated

2021

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|60px

|C. S. Sujatha

|Mavelikara (Kerala)

|2004

|2009

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Krishna Tirath

|Karol Bagh (Delhi)

|2004

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

North West Delhi (Delhi)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Priya Dutt

|Mumbai North West (Maharashtra)

|2005

|2009

|Transferred constituency

Mumbai North Central (Maharashtra)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Botsa Jhansi Lakshmi

|Bobbili (Andhra Pradesh)

|2006

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

Vizianagaram (Andhra Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Jharkhand Mukti Morcha}}

|

|Suman Mahato

|Jamshedpur (Jharkhand)

|2007

|2009

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Yashodhara Raje Scindia

|Gwalior (Madhya Pradesh)

|2007

|2013

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal (United)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Meena Singh

|Bikramganj (Bihar)

|2007

|2009

|Constituency decommissioned

Arrah (Bihar)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Nationalist Congress Party}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Agatha Sangma

|rowspan="2"| Tura (Shillong)

|2008

|2014

|Did not contest

{{party name with colour|National People's Party (India)}}

|2019

|2024

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Shiromani Akali Dal}}

|60px

|Harsimrat Kaur Badal

|Bathinda (Punjab)

|2009

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Rashtriya Lok Dal}}

|

|Sarika Devendra Singh Baghel

|Hathras (Uttar Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Bahujan Samaj Party}}

|

|Raj Kumari Chauhan

|Aligarh (Uttar Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Shruti Choudhry

|Bhiwani–Mahendragarh (Rajasthan)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Deepa Dasmunsi

|Raiganj (West Bengal)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar

|Barasat (West Bengal)

|2009

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Ratna De

|Hooghly (West Bengal)

|2009

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal (United)}}

|60px

|Ashwamedh Devi

|Ujiarpur (Bihar)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Jyoti Dhurve

|Betul (Madhya Pradesh)

|2009

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bahujan Samaj Party}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Begum Tabassum Hasan

|rowspan="2"| Kairana (Uttar Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Rashtriya Lok Dal}}

|2018

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|DMK}}

|

|J. Helen Davidson

|Kanniyakumari (Tamil Nadu)

|2009

|2014

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bahujan Samaj Party}}

|

|Kaisar Jahan

|Sitapur (Uttar Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Darshana Jardosh

|Surat (Gujarat)

|2009

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Poonamben Veljibhai Jat

|Kachchh (Gujarat)

|2009

|2014

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Killi Krupa Rani

|Srikakulam (Andhra Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Jyoti Mirdha

|Nagaur (Rajasthan)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Meenakshi Natarajan

|Mandsaur (Madhya Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Mausam Noor

|Maldaha Uttar (West Bengal)

|2009

|2019

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Saroj Pandey

|Durg (Chhattisgarh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Jayshreeben Patel

|Mahesana (Gujarat)

|2009

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Kamla Devi Patle

|Janjgir–Champa (Chhattisgarh)

|2009

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|J. Shantha

|Bellary (Karnataka)

|2009

|2014

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Telangana Rashtra Samithi}}

|60px

|Vijayashanti

|Medak (Andhra Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|60px

|Satabdi Roy

|Birbhum (West Bengal)

|2009

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Rajesh Nandini Singh

|Shahdol (Madhya Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Nationalist Congress Party}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Supriya Sule

|rowspan="2"| Baramati (Maharashtra)

|2009

|2024

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Nationalist Congress Party (Sharadchandra Pawar)}}

|2024

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Annu Tandon

|Unnao (Uttar Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Prabha Kishor Taviad

|Dahod (Gujarat)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bahujan Samaj Party}}

|

|Seema Upadhyay

|Fatehpur Sikri (Uttar Pradesh)

|2009

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|

|Putul Kumari

|Banka (Bihar)

|2010

|2014

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Samajwadi Party|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Dimple Yadav

|Kannauj (Uttar Pradesh)

|2012

|2019

|Defeated

Mainpuri (Uttar Pradesh)

|2022

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Mala Rajya Laxmi Shah

|Tehri Garhwal (Uttarakhand)

|2012

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Ramya Divya Spandana

|Mandya (Karnataka)

|2013

|2014

|Defeated

2014 to 2024

class="wikitable sortable"

!colspan="2"| Party

!class="unsortable"| Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name

!style="width:16em"| Constituency (State)

!Year elected

!Year left

!Reason

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Santosh Ahlawat

|Jhunjhunu (Rajasthan)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Anju Bala

|Misrikh (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|YSR Congress Party}}

|

|Butta Renuka

|Kurnool (Andhra Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Sushmita Dev

|Silchar (Assam)

|2014

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Lok Janshakti Party}}

|

|Veena Devi

|Munger (Bihar)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Heena Gavit

|Nandurbar (Maharashtra)

|2014

|2024

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Arpita Ghosh

|Balurghat (West Bengal)

|2014

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Niranjan Jyoti

|Fatehpur (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2024

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Telangana Rashtra Samithi}}

|60px

|K. Kavitha

|Nizamabad (Telangana)

|2014

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Shobha Karandlaje

|Udupi Chikmagalur (Karnataka)

|2014

|2024

|Transferred constituency

Bangalore North (Karnataka)

|2024

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Raksha Khadse

|Raver (Maharashtra)

|2014

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Kirron Kher

|Chandigarh

|2014

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with color|YSR Congress Party}}

|60px

|Kothapalli Geetha

|Araku (Andhra Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Sakuntala Laguri

|Keonjhar (Odisha)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Meenakshi Lekhi

|New Delhi (Delhi)

|2014

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|

|M. Vasanthi

|Tenkasi (Tamil Nadu)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Poonamben Maadam

|Jamnagar (Gujarat)

|2014

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Poonam Mahajan

|Mumbai North Central (Maharashtra)

|2014

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Hema Malini

|Mathura (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|60px

|K. Maragatham

|Kancheepuram (Tamil Nadu)

|2014

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Pratima Mondal

|Jaynagar (West Bengal)

|2014

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Apna Dal}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Anupriya Patel

|rowspan="2"| Mirzapur (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Apna Dal (Sonelal)}}

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Riti Pathak

|Sidhi (Madhya Pradesh)

|2014

|2023

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Savitri Bai Phule

|Bahraich (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Aparupa Poddar

|Arambagh (West Bengal)

|2014

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Krishna Raj

|Shahjahanpur (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Priyanka Singh Rawat

|Barabanki (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|60px

|Sandhya Roy

|Medinipur (West Bengal)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Mamtaz Sanghamita

|Bardhaman–Durgapur (West Bengal)

|2014

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Uma Saren

|Jhargram (West Bengal)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|

|V. Sathyabama

|Tiruppur (Tamil Nadu)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|60px

|Moon Moon Sen

|Bankura (West Bengal)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Bharti Shiyal

|Bhavnagar (Gujarat)

|2014

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Renuka Sinha

|Cooch Behar (West Bengal)

|2014

|2016

|Died

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Neelam Sonkar

|Lalganj (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Rita Tarai

|Jajpur (Odisha)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Communist Party of India (Marxist)}}

|60px

|P. K. Sreemathy

|Kannur (Kerala)

|2014

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Savitri Thakur

|Dhar (Madhya Pradesh)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|

|R. Vanaroja

|Tiruvannamalai (Tamil Nadu)

|2014

|2019

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Rekha Verma

|Dhaurahra (Uttar Pradesh)

|2014

|2024

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Ranjanben Dhananjay Bhatt

|Vadodara (Gujarat)

|2014

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Pritam Munde

|Beed (Maharashtra)

|2014

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Pratyusha Rajeshwari Singh

|Kandhamal (Odisha)

|2014

|2019

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Mamata Bala Thakur

|Bangaon (West Bengal)

|2015

|2019

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Sajda Ahmed

|Uluberia (West Bengal)

|2018

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bahujan Samaj Party}}

|

|Sangeeta Azad

|Lalganj (Uttar Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Pratima Bhoumik

|Tripura West (Tripura)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|60px

|Pramila Bisoyi

|Aska (Odisha)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Mimi Chakraborty

|Jadavpur (West Bengal)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Locket Chatterjee

|Hooghly (West Bengal)

|2019

|2024

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Debasree Chaudhuri

|Raiganj (West Bengal)

|2019

|2024

|Transferred constituency and defeated

{{party name with colour|YSR Congress Party}}

|

|Chinta Anuradha

|Amalapuram (Andhra Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Annpurna Devi

|Kodarma (Jharkhand)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Lok Janshakti Party}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Veena Devi

|rowspan="2"| Vaishali (Bihar)

|2019

|2021

|Party factioned

{{party name with colour|Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas)}}

|2021

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Sunita Duggal

|Sirsa (Haryana)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Ramya Haridas

|Alathur (Kerala)

|2019

|2024

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Smriti Irani

|Amethi (Uttar Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|60px

|Nusrat Jahan

|Basirhat (West Bengal)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Rita Bahuguna Joshi

|Allahabad (Uttar Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Jothimani

|Karur (Tamil Nadu)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|60px

|Kanimozhi

|Thoothukkudi (Tamil Nadu)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Geeta Koda

|Singhbhum (Jharkhand)

|2019

|2024

|Left party

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Ranjeeta Koli

|Bharatpur (Rajasthan)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Diya Kumari

|Rajsamand (Rajasthan)

|2019

|2023

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|YSR Congress Party}}

|

|Goddeti Madhavi

|Araku (Andhra Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Jyotsna Mahant

|Korba (Chhattisgarh)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Rajashree Mallick

|Jagatsinghpur (Odisha)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharat Rashtra Samithi}}

|

|Kavitha Maloth

|Mahabubnagar (Telangana)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|60px

|Manjulata Mandal

|Bhadrak (Odisha)

|2019

|2024

|Defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Sanghmitra Maurya

|Badaun (Uttar Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Mahua Moitra

|rowspan="2"| Krishnanagar (West Bengal)

|2019

|2023

|Expelled

2024

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|60px

|Chandrani Murmu

|Keonjhar (Odisha)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Queen Oja

|Gauhati (Assam)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Keshari Devi Patel

|Phulpur (Uttar Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Shardaben Patel

|Mahesana (Gujarat)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Bharati Pawar

|Dindori (Maharashtra)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Navneet Kaur Rana

|Amravati (Maharashtra)

|2019

|2024

|Joined BJP and defeated

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Gitaben Rathva

|Chhota Udaipur (Gujarat)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Sandhya Ray

|Bhind (Madhya Pradesh)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|60px

|Mala Roy

|Kolkata Dakshin (West Bengal)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Gomati Sai

|Raigarh (Chhattisgarh)

|2019

|2023

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Aparajita Sarangi

|Bhubaneswar (Odisha)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|60px

|Renuka Singh Saruta

|Surguja (Chhattisgarh)

|2019

|2023

|Resigned

{{party name with colour|YSR Congress Party}}

|

|Beesetti Venkata Satyavathi

|Anakapalli (Andhra Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Sarmistha Sethi

|Jajpur (Odisha)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Himadri Singh

|Shahdol (Madhya Pradesh)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal (United)|shortname=JD(U)}}

|

|Kavita Singh

|Siwan (Bihar)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Sumalatha

|Mandya (Karnataka)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Pragya Singh Thakur

|Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}

|60px

|Thamizhachi Thangapandian

|Chennai South (Tamil Nadu)

|2019

|

|Serving

{{party name with colour|YSR Congress Party}}

|60px

|Vanga Geetha

|Kakinada (Andhra Pradesh)

|2019

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|

|Mangala Suresh Angadi

|Belgaum (Karnataka)

|2021

|2024

|Retired

{{party name with colour|Shiv Sena (Uddhav Balasaheb Thackeray)}}

|

|Kalaben Delkar

|Dadra and Nagar Haveli

|2021

|2024

|Left party

2024 to present

class="wikitable sortable"

! colspan="2"| Party

! class="unsortable"| Portrait

! style="width:15em"| Name

! style="width:16em"| Constituency (State)

! Year elected

! Year left

! Reason

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

| Shobha Bachhav

| Dhule (Maharashtra)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress}}

|

| Mitali Bag

| Arambagh (West Bengal)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress}}

|

| Rachna Banerjee

| Hooghly (West Bengal)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

| Pratibha Dhanorkar

| Chandrapur (Maharashtra)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|

| Varsha Gaikwad

| Mumbai North Central (Maharashtra)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress}}

| 60px

| Sayani Ghosh

| Jadavpur (West Bengal)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress}}

| 60px

| June Maliah

| Medinipur (West Bengal)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with color|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

| 60px

| Kangana Ranaut

| Mandi (Himachal Pradesh)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress}}

|

| Sharmila Sarkar

| Bardhaman Purba (West Bengal)

| 2024

|

| Serving

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

| 60px

| Praniti Shinde

| Solapur (Maharashtra)

| 2024

|

| Serving

Ors

=Elected members=

class="wikitable sortable"

!colspan="2"| Party

!class="unsortable"| Portrait

!style="width:14em"| Name

!style="width:10em"| State(s)

!style="width:8em"| Term start

!style="width:8em"| Term end

!Terms

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Pushpalata Das

|Assam

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1962

|2

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|60px

|Lakshmi N. Menon

|Bihar

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1966

|3

{{party name with colour|Bharatiya Jana Sangh|shortname=BJS}}

|60px

|Vijaya Raje

|Bihar

|3 April 1952

|20 March 1957

|1

{{party name with colour|Jharkhand Party|shortname=JHKP}}

|

|Angelina Tiga

|Bihar

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1954

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Violet Alva

|Bombay

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1966

|rowspan="2"| 2

Mysore

|3 April 1966

|20 November 1969

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Lilavati Munshi

|Bombay

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1958

|1

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Sailabala Das

|Odisha

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1954

|1

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Sharda Bhargava

|rowspan="2"| Rajasthan

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1962

|rowspan="2"| 3

22 August 1963

|2 April 1966

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Chandravati Lakhanpal

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1962

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Savitri Nigam

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1962

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Begum Aizaz Rasul

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1956

|1

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Maya Devi Chettry

|West Bengal

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1964

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Nalinaksha Dutt

|West Bengal

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1960

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Bedavati Buragohain

|Assam

|3 April 1954

|2 April 1966

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|K. Udayabhanu Bharathi

|Travancore-Cochin

|3 April 1954

|2 April 1964

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Krishna Kumari

|Vindhya Pradesh

|3 April 1954

|2 April 1960

|1

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Anis Kidwai

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 1956

|2 April 1968

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Begum Siddiqa Kidwai

|NCT of Delhi

|24 November 1956

|2 April 1964

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Lila Devi

|Himachal Pradesh

|3 December 1956

|2 April 1962

|1

{{party name with color|INC}}

|60px

|Amrit Kaur

|Punjab

|20 April 1957

|6 February 1964

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Ammu Swaminathan

|Madras

|9 November 1957

|2 April 1960

|1

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Annapurna Devi Thihmareddy

|Mysore

|3 April 1958

|2 April 1970

|2

{{party name with color|INC}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Shanta Vasisht

|rowspan="2"| NCT of Delhi

|rowspan="2"| 3 April 1960

|rowspan="2"| 2 April 1972

|rowspan="2"| 2

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (O)}}
{{party name with color|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|G. Parthasarathy

|Madras

|3 April 1960

|2 April 1966

|1

{{party name with color|INC}}

|60px

|Abha Maiti

|West Bengal

|3 April 1960

|4 March 1962

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Chodagam Ammanna Raja

|Andhra Pradesh

|3 April 1962

|2 April 1968

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Devaki Gopidas

|Karnataka

|3 April 1962

|2 April 1968

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Tara Ramachandra Sathe

|Maharashtra

|3 April 1962

|2 April 1968

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|60px

|Nandini Satpathy

|Odisha

|3 April 1962

|14 June 1972

|2

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Uma Nehru

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 1962

|28 August 1963

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Shyam Kumari Khan

|Uttar Pradesh

|11 December 1963

|2 April 1968

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Mary Naidu

|Andhra Pradesh

|3 April 1964

|2 April 1970

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Maniben Patel

|Gujarat

|3 April 1964

|2 April 1970

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Mohinder Kaur

|Punjab

|3 April 1964

|2 April 1970

|rowspan="2"| 2

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|Himachal Pradesh

|10 April 1978

|9 April 1984

{{party name with colour|Samyukta Socialist Party}}

|

|Sarla Bhadauria

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 1964

|2 April 1970

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Phulrenu Guha

|West Bengal

|3 April 1964

|2 April 1970

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|60px

|Indira Gandhi

|Uttar Pradesh

|26 August 1964

|4 March 1967

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Usha Barthakur

|Assam

|3 April 1966

|2 April 1972

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (O)}}

|

|Pushpaben Mehta

|Gujarat

|3 April 1966

|2 April 1972

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Mangla Devi Talwar

|Madhya Pradesh

|3 April 1966

|2 April 1972

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Vimal Punjab Deshmukh

|Maharashtra

|19 April 1967

|2 April 1972

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (O)}}

|

|Bindumati Devi

|Uttar Pradesh

|9 July 1967

|2 April 1972

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Sarojini Babar

|Maharashtra

|3 April 1968

|2 April 1974

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress}}

|

|Satyavati Dang

|Himachal Pradesh

|3 April 1968

|2 April 1974

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Purabi Mukhopadhyay

|West Bengal

|3 April 1970

|3 April 1982

|2

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Pratibha Singh

|rowspan="2"| Bihar

|rowspan="2"| 31 December 1970

|rowspan="2"| 6 July 1992

|rowspan="2"| 4

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}
{{party name with colour|INC}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Sushila Adivarekar

|rowspan="2"| Maharashtra

|rowspan="2"| 18 September 1971

|rowspan="2"| 2 April 1978

|rowspan="2"| 2

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}
{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Savita Behen

|NCT of Delhi

|3 April 1972

|2 April 1978

|1

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Saroj Khaparde

|rowspan="2"| Maharashtra

|3 April 1972

|2 April 1974

|rowspan="2"| 5

3 April 1976

|2 April 2000

{{party name with color|INC}}

|60px

|Saraswati Pradhan

|Odisha

|3 April 1972

|2 April 1978

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Sumitra Kulkarni

|Gujarat

|10 April 1972

|9 April 1978

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Lakshmi Kumari Chundawat

|Rajasthan

|10 April 1972

|9 April 1978

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Aziza Fatima Imam

|Bihar

|20 March 1973

|2 April 1982

|2

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Kumudben Joshi

|rowspan="2"| Gujarat

|rowspan="2"| 15 October 1973

|rowspan="2"| 2 April 1988

|rowspan="2"| 3

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (O)}}
{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Leela Damodara Menon

|Kerala

|3 April 1974

|2 April 1980

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|60px

|Margaret Alva

|Karnataka

|25 July 1974

|25 July 1998

|4

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Pratima Bose

|West Bengal

|10 July 1975

|9 July 1981

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Ambika Soni

|Punjab

|30 March 1976

|2 April 1980

|rowspan="3"| 5

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|NCT of Delhi

|28 January 2000

|10 June 2004

Punjab

|5 July 2004

|4 July 2022

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Amarjit Kaur

|Punjab

|3 April 1976

|2 April 1988

|2

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Ushi Khan

|Rajasthan

|3 April 1976

|2 April 1982

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Hamida Habibullah

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 1976

|2 April 1982

|1

{{party name with colour|CPI(M)}}

|

|Kanak Mukherjee

|West Bengal

|3 April 1978

|2 April 1990

|2

{{party name with colour|Janata Party}}

|

|Jamuna Devi

|Madhya Pradesh

|10 April 1978

|2 April 1980

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Usha Malhotra

|Himachal Pradesh

|3 April 1980

|2 April 1986

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Monika Das

|Karnataka

|3 April 1980

|2 April 1986

|1

{{party name with colour|CPI(M)}}

|

|Ila Bhattacharya

|Tripura

|3 April 1980

|2 April 1986

|1

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal}}

|60px

|Sarojini Mahishi

|Karnataka

|8 September 1983

|9 April 1990

|2

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Premala Chavan

|Maharashtra

|5 July 1980

|28 December 1984

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Najma Heptulla

|rowspan="2"| Maharashtra

|rowspan="2"| 5 July 1980

|rowspan="2"| 4 July 2004

|rowspan="4"| 6

{{party name with colour|INC}}
{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|Rajasthan

|5 July 2004

|4 July 2010

Madhya Pradesh

|3 April 2012

|20 August 2016

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Sudha Vinay Joshi

|Maharashtra

|3 April 1984

|2 April 1990

|1

{{party name with colour|AIADMK}}

|60px

|J. Jayalalithaa

|Tamil Nadu

|3 April 1984

|28 January 1989

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Shanti Pahadia

|Rajasthan

|10 April 1984

|9 April 1990

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Omem Moyong Deori

|Arunachal Pradesh

|27 May 1984

|26 May 1990

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Kailashpati

|Uttar Pradesh

|28 January 1985

|2 April 1994

|2

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|60px

|Pratibha Patil

|Maharashtra

|5 July 1985

|2 April 1990

|1

{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Renuka Chowdhury

|rowspan="2"| Andhra Pradesh

|3 April 1986

|2 April 1998

|rowspan="3"| 4

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|3 April 2012

|2 April 2018

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|Telangana

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

{{party name with color|Asom Gana Parishad}}

|60px

|Bijoya Chakravarty

|Assam

|3 April 1986

|2 April 1992

|1

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Veena Verma

|Madhya Pradesh

|26 June 1986

|2 April 2000

|3

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Jayanthi Natarajan

|rowspan="3"| Tamil Nadu

|30 June 1986

|22 September 1997

|rowspan="3"| 4

{{party name with color|Tamil Maanila Congress (Moopanar)}}

|10 October 1997

|24 July 2001

{{party name with color|INC}}

|3 April 2008

|2 April 2014

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Sayeeda Khatun

|Madhya Pradesh

|30 June 1986

|29 June 1992

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Sushila Tiriya

|rowspan="2"| Odisha

|2 July 1986

|1 July 1992

|rowspan="2"| 2

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|4 April 2006

|3 April 2012

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|60px

|Suryakanta Patil

|Maharashtra

|5 July 1986

|17 November 1991

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Alia Zuberi

|Uttar Pradesh

|11 November 1989

|4 July 1992

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|60px

|Taradevi Siddhartha

|Karnataka

|26 March 1990

|20 June 1991

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Chandrika Abhinandan Jain

|Maharashtra

|3 April 1990

|2 April 1996

|1

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal}}

|

|Mira Das

|Odisha

|3 April 1990

|2 April 1996

|1

{{party name with colour|CPI(M)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Sarla Maheshwari

|rowspan="2"| West Bengal

|3 April 1990

|2 April 1996

|rowspan="2"| 2

19 August 1999

|18 August 2005

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal}}

|

|Vidya Beniwal

|Haryana

|10 April 1990

|9 April 1996

|1

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="4"| 60px

|rowspan="4"| Sushma Swaraj

|Haryana

|10 April 1990

|9 April 1996

|rowspan="4"| 3

Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 2000

|9 November 2000

Uttarakhand

|9 November 2000

|2 April 2006

Madhya Pradesh

|3 April 2006

|30 May 2009

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Basanti Sarma

|Assam

|3 September 1991

|9 April 2002

|2

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal}}

|

|Ila Panda

|Odisha

|2 July 1992

|1 July 1998

|1

{{party name with colour|CPI(M)}}

|

|Chandra Kala Pandey

|West Bengal

|19 August 1993

|18 August 2005

|2

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Anandiben Patel

|Gujarat

|3 April 1994

|21 June 1998

|1

{{party name with colour|Bahujan Samaj Party|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Mayawati

|rowspan="3"| Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 1994

|3 June 1995

|rowspan="3"| 3

5 July 2004

|13 May 2007

3 April 2012

|20 July 2017

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}

|60px

|Jayanti Patnaik

|Odisha

|3 April 1996

|3 March 1998

|1

{{party name with colour|Telugu Desam Party}}

|60px

|Jaya Prada

|Andhra Pradesh

|10 April 1996

|9 April 2002

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|60px

|Chandresh Kumari Katoch

|Himachal Pradesh

|10 April 1996

|9 April 2002

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|60px

|Frida Topno

|Odisha

|7 April 1998

|2 April 2002

|1

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Mabel Rebello

|Madhya Pradesh

|30 June 1998

|29 June 2004

|rowspan="2"| 2

Jharkhand

|3 April 2006

|2 April 2012

{{party name with colour|Rashtriya Janata Dal}}

|

|Saroj Dubey

|Bihar

|8 July 1998

|7 July 2004

|1

{{party name with colour|Asom Gana Parishad}}

|60px

|Joyasree Goswami Mahanta

|Assam

|24 August 1999

|14 June 2001

|1

{{party name with colour|Telugu Desam Party}}

|60px

|Vanga Geetha

|Andhra Pradesh

|3 April 2000

|2 April 2006

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Jamuna Devi Barupal

|Rajasthan

|4 April 2000

|3 April 2006

|1

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Gurcharan Singh

|Punjab

|7 June 2001

|4 July 2004

|1

{{party name with color|AIADMK}}

|

|S. G. Indira

|Tamil Nadu

|25 July 2001

|24 July 2007

|1

{{party name with color|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Pramila Bohidar

|Odisha

|3 April 2002

|2 April 2008

|1

{{party name with color|Biju Janata Dal}}

|60px

|Sushree Devi

|Odisha

|3 April 2002

|2 April 2008

|1

{{party name with colour|Telugu Desam Party}}

|

|N. P. Durga

|Andhra Pradesh

|10 April 2002

|9 April 2008

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Alka Balram Kshatriya

|Gujarat

|10 April 2002

|9 April 2014

|2

{{party name with colour|Indian National Lok Dal}}

|

|Sumitra Mahajan

|Haryana

|10 April 2002

|19 January 2007

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Prema Cariappa

|Karnataka

|10 April 2002

|9 April 2008

|1

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Maya Singh

|Madhya Pradesh

|10 April 2002

|23 December 2013

|2

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Prabha Thakur

|Rajasthan

|10 April 2002

|9 April 2014

|2

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Kamla Manhar

|Chhattisgarh

|26 September 2003

|2 April 2006

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Anwara Taimur

|Assam

|3 April 2004

|2 April 2010

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|60px

|Mohsina Kidwai

|Chhattisgarh

|30 June 2004

|29 June 2016

|2

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Samajwadi Party}}

|60px

|Jaya Bachchan

|Uttar Pradesh

|5 July 2004

|Incumbent

|5

{{party name with colour|CPI(M)}}

|

|Brinda Karat

|West Bengal

|19 August 2005

|18 August 2011

|1

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Viplove Thakur

|rowspan="2"| Himachal Pradesh

|3 April 2006

|2 April 2012

|rowspan="2"| 2

10 April 2014

|9 April 2020

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Anusuiya Uikey

|Madhya Pradesh

|3 April 2006

|2 April 2012

|1

{{party name with color|Nationalist Congress Party}}

|60px

|Supriya Sule

|Maharashtra

|18 September 2006

|31 May 2009

|1

{{party name with color|DMK}}

|60px

|Kanimozhi

|Tamil Nadu

|25 July 2007

|23 May 2019

|2

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Renubala Pradhan

|Odisha

|3 April 2008

|2 April 2014

|1

{{party name with colour|DMK}}

|

|Vasanthi Stanley

|Tamil Nadu

|3 April 2008

|2 April 2014

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|T. Ratna Bai

|Andhra Pradesh

|10 April 2008

|9 April 2014

|1

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Kusum Rai

|Uttar Pradesh

|26 November 2008

|25 November 2014

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Naznin Faruque

|Assam

|3 April 2010

|2 April 2016

|1

{{party name with color|CPI(M)}}

|60px

|T. N. Seema

|Kerala

|3 April 2010

|2 April 2016

|1

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Bimla Kashyap Sood

|Madhya Pradesh

|3 April 2010

|2 April 2016

|1

{{party name with color|CPI(M)}}

|

|Jharna Das

|Tripura

|3 April 2010

|2 April 2022

|2

{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Gundu Sudha Rani

|Andhra Pradesh

|22 June 2010

|1 June 2014

|rowspan="2"| 2

Telangana

|2 June 2014

|21 June 2016

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Vijayalaxmi Sadho

|Madhya Pradesh

|30 June 2010

|29 June 2016

|1

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|60px

|Hema Malini

|Karnataka

|4 March 2011

|2 April 2012

|1

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Smriti Irani

|Gujarat

|19 August 2011

|23 May 2019

|2

{{party name with colour|Nationalist Congress Party (Sharadchandra Pawar)}}

|60px

|Vandana Chavan

|Maharashtra

|3 April 2012

|2 April 2024

|1

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| 60px

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Rajani Ashokrao Patil

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Maharashtra

|10 January 2013

|2 April 2018

|rowspan="2"| 2

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|27 September 2021

|Incumbent

{{party name with color|INC}}

|

|Wansuk Syiem

|Meghalaya

|12 April 2013

|12 April 2020

|2

{{party name with colour|Samajwadi Party}}

|

|Kanak Lata Singh

|Uttar Pradesh

|14 December 2013

|4 July 2016

|1

{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|60px

|Sarojini Hembram

|Odisha

|3 April 2014

|2 April 2020

|1

{{party name with colour|AIADMK}}

|60px

|Sasikala Pushpa

|Tamil Nadu

|3 April 2014

|2 April 2020

|1

{{party name with colour|AIADMK}}

|

|Vijila Sathyananth

|Tamil Nadu

|3 April 2014

|2 April 2020

|1

{{party name with colour|Telugu Desam Party}}

|

|Thota Seetharama Lakshmi

|Andhra Pradesh

|10 April 2014

|9 April 2020

|1

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal (United)}}

|

|Kahkashan Perween

|Bihar

|10 April 2014

|9 April 2020

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|60px

|Selja Kumari

|Haryana

|10 April 2014

|9 April 2020

|1

{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| 60px

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Nirmala Sitharaman

|Andhra Pradesh

|26 June 2014

|21 June 2016

|rowspan="2"| 3

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|Karnataka

|1 July 2016

|Incumbent

{{party name with colour|Samajwadi Party}}

|

|Tazeen Fatma

|Uttar Pradesh

|26 November 2014

|24 October 2019

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Manorama Dobriyal Sharma

|Uttarakhand

|26 November 2014

|18 February 2015

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Dola Sen

|West Bengal

|14 March 2015

|Incumbent

|3

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|60px

|Ranee Narah

|Assam

|3 April 2016

|2 April 2022

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Chhaya Verma

|Chhattisgarh

|30 June 2016

|29 June 2022

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Rashtriya Janata Dal}}

|

|Misa Bharti

|Bihar

|8 July 2016

|Incumbent

|2

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Sampatiya Uikey

|Madhya Pradesh

|1 August 2017

|29 June 2022

|1

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Shanta Chhetri

|West Bengal

|19 August 2017

|18 August 2023

|1

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Saroj Pandey

|Chhattisgarh

|3 April 2018

|2 April 2024

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|60px

|Amee Yajnik

|Gujarat

|3 April 2018

|2 April 2024

|1

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Kanta Kardam

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 2018

|2 April 2024

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Shiv Sena (Uddhav Balasaheb Thackeray)}}

|

|Priyanka Chaturvedi

|Maharashtra

|3 April 2020

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Nationalist Congress Party (Sharadchandra Pawar)}}

|

|Fouzia Khan

|Maharashtra

|3 April 2020

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Mamata Mohanta

|Odisha

|3 April 2020

|Incumbent

|1

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Arpita Ghosh

|West Bengal

|3 April 2020

|15 September 2021

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress}}

|60px

|Mausam Noor

|West Bengal

|3 April 2020

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Phulo Devi Netam

|Chhattisgarh

|10 April 2020

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Indu Goswami

|Himachal Pradesh

|10 April 2020

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Ramilaben Bara

|Gujarat

|22 June 2020

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Seema Dwivedi

|Uttar Pradesh

|26 November 2020

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Geeta alias Chandraprabha

|Uttar Pradesh

|26 November 2020

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|DMK}}

|

|Kanimozhi NVN Somu

|Tamil Nadu

|27 September 2021

|Incumbent

|1

{{party name with colour|Trinamool Congress|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| 60px

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Sushmita Dev

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| West Bengal

|27 September 2021

|18 August 2023

|rowspan="2"| 2

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|INC}}

|60px

|Jebi Mather

|Kerala

|3 April 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Sumitra Balmik

|Madhya Pradesh

|30 June 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Kavita Patidar

|Madhya Pradesh

|30 June 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Phangnon Konyak

|Nagaland

|3 April 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Ranjeet Ranjan

|Chhattisgarh

|30 June 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Biju Janata Dal}}

|

|Sulata Deo

|Odisha

|2 July 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Darshana Singh

|Uttar Pradesh

|5 July 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Sangeeta Yadav

|Uttar Pradesh

|5 July 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|

|Kalpana Saini

|Uttarakhand

|5 July 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Jharkhand Mukti Morcha}}

|

|Mahua Maji

|Jharkhand

|8 July 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with color|Aam Aadmi Party}}

|

|Swati Maliwal

|NCT of Delhi

|19 January 2024

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Dharamshila Gupta

|Bihar

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Maya Naroliya

|Madhya Pradesh

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Medha Vishram Kulkarni

|Maharashtra

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|60px

|Sonia Gandhi

|Rajasthan

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Sangeeta Balwant

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|

|Sadhana Singh

|Uttar Pradesh

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with color|All India Trinamool Congress}}

|60px

|Sagarika Ghose

|West Bengal

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with color|All India Trinamool Congress}}

|

|Mamata Bala Thakur

|West Bengal

|3 April 2024

|Incumbent

|1

=Nominated members=

class="wikitable sortable"

!colspan="2"| Party

!class="unsortable"| Portrait

!style="width:14em"| Name

!style="width:10em"| Field

!style="width:8em"| Term start

!style="width:8em"| Term end

!Terms

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Rukmini Devi Arundale

|Arts

|3 April 1952

|2 April 1962

|2

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Shakuntala Paranjpye

|Arts

|3 April 1964

|2 April 1970

|1

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|rowspan="3"| 60px

|rowspan="3"| Maragatham Chandrasekar

|rowspan="3"| Politics

|3 April 1970

|2 April 1976

|rowspan="3"| 3

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=2}}

|3 April 1976

|2 April 1982

27 September 1982

|29 December 1984

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Fathema Ismail

|Social Work

|14 April 1978

|13 April 1984

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Nargis

|Arts

|3 April 1980

|3 May 1981

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Asima Chatterjee

|rowspan="2"| Medicine

|18 February 1982

|13 April 1984

|rowspan="2"| 2

9 May 1984

|8 May 1990

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Ela Bhatt

|Social Work

|12 May 1986

|26 September 1988

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Amrita Pritam

|Literature

|12 May 1986

|11 May 1992

|1

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|

|Anwara Taimur

|Politics

|25 November 1988

|8 May 1990

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Vyjayanthimala

|Arts

|27 August 1993

|26 August 1999

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Nirmala Deshpande

|rowspan="2"| Social Work

|27 August 1997

|26 August 1999

|rowspan="2"| 2

24 June 2004

|1 May 2008

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Shabana Azmi

|Arts

|27 August 1997

|26 August 2003

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|P. Selvie Das

|Education

|27 August 1997

|26 August 2003

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Lata Mangeshkar

|Arts

|22 November 1999

|21 November 2005

|1

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|60px

|Hema Malini

|Arts

|27 August 2003

|26 August 2009

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Kapila Vatsyayan

|rowspan="2"| Arts

|16 February 2006

|24 March 2006

|rowspan="2"| 2

10 April 2007

|15 February 2012

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Shobhana Bhartia

|Literature

|16 February 2006

|15 February 2012

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|B. Jayashree

|Arts

|22 March 2010

|21 March 2016

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|

|Anu Aga

|Social Work

|27 April 2012

|26 April 2018

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Rekha

|Arts

|27 April 2012

|26 April 2018

|1

{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Mary Kom

|Sports

|25 April 2016

|24 April 2022

|1

{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Roopa Ganguly

|Arts

|4 October 2016

|24 April 2022

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|60px

|Sonal Mansingh

|Nominated

|14 July 2018

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|P. T. Usha

|Sports

|7 July 2022

|Incumbent

|1

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|{{party name with colour|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|60px

|Sudha Murthy

|Social Work

|8 March 2024

|Incumbent

|1

=Longest serving MPs=

Lok Sabha

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:90%"

!style="width:14em"| Name

!colspan="2"| Party

!style="width:13em"| Constituency(s)

!style="width:5em"| Term start

!style="width:5em"| Term end

!Terms

!Years served

!style="width:13em"| Highest position held

rowspan="4"| Indrajit Gupta

|{{party name with color|Communist Party of India|rowspan=4}}

|Calcutta South West

|1960

|1967

|rowspan="4" style="width:2em"| 11

|rowspan="4"| 37

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister

Alipore

|1967

|1977

Basirhat

|1980

|1989

Midnapore

|1989

|2001

rowspan="5"| Atal Bihari Vajpayee

|{{party name with color|Bharatiya Jana Sangh|shortname=BJS|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="2"| Balrampur

|1957

|1962

|rowspan="5"| 10

|rowspan="5"| 37

|rowspan="5"| Prime Minister

1967

|1971

Gwalior

|1971

|1977

{{party name with color|Janata Party}}

|New Delhi

|1977

|1984

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Lucknow

|1991

|2009

rowspan="4"| P. M. Sayeed

|{{party name with color|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|rowspan="4"| Lakshadweep

|1967

|1971

|rowspan="4"| 10

|rowspan="4"| 37

|rowspan="4"| Deputy Speaker

{{party name with color|INC}}

|1971

|1980

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (U)}}

|1980

|1981

{{party name with color|INC}}

|1981

|2004

rowspan="3"| Somnath Chatterjee

|{{party name with color|CPI(M)|rowspan=3}}

|Bardhaman

|1971

|1977

|rowspan="3"| 10

|rowspan="3"| 37

|rowspan="3"| Speaker

Jadavpur

|1977

|1984

Bolpur

|1985

|2009

rowspan="2"| Kamal Nath

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Chhindwara

|1980

|1996

|rowspan="2"| 9

|rowspan="2"| 36

|rowspan="2"| Cabinet Minister

1998

|2018

Basudeb Acharia

|{{party name with color|CPI(M)}}

|Bankura

|1980

|2014

|9

|34

|Member of Parliament

Manikrao Hodlya Gavit

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Nandurbar

|1981

|2014

|9

|33

|Minister of State

Khagapati Pradhani

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Nowrangpur

|1967

|1999

|9

|32

|Member of Parliament

rowspan="2"| Giridhar Gamang

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Koraput

|1972

|1999

|rowspan="2"| 9

|rowspan="2"| 31

|rowspan="2"| Minister of State (I/C)

2004

|2009

rowspan="8"| Ram Vilas Paswan

|{{party name with color|Janata Party}}

|rowspan="3"| Hajipur

|1977

|1980

|rowspan="8"| 9

|rowspan="8"| 31

|rowspan="8"| Cabinet Minister

{{party name with color|Janata Party (Secular)}}

|1980

|1984

{{party name with color|Janata Dal|rowspan=3}}

|1989

|1991

Rosera

|1991

|1996

rowspan="4"| Hajipur

|1996

|1998

{{party name with color|Janata Dal (United)}}

|1999

|2000

{{party name with color|Lok Janshakti Party|rowspan=2}}

|2000

|2009

2014

|2019

rowspan="7"| George Fernandes

|{{party name with color|Samyukta Socialist Party}}

|Bombay South

|1967

|1971

|rowspan="7"| 9

|rowspan="7"| 30

|rowspan="7"| Cabinet Minister

{{party name with color|Janata Party}}

|rowspan="3"| Muzaffarpur

|1977

|1980

{{party name with color|Janata Party (Secular)}}

|1980

|1984

{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|1989

|1996

{{party name with color|Samata Party|shortname=SAP}}

|rowspan="2"| Nalanda

|1996

|1999

{{party name with color|Janata Dal (United)|rowspan=2}}

|1999

|2004

Muzaffarpur

|2004

|2009

rowspan="3"| Madhavrao Scindia

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=3}}

|Guna

|1971

|1984

|rowspan="3"| 9

|rowspan="3"| 30

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

Gwalior

|1984

|1999

Guna

|1999

|2001

rowspan="7"| P. A. Sangma

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="7"| Tura

|1977

|1980

|rowspan="7"| 9

|rowspan="7"| 29

|rowspan="7"| Speaker

1980

|1988

1991

|1999

{{party name with color|Nationalist Congress Party}}

|1999

|2004

{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress}}

|2004

|2005

{{party name with color|Nationalist Congress Party}}

|2005

|2008

{{party name with color|National People's Party (India)}}

|2014

|2016

rowspan="3"| Frank Anthony

|{{party name with color|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|rowspan="3"| Nominated (Anglo{{ndash}}Indian)

|1952

|1977

|rowspan="3"| 8

|rowspan="3"| 40

|rowspan="3"| Member of Parliament

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|1980

|1989

1991

|1993

rowspan="6"| Vidya Charan Shukla

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=4}}

|Balodabazar

|1957

|1962

|rowspan="6"| 8

|rowspan="6"| 35

|rowspan="6"| Cabinet Minister

Mahasamund

|1962

|1971

Raipur

|1971

|1977

rowspan="2"| Mahasamund

|1980

|1989

{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|1989

|1991

{{party name with color|INC}}

|Raipur

|1991

|1996

rowspan="4"| Arjun Charan Sethi

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="4"| Bhadrak

|1971

|1977

|rowspan="4"| 8

|rowspan="4"| 35

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister

1980

|1984

{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|1991

|1996

{{party name with color|Biju Janata Dal}}

|1998

|2019

rowspan="4"| Jagjivan Ram

|{{party name with color|rowspan=2|INC}}

|Shahabad South

|1952

|1957

|rowspan="4"| 8

|rowspan="4"| 34

|rowspan="4"| Deputy Prime Minister

rowspan="3"| Sasaram

|1957

|1977

{{party name with color|Janata Party}}

|1977

|1981

{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (Jagjivan)}}

|1981

|1986

rowspan="7"| Buta Singh

|{{party name with color|Akali Dal|shortname=AKD}}

|Moga

|1962

|1967

|rowspan="7"| 8

|rowspan="7"| 33

|rowspan="7"| Cabinet Minister

{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=4}}

|rowspan="2"| Ropar

|1967

|1977

1980

|1984

rowspan="4"| Jalore

|1984

|1989

1991

|1996

{{party name with color|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|1998

|1999

{{party name with color|INC}}

|1999

|2004

rowspan="4"| Balasaheb Vikhe Patil

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Kopargaon

|1971

|1991

|rowspan="4"| 8

|rowspan="4"| 31

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister

{{party name with color|Shiv Sena|rowspan=2}}

|Ahmednagar

|1998

|1999

rowspan="2"| Kopargaon

|1999

|2004

{{party name with color|INC}}

|2004

|2009

rowspan="3"| C. K. Jaffer Sharief

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=3}}

|Kanakpura

|1971

|1977

|rowspan="3"| 8

|rowspan="3"| 31

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

rowspan="2"| Bangalore North

|1977

|1996

1998

|2004

rowspan="7" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Maneka Gandhi

|{{party name with color|Janata Dal|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="4"| Pilibhit

|1989

|1991

|rowspan="7"| 8

|rowspan="7"| 30

|rowspan="7"| Cabinet Minister

1996

|1998

{{party name with color|Independent politician|shortname=IND}}

|1998

|2004

{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=4}}

|2004

|2009

Aonla

|2009

|2014

Pilibhit

|2014

|2019

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|Sultanpur

|2019

|Incumbent

Hannan Mollah

|{{party name with color|CPI(M)}}

|Uluberia

|1980

|2009

|8

|{{age|14 Jan 1980|16 May 2009}}

|Member of Parliament

Sanat Kumar Mandal

|{{party name with color|Revolutionary Socialist Party (India)}}

|Joynagar

|1980

|2009

|8

|{{age|14 Jan 1980|16 May 2009}}

|Member of Parliament

rowspan="3"| Shibu Soren

|{{party name with color|Jharkhand Mukti Morcha|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Dumka

|1980

|1984

|rowspan="3"| 8

|rowspan="3"| 29

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

1989

|1998

2002

|2019

Sumitra Mahajan

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Indore

|1989

|2019

|8

|{{age|2 Dec 1989|16 May 2019}}

|Speaker

rowspan="2"| Manabendra Shah

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|rowspan="2"| Tehri Garhwal

|1957

|1971

|rowspan="2"| 8

|rowspan="2"| 28

|rowspan="2"| Member of Parliament

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|1991

|2007

rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Santosh Gangwar

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Bareilly

|1989

|2009

|rowspan="2"| 8

|rowspan="2"| 28

|rowspan="2"| Minister of State (I/C)

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|2014

|Incumbent

rowspan="3"| Laxminarayan Pandey

|{{party name with color|Bharatiya Jana Sangh|shortname=BJS}}

|rowspan="3"| Mandsaur

|1971

|1977

|rowspan="3"| 8

|rowspan="3"| 27

|rowspan="3"| Member of Parliament

{{party name with color|Janata Party}}

|1977

|1980

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|1989

|2009

Amar Roy Pradhan

|{{party name with color|All India Forward Bloc}}

|Cooch Behar

|1977

|2004

|8

|27

|Member of Parliament

rowspan="3"| Kariya Munda

|{{party name with color|Janata Party}}

|rowspan="3"| Khunti

|1977

|1980

|rowspan="3"| 8

|rowspan="3"| 27

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|1989

|2004

2009

|2019

rowspan="2"| Manoranjan Bhakta

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Andaman and Nicobar Islands

|1977

|1999

|rowspan="2"| 8

|rowspan="2"| 27

|rowspan="2"| Member of Parliament

2004

|2009

A. B. A. Ghani Khan Choudhury

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Malda

|1980

|2006

|8

|26

|Cabinet Minister

rowspan="3"| Chandra Shekhar

|{{party name with color|Janata Party}}

|rowspan="3"| Ballia

|1977

|1984

|rowspan="3"| 8

|rowspan="3"| 24

|rowspan="3"| Prime Minister

{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|1989

|1990

{{party name with color|Samajwadi Janata Party (Rashtriya)}}

|1990

|2007

rowspan="4"| Vijaya Raje Scindia

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|Guna

|1957

|1962

|rowspan="4"| 8

|rowspan="4"| 23

|rowspan="4"| Member of Parliament

Gwalior

|1962

|1967

{{party name with color|Bharatiya Jana Sangh|shortname=BJS}}

|Bhind

|1971

|1977

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|Guna

|1989

|1999

Tridib Chaudhuri

|{{party name with color|Revolutionary Socialist Party (India)}}

|Berhampore

|1952

|1984

|7

|32

|Member of Parliament

rowspan="3" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Kodikunnil Suresh

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="2"| Adoor

|1989

|1998

|rowspan="3"| 7

|rowspan="3"| 31

|rowspan="3"| Minister of State

1999

|2004

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|Mavelikara

|2009

|Incumbent

rowspan="3"| L. K. Advani

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=3}}

|New Delhi

|1989

|1991

|rowspan="3"| 7

|rowspan="3"| 27

|rowspan="3"| Deputy Prime Minister

rowspan="2"| Gandhinagar

|1991

|1996

1998

|2019

rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightyellow"| Virendra Kumar Khatik

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|Sagar

|1996

|2009

|rowspan="2"| 7

|rowspan="2"| 27

|rowspan="2"| Cabinet Minister

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|Tikamgarh

|2009

|Incumbent

rowspan="3"| E. Ahamed

|{{party name with color|Indian Union Muslim League|rowspan=3}}

|Manjeri

|1991

|2004

|rowspan="3"| 7

|rowspan="3"| 25

|rowspan="3"| Minister of State

Ponnani

|2004

|2009

Malappuram

|2009

|2017

Shivraj Patil

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Latur

|1980

|2004

|7

|24

|Speaker

Anil Basu

|{{party name with color|CPI(M)}}

|Arambagh

|1984

|2009

|7

|24

|Member of Parliament

rowspan="3"| P. Chidambaram

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|rowspan="3"| Sivaganga

|1984

|1996

|rowspan="3"| 7

|rowspan="3"| 24

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

{{party name with color|Tamil Maanila Congress (Moopanar)}}

|1996

|1999

{{party name with color|INC}}

|2004

|2014

rowspan="2"| Ramesh Bais

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Raipur

|1989

|1991

|rowspan="2"| 7

|rowspan="2"| 24

|rowspan="2"| Minister of State (I/C)

1996

|2019

rowspan="4"| Mamata Banerjee

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|Jadavpur

|1984

|1989

|rowspan="4"| 7

|rowspan="4"| 23

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister

rowspan="2"| Calcutta South

|1991

|1998

{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress|rowspan=2}}

|1998

|2009

Kolkata Dakshin

|2009

|2011

rowspan="2"| G. M. Banatwala

|{{party name with color|Indian Union Muslim League|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Ponnani

|1977

|1991

|rowspan="2"| 7

|rowspan="2"| 22

|rowspan="2"| Member of Parliament

1996

|2004

Somjibhai Damor

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Dahod

|1977

|1999

|7

|{{age|18 Jan 1977|10 Oct 1999}}

|Member of Parliament

rowspan="6"| Mohanbhai Sanjibhai Delkar

|{{party name with color|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|rowspan="6"| Dadra and Nagar Haveli

|1989

|1991

|rowspan="6"| 7

|rowspan="6"| 20

|rowspan="6"| Member of Parliament

{{party name with color|INC}}

|1991

|1998

{{party name with color|BJP}}

|1998

|1999

{{party name with color|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|1999

|2004

{{party name with color|Bharatiya Navshakti Party}}

|2004

|2009

{{party name with color|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|2019

|2021

Rajya Sabha

class="wikitable sortable"

!style="width:14em"| Name

!colspan="2"| Party

!style="width:10em"| State(s)

!style="width:8em"| Term start

!style="width:8em"| Term end

!Terms

!Years served

!style="width:13em"| Highest position held

rowspan="3"| Najma Heptulla

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Maharashtra

|5 July 1980

|4 July 2004

|rowspan="3"| 6

|rowspan="3"| 34

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|Rajasthan

|5 July 2004

|4 July 2010

Madhya Pradesh

|3 April 2012

|20 August 2016

rowspan="2"| Manmohan Singh

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|Assam

|1 October 1991

|14 June 2009

|rowspan="2"| 6

|rowspan="2"| 32

|rowspan="2"| Prime Minister

Rajasthan

|20 August 2019

|3 April 2024

rowspan="4"| Mahendra Prasad

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Bihar

|31 March 1985

|6 July 1992

|rowspan="4"| 7

|rowspan="4"| 29

|rowspan="4"| Member of Parliament

{{party name with color|Independent politician|shortname=IND|rowspan=2}}

|Nominated

|27 August 1993

|24 November 1994

rowspan="2"| Bihar

|3 April 2000

|2 April 2006

{{party name with color|Janata Dal (United)}}

|3 April 2006

|27 December 2021

rowspan="5"| Ram Jethmalani

|{{party name with color|Janata Dal}}

|Karnataka

|3 April 1998

|2 April 1994

|rowspan="5"| 6

|rowspan="5"| 20

|rowspan="5"| Cabinet Minister

{{party name with color|Independent politician|shortname=IND|rowspan=3}}

|Maharashtra

|3 April 1994

|2 April 2006

Nominated

|10 April 2006

|28 August 2009

Rajasthan

|5 July 2010

|4 July 2016

{{party name with color|Rashtriya Janata Dal}}

|Bihar

|8 July 2016

|8 September 2019

=Female diplomats, India=

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="font-size:93%"

!Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name

!style="width:45em"| Designation

!Tenure

rowspan="4"| 65px

|rowspan="4"| {{center|Nirupama Rao}}

|{{flagicon|Peru}} Ambassador of India to Peru, with concurrent accredition as:
{{flagicon|Bolivia}} Ambassador of India to Bolivia

|1995{{ndash}}1998

{{flagicon|Sri Lanka}} High Commissioner of India to Sri Lanka

|2004{{ndash}}2006

{{flagicon|China}} Ambassador of India to China

|2006{{ndash}}2009

{{flagicon|US}} Ambassador of India to the United States

|2011{{ndash}}2013

colspan="4"|
rowspan="2"| 65px

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Neelam Deo}}

|{{flagicon|Denmark}} Ambassador of India to Denmark

|1996{{ndash}}1999

{{flagicon|Ivory Coast}} Ambassador of India to Cote d'Ivoire, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Sierra Leone}} High Commissioner of India to Sierre Leone
{{flagicon|Niger}} Ambassador of India to Niger
{{flagicon|Guinea}} Ambassador of India to Guinea

|1999{{ndash}}2002

colspan="4"|
65px

|{{center|Lakshmi Puri}}

|{{flagicon|Hungary}} Ambassador of India to Hungary, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Ambassador of India to Bosnia and Herzegovina

|1999{{Ndash}}2002

colspan="4"|
rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Veena Sikri}}

|{{flagicon|Malaysia}} High Commissioner of India to Malaysia

|2000{{ndash}}2003

{{flagicon|Bangladesh}} High Commissioner of India to Bangladesh

|2003{{ndash}}2006

colspan="4"|
rowspan="3"|

|rowspan="3"| {{center|Chitra Narayanan}}

|{{flagicon|Sweden}} Ambassador of India to Sweden, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Latvia}} Ambassador of India to Latvia

|2001{{ndash}}2004

{{flagicon|Turkey}} Ambassador of India to Turkey

|2004{{ndash}}2008

{{flagicon|Switzerland}} Ambassador of India to Switzerland, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Liechtenstein}} Ambassador of India to Liechtenstein
{{flagicon|Holy See}} Ambassador of India to the Holy See

|2008{{ndash}}2013

colspan="4"|
rowspan="3"|

|rowspan="3"| {{center|Sushmita Gongulee Thomas}}

|{{flagicon|Ivory Coast}} Ambassador of India to Cote d'Ivoire, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Liberia}} Ambassador of India to Liberia
{{flagicon|Sierra Leone}} High Commissioner of India to Sierra Leone

|2002{{ndash}}2004

{{flagicon|Chile}} Ambassador of India to Chile

|2004{{ndash}}2008

{{flagicon|Turkey}} Ambassador of India to Turkey

|2011{{ndash}}2014

colspan="4"|
rowspan="2"| 65px

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Meera Shankar}}

|{{flagicon|Germany}} Ambassador of India to Germany

|2005{{ndash}}2009

{{flagicon|US}} Ambassador of India to the United States

|2009{{ndash}}2011

colspan="4"|
rowspan="2"| 65px

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Sujatha Singh}}

|{{flagicon|Australia}} High Commissioner of India to Australia

|2007{{ndash}}2011

{{flagicon|Germany}} Ambassador of India to Germany

|2011{{ndash}}2013

colspan="4"|
rowspan="2"| 65px

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Sujata Mehta}}

|{{flagicon|Spain}} Ambassador of India to Spain, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Andorra}} Ambassador of India to Andorra

|2007{{ndash}}2011

{{flagicon|United Nations}} Ambassador and Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations Conference on Disarmament

|2011{{ndash}}2013

colspan="4"|
rowspan="3"| 65px

|rowspan="3"| {{center|Ruchi Ghanashyam}}

|{{flagicon|Ghana}} High Commissioner of India to Ghana, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Burkina Faso}} Ambassador of India to Burkina Faso
{{flagicon|Sierra Leone}} High Commissioner of India to Sierra Leone

|2008{{ndash}}2011

{{flagicon|South Africa}} High Commissioner of India to South Africa, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Lesotho}} High Commissioner of India to Lesotho

|2015{{ndash}}2017

{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} High Commissioner of India to the United Kingdom

|2018{{ndash}}2020

colspan="4"|
rowspan="3"| 65px

|rowspan="3"| {{center|Shamma Jain}}

|{{flagicon|Ivory Coast}} Ambassador of India to Cote d'Ivoire, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Guinea}} Ambassador of India to Guinea
{{flagicon|Sierra Leone}} High Commissioner of India to Sierre Leone

|2008{{ndash}}2011

{{flagicon|Panama}} Ambassador of India to Panama, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Costa Rica}} Ambassador of India to Costa Rica

|2014{{ndash}}2017

{{flagicon|Greece}} Ambassador of India to Greece

|2017{{ndash}}2019

colspan="4"|
rowspan="3"| 65px

|rowspan="3"| {{center|Monika Kapil Mohta}}

|{{flagicon|Poland}} Ambassador of India to Poland, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Lithuania}} Ambassador of India to Lithuania

|2011{{ndash}}2016

{{flagicon|Sweden}} Ambassador of India to Sweden, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Latvia}} Ambassador of India to Latvia

|2016{{ndash}}2020

{{flagicon|Switzerland}} Ambassador of India to Switzerland, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Liechtenstein}} Ambassador of India to Liechtenstein

|2020{{ndash}}2022

colspan="4"|
rowspan="3" bgcolor="lightblue"| 65px

|rowspan="3" bgcolor="lightblue"| {{center|Nagma Mallick}}

|{{flagicon|Tunisia}} Ambassador of India to Tunisia

|2012{{ndash}}2015

{{flagicon|Brunei}} High Commissioner of India to Brunei Darussalam

|2015{{ndash}}2018

bgcolor="lightblue"| {{flagicon|Poland}} Ambassador of India to Poland, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Lithuania}} Ambassador of India to Lithuania

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 2021{{ndash}}present

colspan="4"|
65px

|{{center|Preeti Saran}}

|{{flagicon|Vietnam}} Ambassador of India to Vietnam

|2013{{ndash}}2016

colspan="4"|
rowspan="4" bgcolor="lightblue"| 65px

|rowspan="4" bgcolor="lightblue"| {{center|Ruchira Kamboj}}

|{{flagicon|UNESCO}} Permanent Representative of India to the UNESCO

|2014{{ndash}}2017

{{flagicon|South Africa}} High Commissioner of India to South Africa

|2017{{Ndash}}2019

{{flagicon|Bhutan}} Ambassador of India to Bhutan

|2019{{ndash}}2022

bgcolor="lightblue"| {{flagicon|UN}} Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 2022{{ndash}}present

colspan="4"|
rowspan="2"| 65px

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Suchitra Durai}}

|{{flagicon|Kenya}} High Commissioner of India to Kenya, with concurrent accreditation to:
{{flagicon|Somalia}} Ambassador of India to Somalia
{{flagicon|Eritrea}} Ambassador of India to Eritrea

|2015{{ndash}}2018

{{flagicon|Thailand}} Ambassador of India to Thailand

|2018{{ndash}}2023

colspan="4"|
rowspan="2"| 65px

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Riva Ganguly Das}}

|{{flagicon|Romania}} Ambassador of India to Romania, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Albania}} Ambassador of India to Albania
{{flagicon|Moldova}} Ambassador of India to Moldova

|2015{{ndash}}2019

{{flagicon|Bangladesh}} High Commissioner of India to Bangladesh

|2019{{ndash}}2020

colspan="4"|
bgcolor="lightblue"

|65px

|{{center|Mukta Dutta Tomar}}

|{{flagicon|GER}} Ambassador of India to Germany

|2017{{ndash}}present

colspan="4"|
rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Gaitri Issar Kumar}}

|{{flagicon|Belgium}} Ambassador of India to Belgium, with concurrent accreditation as:
{{flagicon|Luxembourg}} Ambassador of India to Luxembourg

|2017{{ndash}}2020

{{flagicon|UK}} High Commissioner of India to the United Kingdom

|2020{{ndash}}2022

colspan="4"|
bgcolor="lightblue"

|

|{{center|Devyani Khobragade}}

|{{flagicon|Cambodia}} Ambassador of India to Cambodia

|2020{{ndash}}present

colspan="4"|
bgcolor="lightblue"

|

|{{center|Nilakshi Saha Sinha}}

|{{flagicon|Armenia}} Ambassador of India to Armenia, with concurrent accredition as:
{{flagicon|Georgia}} Ambassador of India to Georgia

|2023{{ndash}}present

=Judges, post career=

List

;Notes

:{{note label|†|†|†}} Died in office

:{{note label|§|§|§}} Resigned

class="sortable wikitable style="font-size:93%"
{{abbr|No.|Number}}

! class="sortable" style="width:16em"|Name
(birth–death)

! Lifespan

! Date of appointment

! Date of retirement

! style="width:8em"| Term length

! style="width:9em" |Parent High Court

! Immediate prior position held

! style="width:10em" |Appointer
(President of India)

1

|Sir Fazl Ali

|1886{{ndash}}1959

|26 January 1950

|30 May 1952

|{{ayd|26 Jan 1950|30 May 1952}}

|Patna

|Judge, Federal Court of India

|rowspan="15" align="center"| Rajendra Prasad

2

|N. Chandrasekhara Aiyar

|

|23 September 1950

|24 January 1953

|{{ayd|23 Sep 1950|24 Jan 1953}}

|Madras

|Judge, Madras High Court

3

|Vivian Bose

|1891{{ndash}}1983

|5 March 1951

|8 March 1956

|{{ayd|5 Mar 1951|8 Mar 1956}}

|Nagpur High Court

|Chief Justice, Nagpur High Court

4

|Ghulam Hasan

|

|8 September 1952

|5 November 1954{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|{{ayd|8 Sep 1952|5 Nov 1954}}

|Allahabad

|Judge, Allahabad High Court

5

|Natwarlal H. Bhagwati

|1894{{ndash}}1970

|8 September 1952

|6 June 1959

|{{ayd|8 Sep 1952|6 Jun 1959}}

|Bombay

|Judge, Bombay High Court

6

|B. Jagannadha Das

|

|9 March 1953

|26 July 1958

|{{ayd|9 March 1953|26 July 1958}}

|Orissa

|Chief Justice, Orissa High Court

7

|T. L. Venkatarama Aiyyar

|

|4 January 1954

|24 November 1958

|{{ayd|4 January 1954|24 November 1958}}

|Madras

|Judge, Madras High Court

8

|Syed Jaffer Imam

|

|10 January 1955

|31 January 1964{{ref label|§|§|§}}

|{{ayd|10 Jan 1955|31 Jan 1964}}

|Patna

|Chief Justice, Patna High Court

9

|Sudhansu Kumar Das

|

|30 April 1956

|2 September 1963

|{{ayd|30 Apr 1956|2 Sep 1963}}

|Patna

|Chief Justice, Patna High Court

10

|P. Govinda Menon

|

|1 September 1956

|16 October 1957{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|{{ayd|1 Sep 1956|16 Oct 1957}}

|Madras

|Chief Justice, Madras High Court

11

|Jivanlal Kapur

|

|14 January 1957

|12 December 1962

|{{ayd|14 Jan 1957|12 Dec 1962}}

|Punjab

|Judge, Punjab High Court

12

|Kulada Charan Das Gupta

|1900{{ndash}}1987

|24 August 1959

|2 January 1965

|{{ayd|24 Aug 1959|2 Jan 1965}}

|Calcutta

|Chief Justice, Calcutta High Court

13

|Raghubar Dayal

|

|27 July 1960

|25 October 1965

|{{ayd|27 Jul 1960|25 Oct 1965}}

|Allahabad

|Judge, Allahabad High Court

14

|N. Rajagopala Ayyangar

|

|27 July 1960

|14 December 1964

|{{ayd|27 Jul 1960|14 Dec 1964}}

|Madras

|Puisne Judge, Madras High Court

15

|Janardan Raghunath Mudholkar

|

|3 October 1960

|3 July 1966{{ref label|§|§|§}}

|{{ayd|3 Oct 1960|3 Jul 1966}}

|Bombay

|Acting Chief Justice, Bombay High Court

16

|R. S. Bachawat

|

|7 September 1964

|31 July 1969

|{{ayd|7 Sep 1964|31 Jul 1969}}

|Calcutta

|Judge, Calcutta High Court

|rowspan="7" align="center"| Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan

17

|V. Ramaswami

|

|4 January 1965

|29 October 1969

|{{ayd|4 Jan 1965|29 Oct 1969}}

|Patna

|Chief Justice, Patna High Court

18

|Penmetsa Satyanarayana Raju

|1908{{ndash}}1966

|20 October 1965

|20 April 1966{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|{{ayd|20 Oct 1965|20 Apr 1966}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Chief Justice, Andhra Pradesh High Court

19

|Jaishanker Manilal Shelat

|1908{{ndash}}1985

|24 February 1966

|30 April 1973{{ref label|§|§|§}}

|{{ayd|24 Feb 1966|30 Apr 1973}}

|Gujarat

|Chief Justice, Gujarat High Court

20

|Vashishtha Bhargava

|

|8 August 1966

|4 February 1971

|{{ayd|8 Aug 1966|4 Feb 1971}}

|Allahabad

|Chief Justice, Allahabad High Court

21

|G. K. Mitter

|

|29 August 1966

|23 September 1971

|{{ayd|29 Aug 1966|23 Sep 1971}}

|Calcutta

|Judge, Calcutta High Court

22

|C. A. Vaidyialingam

|

|10 October 1966

|29 June 1972

|{{ayd|10 Oct 1966|29 Jun 1972}}

|Madras

|Judge, Kerala High Court

23

|K. S. Hegde

|1909{{ndash}}1990

|17 July 1967

|30 April 1973{{ref label|§|§|§}}

|{{ayd|17 Jul 1967|30 Apr 1973}}

|Mysore

|Chief Justice, Delhi High Court

|rowspan="2" align="center"| Zakir Husain

24

|A. N. Grover

|1912{{ndash}}1993

|11 February 1968

|31 May 1973{{ref label|§|§|§}}

|{{ayd|11 Feb 1968|31 May 1973}}

|Punjab and Haryana

|Judge, Punjab and Haryana High Court

25

|Pingle Jaganmohan Reddy

|1910{{ndash}}1999

|1 August 1969

|22 January 1975

|{{ayd|1 Aug 1969|22 Jan 1975}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Chief Justice, Andhra Pradesh High Court

|rowspan="2" align="center"| Mohammad Hidayatullah
{{small|(Acting)}}

26

|Inder Dev Dua

|

|1 August 1969

|3 October 1972

|{{ayd|1 Aug 1969|3 Oct 1972}}

|Punjab

|Chief Justice, Delhi High Court

27

|Subimal Chandra Roy

|1912{{ndash}}1971

|19 July 1971

|12 November 1971{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|{{ayd|19 Jul 1971|12 Nov 1971}}

|Bar Council

|Designated Senior Advocate

|rowspan="10" align="center"| V. V. Giri

28

|D. G. Palekar

|

|19 July 1971

|3 September 1974

|{{ayd|19 Jul 1971|3 Sep 1974}}

|Bombay

|Judge, Bombay High Court

29

|Hans Raj Khanna

|1912{{ndash}}2008

|22 September 1971

|12 March 1977{{ref label|§|§|§}}

|{{ayd|22 Sep 1971|12 Mar 1977}}

|Punjab

|Chief Justice, Delhi High Court

30

|K. K. Mathew

|1911{{ndash}}1992

|4 October 1971

|2 January 1976

|{{ayd|4 October 1971|2 January 1976}}

|Kerala

|Judge, Kerala High Court

31

|S. N. Dwivedi

|

|14 August 1972

|8 December 1974{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|{{ayd|14 Aug 1972|8 Dec 1974}}

|Allahabad

|Judge, Allahabad High Court

32

|A. K. Mukherjea

|1915{{ndash}}1973

|14 August 1972

|23 October 1973{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|{{ayd|14 Aug 1972|23 Oct 1973}}

|Calcutta

|Judge, Calcutta High Court

33

|A. Alagiriswami

|

|17 October 1972

|16 October 1975

|{{ayd|17 Oct 1972|16 Oct 1975}}

|Madras

|Judge, Madras High Court

34

|V. R. Krishna Iyer

|1915{{ndash}}2014

|17 July 1973

|14 November 1980

|{{ayd|17 Jul 1973|14 Nov 1980}}

|Kerala

|Judge, Kerala High Court

35

|Parbati Kumar Goswami

|1913{{ndash}}1992

|10 September 1973

|31 December 1977

|{{ayd|10 Sep 1973|31 Dec 1977}}

|Assam and Nagaland

|Chief Justice, Assam and Nagaland High Court

36

|Ranjit Singh Sarkaria

|1916{{ndash}}2007

|17 September 1973

|15 January 1981

|{{ayd|17 Sep 1973|15 Jan 1981}}

|Punjab and Haryana

|Puisne Judge, Punjab and Haryana High Court

37

|Alak Chandra Gupta

|

|2 September 1974

|31 December 1981

|{{ayd|2 Sep 1974|31 Dec 1981}}

|Calcutta

|Judge, Calcutta High Court

|rowspan="6" align="center"| Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed

38

|N. L. Untwalia

|

|3 October 1974

|31 July 1980

|{{ayd|3 Oct 1974|31 Jul 1980}}

|Patna

|Chief Justice, Patna High Court

39

|Syed Murtaza Fazl Ali

|1920{{ndash}}1985

|2 April 1975

|20 August 1985

|{{ayd|2 Apr 1975|20 Aug 1985}}

|Jammu and Kashmir

|Chief Justice, Jammu and Kashmir High Court

40

|P. N. Shingal

|

|6 November 1975

|14 October 1980

|{{ayd|6 Nov 1975|14 Oct 1980}}

|Rajasthan

|Chief Justice, Rajasthan High Court

41

|Jaswant Singh

|

|23 January 1976

|24 January 1979

|{{ayd|23 Jan 1976|24 Jan 1979}}

|Jammu and Kashmir

|Chief Justice, Jammu and Kashmir High Court

42

|Palapatti Sadaya Goundar Kailasam

|1915{{ndash}}1986

|3 January 1977

|11 September 1980

|{{ayd|3 Jan 1977|11 Sep 1980}}

|Madras

|Chief Justice, Madras High Court

43

|V. D. Tulzapurkar

|1921{{ndash}}2004

|30 September 1977

|8 March 1986

|{{ayd|30 Sep 1977|8 Mar 1986}}

|Bombay

|Judge, Bombay High Court

|rowspan="10" align="center"| Neelam Sanjiva Reddy

44

|D. A. Desai

|

|30 September 1977

|8 May 1985

|{{ayd|30 Sep 1977|8 May 1985}}

|Gujarat

|Judge, Gujarat High Court

45

|A. D. Koshal

|

|17 July 1978

|6 March 1982

|{{ayd|17 Jul 1978|6 Mar 1982}}

|Punjab and Haryana

|Chief Justice, Punjab and Haryana High Court

46

|O. Chinnappa Reddy

|1922{{ndash}}2013

|17 July 1978

|24 September 1987

|{{ayd|17 Jul 1978|24 Sep 1987}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Judge, Andhra Pradesh High Court

47

|Ananda Prakash Sen

|

|17 July 1978

|19 September 1988

|{{ayd|17 Jul 1978|19 Sep 1988}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|Chief Justice, Madhya Pradesh High Court

48

|Baharul Islam

|1918{{ndash}}1993

|4 December 1980

|12 January 1983

|{{ayd|4 Dec 1980|12 Jan 1983}}

|Gauhati

|Chief Justice, Gauhati High Court

49

|Appajee Vardarajan

|1920{{ndash}}2009

|10 December 1980

|16 August 1985

|{{ayd|10 Dec 1980|16 Aug 1985}}

|Madras

|Judge, Madras High Court

50

|Amarendra Nath Sen

|born 1920

|28 January 1981

|30 September 1985

|{{ayd|28 Jan 1981|30 Sep 1985}}

|Calcutta

|Chief Justice, Calcutta High Court

51

|V. Balakrishna Eradi

|1922{{ndash}}2010

|30 January 1981

|18 June 1987

|{{ayd|30 Jan 1981|18 Jun 1987}}

|Kerala

|Chief Justice, Kerala High Court

52

|R. B. Misra

|

|30 January 1981

|14 June 1986

|{{ayd|30 Jan 1981|14 Jun 1986}}

|Allahabad

|Judge, Allahabad High Court

53

|Dinshah Pirosha Madon

|

|15 March 1983

|6 April 1986

|{{ayd|15 Mar 1983|6 Apr 1986}}

|Bombay

|Chief Justice, Bombay High Court

|rowspan="8" align="center"| Zail Singh

54

|Manharlal Pranlal Thakkar

|

|15 March 1983

|3 November 1988

|{{ayd|15 Mar 1983|3 Nov 1988}}

|Gujarat

|Chief Justice, Gujarat High Court

55

|Vazhakkulangarayil Khalid

|1922{{ndash}}2017

|25 June 1984

|30 June 1987

|{{ayd|25 Jun 1984|30 Jun 1987}}

|Kerala

|Chief Justice, Jammu and Kashmir High Court

56

|Goverdhan Lal Oza

|

|29 October 1985

|11 December 1989

|{{ayd|29 Oct 1985|11 Dec 1989}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|Chief Justice, Madhya Pradesh High Court

57

|Bankim Chandra Ray

|born 1926

|9 October 1985

|31 October 1991

|{{Ayd|9 Oct 1985|31 Oct 1991}}

|Calcutta

|Judge, Calcutta High Court

58

|M. M. Dutt

|

|10 March 1986

|29 October 1989

|{{ayd|10 Mar 1986|29 Oct 1989}}

|Calcutta

|Judge, Calcutta High Court

59

|S. Natarajan

|1925{{ndash}}2014

|10 March 1986

|28 October 1989

|{{ayd|10 Mar 1986|28 Oct 1989}}

|Madras

|Judge, Madras High Court

60

|Kalmanje Jagannatha Shetty

|1926{{ndash}}2015

|1 May 1987

|14 December 1991

|{{ayd|1 May 1987|14 Dec 1991}}

|Karnataka

|Chief Justice, Allahabad High Court

61

|S. Ranganathan

|1927{{ndash}}2022

|5 October 1987

|30 October 1992

|{{ayd|5 Oct 1987|30 Oct 1992}}

|Delhi

|Judge, Delhi High Court

|rowspan="21" align="center"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman

62

|Narayan Dutta Ojha

|

|18 January 1988

|18 January 1991

|{{ayd|18 Jan 1988|18 Jan 1991}}

|Allahabad

|Chief Justice, Madhya Pradesh High Court

63

|S. Ratnavel Pandian

|1929{{ndash}}2018

|14 December 1988

|12 March 1994

|{{ayd|14 Dec 1988|12 Mar 1994}}

|Madras

|Judge, Madras High Court

64

|T. K. Thommen

|

|14 December 1988

|25 September 1993

|{{ayd|14 Dec 1988|25 Sep 1993}}

|Kerala

|Acting Chief Justice, Kerala High Court

65

|K. N. Saikia

|1926{{ndash}}2016

|14 December 1988

|28 February 1991

|{{ayd|14 Dec 1988|28 Feb 1991}}

|Gauhati

|Chief Justice, Gauhati High Court

66

|Kuldip Singh

|born 1932

|14 December 1988

|21 December 1996

|{{ayd|14 Dec 1988|21 Dec 1996}}

|Bar Council

|Additional Solicitor General of India

67

|V. Ramaswami

|born 1929

|6 October 1989

|14 February 1994

|{{ayd|6 Oct 1989|14 Feb 1994}}

|Madras

|Chief Justice, Punjab and Haryana High Court

68

|P. B. Sawant

|1930{{ndash}}2021

|6 October 1989

|29 June 1995

|{{ayd|6 Oct 1989|29 Jun 1995}}

|Bombay

|Judge, Bombay High Court

69

|Narendra Mohan Kasliwal

|1928{{ndash}}2021

|6 October 1989

|3 April 1993

|{{Ayd|6 Oct 1989|3 Apr 1993}}

|Rajasthan

|Chief Justice, Himachal Pradesh High Court

70

|Katikithala Ramaswamy

|1932{{ndash}}2019

|6 October 1989

|12 July 1997

|{{ayd|6 Oct 1989|12 Jul 1997}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Judge, Andhra Pradesh High Court

71

|Fathima Beevi

|1927{{ndash}}2023

|6 October 1989

|29 April 1992

|{{ayd|6 Oct 1989|29 Apr 1992}}

|Kerala

|Judge, Kerala High Court

72

|K. Jayachandra Reddy

|1929{{ndash}}2020

|11 January 1990

|14 July 1994

|{{ayd|11 Jan 1990|14 Jul 1994}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Judge, Andhra Pradesh High Court

73

|S. C. Agarwal

|1934{{ndash}}2021

|11 January 1990

|4 September 1998

|{{ayd|11 Jan 1990|4 Sep 1998}}

|Rajasthan

|Judge, Rajasthan High Court

74

|R. M. Sahai

|

|11 January 1990

|24 June 1995

|{{ayd|11 Jan 1990|24 Jun 1995}}

|Allahabad

|Judge, Allahabad High Court

75

|Yogeshwar Dayal

|1930{{ndash}}1994

|22 March 1991

|2 August 1994

|{{ayd|22 Mar 1991|2 Aug 1994}}

|Delhi

|Chief Justice, Andhra Pradesh High Court

76

|Shanmughasundaram Mohan

|1930{{ndash}}2019

|7 October 1991

|10 February 1995

|{{ayd|7 Oct 1991|10 Feb 1995}}

|Madras

|Chief Justice, Karnataka High Court

77

|B. P. Jeevan Reddy

|born 1932

|7 October 1991

|13 March 1997

|{{ayd|7 Oct 1991|13 Mar 1997}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Chief Justice, Andhra Pradesh High Court

78

|Ganendra Narayan Ray

|born 1933

|7 October 1991

|30 April 1998

|{{ayd|7 Oct 1991|30 Apr 1998}}

|Calcutta

|Chief Justice, Gujarat High Court

79

|R. C. Patnaik

|born 1935

|3 December 1991

|30 May 1992

|{{ayd|3 Dec 1991|30 May 1992}}

|Orissa

|Judge, Orissa High Court

80

|N. P. Singh

|born 1931

|15 June 1992

|24 December 1996

|{{ayd|15 Jun 1992|24 Dec 1996}}

|Patna

|Chief Justice, Calcutta High Court

81

|N. Venkatachala

|1930{{ndash}}2019

|1 July 1992

|2 July 1995

|{{ayd|1 Jul 1992|2 Jul 1995}}

|Karnataka

|Acting Chief Justice, Karnataka High Court

82

|Manoj Kumar Mukherjee

|1933{{ndash}}2021

|14 December 1993

|30 November 1998

|{{ayd|14 Dec 1993|30 Nov 1998}}

|Calcutta

|Judge, Calcutta High Court

|rowspan="14" align="center"| Shankar Dayal Sharma

83

|Faizanuddin

|born 1932

|14 December 1993

|4 February 1997

|{{ayd|14 Dec 1993|4 Feb 1997}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|Acting Chief Justice, Madhya Pradesh High Court

84

|Banwari Lal Hansaria

|1931{{ndash}}1997

|14 December 1993

|24 December 1996

|{{ayd|14 Dec 1993|24 Dec 1996}}

|Gauhati

|Chief Justice, Orissa High Court

85

|S. C. Sen

|

|11 June 1994

|20 December 1997

|{{ayd|11 Jun 1994|20 Dec 1997}}

|Calcutta

|Judge, Calcutta High Court

86

|K. S. Paripoornan

|1932{{ndash}}2016

|11 June 1994

|11 June 1997

|{{ayd|11 Jun 1994|11 Jun 1997}}

|Kerala

|Chief Justice, Patna High Court

87

|S. B. Majmudar

|born 1935

|19 September 1994

|19 August 2000

|{{ayd|19 Sep 1994|19 Aug 2000}}

|Gujarat

|Chief Justice, Karnataka High Court

88

|Sujata Manohar

|born 1934

|8 November 1994

|27 August 1999

|{{ayd|8 Nov 1994|27 Aug 1999}}

|Bombay

|Chief Justice, Kerala High Court

89

|G. T. Nanavati

|1935{{ndash}}2021

|6 March 1995

|16 February 2000

|{{ayd|6 Mar 1995|16 Feb 2000}}

|Gujarat

|Chief Justice, Karnataka High Court

90

|Saiyed Saghir Ahmad

|1935{{ndash}}2011

|6 March 1995

|30 June 2000

|{{ayd|6 Mar 1995|30 Jun 2000}}

|Allahabad

|Chief Justice, Andhra Pradesh High Court

91

|K. Venkataswami

|

|6 March 1995

|18 September 1999

|{{ayd|6 Mar 1995|18 Sep 1999}}

|Madras

|Chief Justice, Patna High Court

92

|Sudhakar Panditrao Kurdukar

|born 1935

|29 March 1996

|15 January 2000

|{{ayd|29 Mar 1996|15 Jan 2000}}

|Bombay

|Chief Justice, Punjab and Haryana High Court

93

|K. T. Thomas

|born 1937

|29 March 1996

|29 January 2002

|{{ayd|29 Mar 1996|29 Jan 2002}}

|Kerala

|Chief Justice, Kerala High Court

94

|M. Jagannadha Rao

|born 1935

|21 March 1997

|1 December 2000

|{{ayd|21 Mar 1997|1 Dec 2000}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Chief Justice, Delhi High Court

95

|D. P. Wadhwa

|born 1935

|21 March 1997

|4 May 2000

|{{ayd|21 Mar 1997|4 May 2000}}

|Delhi

|Chief Justice, Patna High Court

96

|Madhavachari Srinivasan

|1937{{Ndash}}2000

|25 September 1997

|25 February 2000

|{{ayd|25 Sep 1997|25 Feb 2000}}

|Madras

|Chief Justice, Himachal Pradesh High Court

97

|Ajay Kumar Misra

|

|4 December 1997

|31 August 2001

|{{ayd|4 Dec 1997|31 Aug 2001}}

|Allahabad

|Chief Justice, Delhi High Court

98

|Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri

|born 1938

|4 December 1997

|4 April 2003

|{{ayd|4 Dec 1997|4 Apr 2003}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Acting Chief Justice, Andhra Pradesh High Court

99

|Manharlal Bhikhalal Shah

|born 1938

|9 December 1998

|24 September 2003

|{{ayd|9 Dec 1998|24 Sep 2003}}

|Gujarat

|Chief Justice, Bombay High Court

100

|D. P. Mohapatra

|born 1937

|9 December 1998

|2 August 2002

|{{ayd|9 Dec 1998|2 Aug 2002}}

|Orissa

|Chief Justice, Allahabad High Court

101

|Umesh Chandra Banerjee

|1937{{ndash}}2012

|9 December 1998

|17 November 2002

|{{ayd|9 Dec 1998|17 Nov 2002}}

|Calcutta

|Chief Justice, Andhra Pradesh High Court

102

|N. Santosh Hegde

|born 1940

|8 January 1999

|16 June 2005

|{{ayd|8 Jan 1999|16 Jun 2005}}

|Bar Council

|Solicitor General of India

103

|Ram Prakash Sethi

|1937{{ndash}}2007

|8 January 1999

|6 July 2002

|{{ayd|8 Jan 1999|6 Jul 2002}}

|Jammu and Kashmir

|Chief Justice, Karnataka High Court

104

|Sailendu Nath Phukan

|1937{{ndash}}2018

|28 January 1999

|31 March 2002

|{{ayd|28 Jan 1999|31 Mar 2002}}

|Gauhati

|Chief Justice, Orissa High Court

105

|Doraiswamy Raju

|born 1939

|28 January 2000

|1 July 2004

|{{ayd|28 Jan 2000|1 Jul 2004}}

|Madras

|Chief Justice, Himachal Pradesh High Court

106

|Ruma Pal

|born 1941

|28 January 2000

|2 June 2006

|{{ayd|28 Jan 2000|2 Jun 2006}}

|Calcutta

|Judge, Calcutta High Court

107

|Sam Nariman Variava

|born 1940

|15 March 2000

|7 November 2005

|{{ayd|15 Mar 2000|7 Nov 2005}}

|Bombay

|Judge, Bombay High Court

108

|Shivaraj Patil

|born 1940

|15 March 2000

|11 January 2005

|{{ayd|15 Mar 2000|11 Jan 2005}}

|Karnataka

|Chief Justice, Rajasthan High Court

109

|Brijesh Kumar

|born 1939

|19 October 2000

|9 June 2004

|{{ayd|19 Oct 2000|9 Jun 2004}}

|Allahabad

|Chief Justice, Gauhati High Court

110

|B. N. Agrawal

|born 1944

|19 October 2000

|15 October 2009

|{{ayd|19 Oct 2000|15 Oct 2009}}

|Patna

|Chief Justice, Orissa High Court

111

|P. Venkatarama Reddi

|born 1940

|17 August 2001

|9 August 2005

|{{ayd|17 Aug 2001|9 Aug 2005}}

|Andhra Pradesh

|Chief Justice, Karnataka High Court

112

|Ashok Bhan

|born 1943

|17 August 2001

|2 October 2008

|{{ayd|17 Aug 2001|2 Oct 2008}}

|Punjab and Haryana

|Acting Chief Justice, Karnataka High Court

113

|Arijit Pasayat

|born 1944

|19 October 2001

|10 May 2009

|{{ayd|19 Oct 2001|10 May 2009}}

|Orissa

|Chief Justice, Delhi High Court

114

|B. P. Singh

|born 1942

|14 December 2001

|8 July 2007

|{{ayd|14 Dec 2001|8 Jul 2007}}

|Patna

|Chief Justice, Bombay High Court

115

|D. M. Dharmadhikari

|born 1940

|5 March 2002

|13 August 2005

|{{ayd|5 Mar 2002|13 Aug 2005}}

|Madhya Pradesh

|Chief Justice, Gujarat High Court

116

|H. K. Sema

|born 1943

|9 April 2002

|1 June 2008

|{{ayd|9 Apr 2002|1 Jun 2008}}

|Gauhati

|Chief Justice, Jammu and Kashmir High Court

Career

=Rajya Sabha MPs=

Assam

=Sitting=

Keys:

{{Party legend|Bharatiya Janata Party|4}}

{{Party legend|Asom Gana Parishad|1}}

{{Party legend|United People's Party Liberal|1}}

{{Party legend|Independent|1}}

class="wikitable sortable"

!{{abbr|No.|Number}}

!style="width:15em"| Name

!colspan="2"| Party affiliation

!style="width:10em"| Date of election

!style="width:10em"| Date of retirement

1

|Kamakhya Prasad Tasa

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|style="width:18em"| Bharatiya Janata Party

|15 June 2019

|14 June 2025

2

|Birendra Prasad Baishya

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|15 June 2019

|14 June 2025

3

|Bhubaneswar Kalita

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

|10 April 2020

|9 April 2026

4

|Ajit Kumar Bhuyan

|bgcolor="{{party color|Independent politician}}"|

|Independent

|10 April 2020

|9 April 2026

5

|Sarbananda Sonowal

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

|6 October 2021

|9 April 2026

6

|Rwngwra Narzary

|bgcolor="{{party color|United People's Party Liberal}}"|

|United People's Party Liberal

|2 April 2022

|1 April 2028

7

|Pabitra Margherita

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

|2 April 2022

|1 April 2028

=Former=

Keys:

{{Party legend|Indian National Congress}}

{{Party legend|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

{{Party legend|Asom Gana Parishad}}

{{Party legend|Bodoland People's Front}}

{{Party legend|Independent|1}}

class="wikitable sortable"

!style="width:15em"| Name

!colspan="2"| Party affiliation

!style="width:10em"| Date of election

!style="width:10em"| Date of retirement

!Notes

Baharul Islam

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|3 April 1962

|2 April 1968

|

Usha Barthakur

|bgcolor="{{party color|Samyukta Socialist Party}}"|

|Samyukta Socialist Party

|3 April 1966

|2 April 1972

|

Sriman Prafulla Goswami

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|4 May 1967

|2 April 1972

|

Baharul Islam

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|3 April 1968

|20 January 1972

|Resigned

Golap Borbora

|bgcolor="{{party color|Samyukta Socialist Party}}"|

|Samyukta Socialist Party

|3 April 1968

|2 April 1974

|

Sriman Prafulla Goswami

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|3 April 1974

|2 April 1980

|

Dinesh Goswami

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|10 April 1978

|9 April 1984

|

Biswa Goswami

|bgcolor="{{party color|Janata Party}}"|

|Janata Party

|3 April 1980

|2 April 1986

|

Bijoya Chakravarty

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|3 April 1986

|2 April 1992

|

Nagen Saikia

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|3 April 1986

|2 April 1992

|

Bijoy Krishna Handique

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress (Indira)}}"|

|Indian National Congress (Indira)

|3 April 1986

|2 April 1992

|

Baharul Islam

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|15 June 1989

|14 June 1995

|

David Ledger

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|15 June 1989

|14 June 1995

|

Amritlal Basumatary

|bgcolor="{{party color|Indian Congress (Socialist)}}"|

|Indian Congress (Socialist)

|15 June 1989

|1 August 1991

|Disqualified

Dinesh Goswami

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|10 April 1990

|2 June 1991

|Died

Bhadreswar Buragohain

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|10 April 1990

|9 April 1996

|

Basanti Sarma

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|3 September 1991

|9 April 1996

|Bye-election due to demise of Dinesh Goswami

Manmohan Singh

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|1 October 1991

|14 June 1995

|Bye-election due to disqualification of Amritlal Basumatary

Tara Charan Majumdar

|bgcolor="{{party color|Independent politician}}"|

|Independent

|3 April 1992

|2 April 1998

|

Matang Sinh

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|3 April 1992

|2 April 1998

|

Manmohan Singh

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|15 June 1995

|14 June 2001

|

Parag Chaliha

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|15 June 1995

|22 June 1999

|Died

Basanti Sarma

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|10 April 1996

|9 April 2002

|

Prakanta Warisa

|bgcolor="{{party color|Autonomous State Demand Committee}}"|

|Autonomous State Demand Committee

|10 April 1996

|9 April 2002

|

Arun Kumar Sarmah

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|3 April 1998

|2 April 2004

|

Joyasree Goswami Mahanta

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|24 August 1999

|14 June 2001

|Bye-election due to demise of Parag Chaliha

Manmohan Singh

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|15 June 2001

|14 June 2007

|

Indramoni Bora

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

|15 June 2001

|14 June 2007

|

Karnendu Bhattacharjee

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|10 April 2002

|9 April 2008

|

Dwijendra Nath Sharmah

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|10 April 2002

|9 April 2008

|

Urkhao Gwra Brahma

|bgcolor="{{party color|Independent politician}}"|

|Independent

|10 April 2002

|9 April 2008

|

Silvius Condpan

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|3 April 2004

|2 April 2010

|

Anwara Taimur

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|3 April 2004

|2 April 2010

|

Manmohan Singh

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|15 June 2007

|14 June 2013

|

Kumar Deepak Das

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|15 June 2007

|14 June 2013

|

Biswajit Daimary

|bgcolor="{{party color|Bodoland People's Front}}"|

|style="width:18em"| Bodoland People's Front

|10 April 2008

|9 April 2014

|

Birendra Prasad Baishya

|bgcolor="{{party color|Asom Gana Parishad}}"|

|Asom Gana Parishad

|10 April 2008

|9 April 2014

|

Bhubaneswar Kalita

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|10 April 2008

|9 April 2014

|

Naznin Faruque

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|3 April 2010

|2 April 2016

|

Silvius Condpan

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|3 April 2010

|10 November 2011

|Died

Pankaj Bora

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|22 December 2011

|2 April 2016

|Bye-election due to demise of Silvius Condpan

Manmohan Singh

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|15 June 2013

|14 June 2019

|

Santiuse Kujur

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|15 June 2013

|14 June 2019

|

Biswajit Daimary

|bgcolor="{{party color|Bodoland People's Front}}"|

|style="width:18em"| Bodoland People's Front

|10 April 2014

|9 April 2020

|

Bhubaneswar Kalita

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|10 April 2014

|5 August 2019

|Resigned

Sanjaya Sinh

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|10 April 2014

|30 July 2019

|Resigned

Ripun Bora

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|2 April 2016

|1 April 2022

|

Ranee Narah

|bgcolor="{{party color|INC}}"|

|Indian National Congress

|2 April 2016

|1 April 2022

|

Biswajit Daimary

|bgcolor="{{party color|Bodoland People's Front}}"|

|style="width:18em"| Bodoland People's Front

|10 April 2020

|12 November 2020

|Resigned

Biswajit Daimary

|bgcolor="{{party color|BJP}}"|

|Bharatiya Janata Party

|22 February 2021

|12 May 2021

|Resigned

=President's rule=

class="wikitable sortable"

!{{abbr|No.|Number}}

!style="width:8em"| State

!class="unsortable"| Term

!style="width:7em"| Date imposed

!style="width:7em"| Date revoked

!class="unsortable" style="width:5em"| Duration

!style="width:8em"| Imposed by
(President)

!style="width:8em"| Prime Minister
(at time)

!Governor

!style="width:33em"| Notes

|Delhi

|1

|14 February 2014

|11 February 2015

|{{ayd|14 Feb 2014|11 Feb 2015}}

|Pranab Mukherjee

|Manmohan Singh (INC)

|Najeeb Jung

|style="font-size:90%"| President's rule was imposed in Delhi following the resignation of chief minister Arvind Kejriwal after the state assembly rejected the Jan Lokpal Bill. The president's rule was withdrawn after the re-election of Arvind Kejriwal-led Aam Aadmi Party in the 2015 election.

|Andhra Pradesh

|2

|28 February 2014

|8 June 2014

|{{ayd|28 February 2014|8 Jun 2014}}

|Pranab Mukherjee

|Manmohan Singh (INC)

|E. S. L. Narasimhan

|Jammu and Kashmir (state)

|6

|9 January 2015

|1 March 2015

|{{ayd|9 Jan 2015|1 Mar 2015}}

|Pranab Mukherjee

|Narendra Modi (BJP)

|Narinder Nath Vohra

|style="font-size:90%"| Governor's rule was imposed in the state following the failure of the political parties to form government in the state in the background of the fractured mandate resulting from the 2014 state legislative assembly election. Finally, the BJP and the JKPDP formed a coalition and formed the government, leading to the withdrawal of the governor's rule.

|Jammu and Kashmir (state)

|7

|8 January 2016

|4 April 2016

|{{ayd|8 Jan 2016|4 Apr 2016}}

|Pranab Mukherjee

|Narendra Modi (BJP)

|Narinder Nath Vohra

|style="font-size:90%"| Governor's rule was imposed in the state following the demise of chief minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed and upon the failure of the ruling coalition between BJP and JKPDP to elect a successor. Finally, with the election of Sayeed's daughter Mehbooba Mufti as the chief minister by the coalition, the governor's rule in the state was revoked.

|Arunachal Pradesh

|2

|25 January 2016

|19 February 2016

|{{ayd|25 Jan 2016|19 Feb 2016}}

|Pranab Mukherjee

|Narendra Modi (BJP)

|Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa

|style="font-size:90%"| 21 Congress legislators joined hands with 11 BJP legislators and two independents, making the ruling Congress government of chief minister Nabam Tuki, a minority government{{cite web |title=It's against Constitution: Politicians react to Prez rule in Arunachal |url=http://www.hindustantimes.com/india/it-s-against-constitution-politicians-react-to-prez-rule-in-arunachal/story-rvOfvxYX8A3r7P60hqQGDI.html |work=Hindustan Times |date=25 January 2016 |access-date=25 January 2016 |archive-date=26 January 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160126040716/http://www.hindustantimes.com/india/it-s-against-constitution-politicians-react-to-prez-rule-in-arunachal/story-rvOfvxYX8A3r7P60hqQGDI.html |url-status=live }}. The governor Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa dismissed the minority Congress government and recommended the imposition of the President's rule in the state. However, the Supreme Court intervened and declared the imposition of the president's rule as ultra vires and reinstated the dismissed Congress government. In a landmark judgment, the court found fault with the unconstitutional role played by the state governor in interfering with legislative activities and decisions of the speaker of the assembly.{{cite web |title=After Arunachal Pradesh debacle, PM Modi must abolish post of governor |date=14 July 2016 |url=http://www.firstpost.com/politics/after-arunachal-pradesh-debacle-modi-must-abolish-post-of-governor-2892642.html |access-date=15 July 2016 |archive-date=17 July 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160717094634/http://www.firstpost.com/politics/after-arunachal-pradesh-debacle-modi-must-abolish-post-of-governor-2892642.html |url-status=live }} Upon the revocation of the president's rule, Kalikho Pul of PAP was appointed chief minister.

|Uttarakhand

|1

|27 March 2016

|21 April 2016

|{{ayd|27 Mar 2016|21 Apr 2016}}

|Pranab Mukherjee

|Narendra Modi (BJP)

|Krishan Kant Paul

|style="font-size:90%"| Nine MLAs of the ruling Congress party rebelled against the government headed by chief minister Harish Rawat, leading to the ruling government becoming a minority. Governor Krishan Kant Paul ordered the chief minister to face a vote of no-confidence before the assembly, however, a day before the vote, the government was dismissed and the President's rule was imposed in the state. Hearing a matter related to the case, the Uttarakhand High Court declared the imposition of the president's rule unconstitutional and restored the Congress government of Harish Rawat in the state.

|Uttarakhand

|2

|22 April 2016

|11 May 2016

|{{ayd|22 Apr 2016|11 May 2016}}

|Pranab Mukherjee

|Narendra Modi (BJP)

|Krishan Kant Paul

|style="font-size:90%"| The Supreme Court held the stay on Uttarakhand High Court's verdict, thus reinstating the president's rule in the state, which was later withdrawn after chief minister Harish Rawat won the floor test.

|Jammu and Kashmir (state)

|8

|19 June 2018

|30 October 2019

|{{ayd|19 June 2018|30 October 2019}}

|Ram Nath Kovind

|Narendra Modi (BJP)

|Satya Pal Malik

|style="font-size:90%"| President's rule in the state was imposed following the resignation of chief minister Mehbooba Mufti after the BJP withdrew from the ruling coalition. Before proving her majority on the floor of the house, the governor's rule was imposed in the state. Following the expiration of six months of governor's rule, the president's rule was imposed in the state which remain in force until the bifurcation of the state into the two union territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh on 31 October 2019.

bgcolor="lightblue"

!

|Jammu and Kashmir (union territory)

|1

|31 October 2019

|present

|{{ayd|31 Oct 2019}}

|Ram Nath Kovind

|Narendra Modi (BJP)

|G. C. Murmu,
Manoj Sinha (current)

|style="font-size:90%"| Following the bifurcation of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, the president's rule was imposed in the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir under section 73 of the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019 as Article 356 is not applicable to union territories.

|Maharashtra

|3

|12 November 2019

|23 November 2019

|{{ayd|12 Nov 2019|23 Nov 2019}}

|Ram Nath Kovind

|Narendra Modi (BJP)

|Bhagat Singh Koshyari

|style="font-size:90%"| After the ruling BJP-Shiv Sena coalition broke and no other party was able to form the government and the tenure of the outgoing assembly had expired, the governor recommended for imposition of president's rule in the state. The president's rule was withdrawn on early morning of 23 November 2019 when governor Koshyari re-appointed Devendra Fadnavis as the chief minister and Ajit Pawar as the deputy chief minister in a surprising move.

=Longest-serving ministers=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; border:1px #aaf solid; font-size:90%"

!#

!style="width:13em"| Minister
{{small|(birth-death)}}

!Portrait

!style="width:17em"|Final or current ministerial rank
(final/current portfolio held)

!style="width:10em"|Ministries served

!style="width:13em"|Party affiliations

!style="width:12em"|Ranks

!style="width:10em"| Start of tenure

!style="width:10em"| End of tenure

!style="width:10em"| Time in office

!style="width:6em"| Overall tenure

rowspan="4"| 1

|rowspan="4"| Jagjivan Ram
{{small|(1908{{ndash}}1986)}}

|rowspan="4"| 80px

|rowspan="4"| Deputy Prime Minister
(Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defence)

|rowspan="4"| Nehru I
Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV
Indira II
Indira III
Desai

|rowspan="4" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1947–1969)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1977)
{{colour box|{{party color|Janata Party}}}} JP (1977–1979)

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

|15 August 1947

|31 August 1963

|{{ayd|1947|8|15|1963|8|31}}

!rowspan="4"| 29 years, 126 days
{{refn|Not including service as cabinet minister during the Interim Government of India from 2 September 1946–15 August 1947 ({{Age in years, months and days|1946|9|2|1947|8|15}}).|group= n}}

align="center"24 January 19662 February 1977{{ayd|1966|1|24|1977|2|2}}
align="center"28 March 197724 January 1979{{ayd|1977|3|28|1979|1|24}}
align="center"

|Deputy Prime Minister

|24 January 1979

|28 July 1979

|{{ayd|1979|1|24|1979|7|7}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!2

|Swaran Singh
{{small|(1907{{ndash}}1994)}}

|

|Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Defence)

|Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira II
Indira III

|align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1952–1969)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1975)

|Cabinet Minister

|13 May 1952

|1 December 1975

|File:Arrow east.svg

!{{ayd|13 May 1952|1 Dec 1975}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="3"| 3

|rowspan="3"| Satya Narayan Sinha
{{small|(1900{{ndash}}1983)}}

|rowspan="3"| 80px

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Information and Broadcasting, and Communications)

|rowspan="3"| Nehru I
Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I

|rowspan="3" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1948–1969)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1971)

|Deputy Minister

|1 October 1948

|26 February 1949

|{{ayd|1 Oct 1948|26 Feb 1949}}

!rowspan="3"| {{ayd|1 Oct 1948|8 Mar 1971}}

Minister of State

|26 February 1949

|10 April 1962

|{{ayd|26 Feb 1949|10 Apr 1962}}

Cabinet Minister

|10 April 1962

|8 March 1971

|{{ayd|10 Apr 1962|8 Mar 1971}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="4"| 4

|rowspan="4"| Raj Bahadur
{{small|(1912{{ndash}}1990)}}

|rowspan="4"| 80px

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Tourism and Civil Aviation)

|rowspan="4"| Nehru I
Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira III

|rowspan="4" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1951–1969)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1976)

|rowspan="2"| Deputy Minister

29 May 195113 May 1952{{ayd|29 May 1951|13 May 1952}}

!rowspan="4"| 21 years, 181 days

4 June 1952

|14 February 1956

|{{ayd|4 Jun 1952|14 Feb 1956}}

align="center"

|Minister of State{{refn|With Cabinet rank from 14 February 1956 – 17 April 1957.|group= n}}

|14 February 1956

|13 March 1967

|{{ayd|14 Feb 1956|13 Mar 1967}}

align="center"

|Cabinet Minister

|18 March 1971

|22 December 1976

|{{ayd|18 Mar 1971|22 Dec 1976}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="6"| 5

|rowspan="6"| Pranab Mukherjee
{{small|(1935{{ndash}}2020)}}

|rowspan="6"| 80px

|rowspan="6"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Finance)

|rowspan="6"| Indira III
Indira IV
Rajiv II
Rao
Manmohan I
Manmohan II

|rowspan="6" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1973–1977)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1980–1984, 1993–1996)
{{color box|{{party color|INC}}}} INC (2004–2012)

|Deputy Minister

|5 February 1973

|10 October 1974

|{{ayd|5 Feb 1973|10 Oct 1974}}

!rowspan="6"| 20 years, 136 days

Minister of State

|10 October 1974

|24 March 1977

|{{Ayd|1974|10|10|1977|3|24}}

rowspan=4 |Cabinet Minister14 January 198031 December 1984{{Ayd|1980|1|14|1984|12|31}}
|17 January 19939 July 1993{{Ayd|1993|1|17|1993|7|9}}
|31 August 199316 May 1996{{Ayd|1993|8|31|1996|5|16}}
|22 May 200426 June 2012{{Ayd|2004|5|22|2012|6|26}}
style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="5"| 6

|rowspan="5"| B. Shankaranand
{{small|(1925{{ndash}}2009)}}

|rowspan="5"|

|rowspan="5"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Health and Family Welfare)

|rowspan="5"| Indira III
Indira IV
Rajiv I
Rajiv II
Rao

|rowspan="5" align="left"| {{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1971–1977)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1980–1987, 1988–1989, 1991–1994)

|Deputy Minister

|2 May 1971

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1971|5|2|1977|3|24}}

!rowspan="5"| 18 years, 157 days

rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister

|14 January 1980

|31 October 1984

|{{ayd|1980|1|14|1984|10|31}}

4 November 1984

|22 August 1987

|{{ayd|1984|11|4|1987|8|22}}

25 June 1988

|2 December 1989

|{{ayd|1988|6|25|1989|12|2}}

21 June 1991

|22 December 1994

|{{ayd|1991|6|21|1994|12|22}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="7"| 7

|rowspan="7"| P. Chidambaram
{{small|(born 1945)}}

|rowspan="7"| 80px

|rowspan="7"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Finance)

|rowspan="7"| Rajiv II
Rao
Deve Gowda
Gujral
Manmohan I
Manmohan II

|rowspan="7" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1985–1989, 1991–1992, 1995–1996)
{{color box|{{party color|Tamil Maanila Congress}}}} TMC(M) (1996–2001)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC (2004–2014)

|Deputy Minister

|25 September 1985

|20 January 1986

|{{ayd|1985|9|25|1986|1|20}}

!rowspan="7"| 18 years,
59 days

rowspan="3"| Minister of State{{refn|Independent Charge from 21 June 1991.|group= n}}

|20 January 1986

|2 December 1989

|{{ayd|1986|1|20|1989|12|2}}

21 June 1991

|9 July 1992

|{{ayd|1991|6|21|1992|7|9}}

10 February 1995

|3 April 1996

|{{ayd|1995|2|10|1996|4|3}}

rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

|1 June 1996

|21 April 1997

|{{ayd|1996|6|1|1997|4|21}}

1 May 1997

|19 March 1998

|{{ayd|1997|5|1|1998|3|19}}

22 May 2004

|26 May 2014

|{{ayd|2004|5|22|2014|5|26}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="4"| 8

|rowspan="4"| Kotha Raghuramaiah
{{small|(1912{{ndash}}1979)}}

|rowspan="4"| 80px

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Tourism and Civil Aviation, Parliamentary Affairs)

|rowspan="4"| Nehru III
Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira II
Indira III

|rowspan="4" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1957–1969)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1977)

|Deputy Minister

|21 May 1957

|10 April 1962

|{{ayd|21 May 1957|10 Apr 1962}}

!rowspan="4"| 17 years, 342 days

Minister of State

|16 April 1962

|27 June 1970

|{{ayd|1962|4|16|1970|6|27}}

align="center"

|rowspan="2"| Cabinet Minister

|27 June 1970

|18 March 1971

|{{ayd|27 Jun 1970|18 Mar 1971}}

5 February 1973

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|5 Feb 1973|24 Mar 1977}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="3"| 9

|rowspan="3"| Indira Gandhi
{{small|(1917–1984)}}

|rowspan="3"| 80px

|rowspan="3"| Prime Minister

|rowspan="3"| Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira II
Indira III
Indira IV

|rowspan="3" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1966–1969)
{{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1977)
{{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1980–1984)

|Cabinet Minister

|2 July 1964

|24 January 1966

|{{ayd|1964|7|2|1966|1|24}}

!rowspan="3"| 17 years, 191 days

rowspan="2"| Prime Minister

|24 January 1966

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1966|1|24|1977|3|24}}

14 January 1980

|31 October 1984{{note label|†|†|†}}

|{{ayd|1980|1|14|1984|10|31}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="3"| 10

|rowspan="3"| Jaisukhlal Hathi
{{small|(1909{{ndash}}1982)}}

|rowspan="3"| 80px

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Labour and Rehabilitation)

|rowspan="3"| Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I

|rowspan="3" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1952–1969)

|Deputy Minister

|12 September 1952

|10 April 1962

|{{ayd|1952|9|12|1962|4|10}}

!rowspan="3"| 17 years,
58 days

Minister of State

|16 April 1962

|13 March 1967

|{{ayd|1962|4|16|1967|3|13}}

Cabinet Minister

|13 March 1967

|15 November 1969

|{{ayd|1967|3|13|1969|11|15}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!11

|Jawaharlal Nehru
{{small|(1889{{ndash}}1964)}}

|80px

|Prime Minister

|Nehru I
Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV

|align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1947–1964)

|Prime Minister

|15 August 1947

|27 May 1964{{note label|†|†|†}}

|File:Arrow east.svg

!{{ayd|1947|8|15|1964|5|27}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="5"| 12

|rowspan="5"| Vidya Charan Shukla
{{small|(1927{{ndash}}2013)}}

|rowspan="5"| 80px

|rowspan="5"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Water Resources and Parliamentary Affairs)

|rowspan="5"| Indira I
Indira II
Indira III
Indira IV
Chandra Shekhar
Rao

|rowspan="5" align="left"| {{color box|{{party color|INC}}}} (1966–1969)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1977)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1980–1981, 1991–1996)
{{colorbox|{{party color|Samajwadi Janata Party (Rashtriya)}}}} SJP(R) (1990–1991)

|Deputy Minister

|24 January 1966

|13 March 1967

|{{ayd|1966|1|24|1967|3|13}}

!rowspan="5"| 16 years, 279 days

Minister of State{{refn|Independent Charge from 28 June 1975.|group= n}}

|13 March 1967

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1967|3|13|1977|3|24}}

rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

|8 June 1980

|19 March 1981

|{{ayd|1980|6|8|1981|3|19}}

21 November 1990

|20 February 1991

|{{ayd|1990|11|21|1991|2|20}}

21 June 1991

|17 January 1996

|{{ayd|1991|6|21|1996|1|17}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="5"| 13

|rowspan="5"| Ram Vilas Paswan
{{small|(1946{{ndash}}2020)}}

|rowspan="5"| 80px

|rowspan="5"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution)

|rowspan="5"| V. P. Singh
Deve Gowda
Gujral
Vajpayee III
Manmohan I
Modi I
Modi II

|rowspan="5" align="left"| {{colorbox|{{party color|Janata Dal}}}} JD (1989–1990, 1996–1998, 1999–2000)
{{colorbox|{{party color|Lok Janshakti Party}}}} LJP (2000–2002, 2004–2009, 2014–2020)

|rowspan="5"| Cabinet Minister

|6 December 1989

|10 November 1990

|{{ayd|1989|12|6|1990|11|10}}

!rowspan=5| 16 years, 233 days

1 June 1996

|19 March 1998

|{{ayd|1996|6|1|1998|3|19}}

13 October 1999

|29 April 2002

|{{ayd|1999|10|13|2002|4|29}}

22 May 2004

|22 May 2009

|{{ayd|2004|5|22|2009|5|22}}

26 May 2014

|8 October 2020{{note label|†|†|†}}

|{{ayd|2014|5|26|2020|10|8}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="5"| 14

|rowspan="5"| Ghulam Nabi Azad
{{small|(born 1949)}}

|rowspan="5"| 80px

|rowspan="5"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Health, Family Welfare and Water Resources)

|rowspan="5"| Indira IV
Rajiv II
Rao
Manmohan I
Manmohan II

|rowspan="5" align="left"| {{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1984–1987, 1991–1996)
{{color box|{{party color|INC}}}} INC (2004–2005, 2009–2014)

|Deputy Minister

|2 September 1982

|31 December 1984

|{{ayd|2 Sep 1982|31 Dec 1984}}

!rowspan="5"| 16 years, 137 days

Minister of State

|31 December 1984

|7 September 1987

|{{ayd|1984|12|31|1987|9|7}}

rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

|21 June 1991

|16 May 1996

|{{ayd|1991|6|21|1996|5|16}}

align="center"

|22 May 2004

|1 November 2005

|{{ayd|2004|5|22|2005|11|1}}

22 May 2009

|26 May 2014

|{{ayd|2009|5|22|2014|5|26}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="3"| 15

|rowspan="3"| Shah Nawaz Khan
{{small|(1914{{ndash}}1983)}}

|rowspan="3"| 80px

|rowspan="3"| Minister of State
(Minister of Agriculture and Irrigation)

|rowspan="3"| Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira II
Indira III

|rowspan="3" align="left"| {{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1952–1967)
{{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1971–1977)

|rowspan="2"| Deputy Minister

|20 September 1956

|9 June 1964

|{{ayd|1956|9|20|1964|6|9}}

!rowspan="3"| 16 years, 130 days

15 June 1964

|13 March 1967

|{{ayd|1964|6|15|1967|3|13}}

Minister of State

|2 May 1971

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1971|5|2|1977|3|24}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="6"| 16

|rowspan="6"| Gulzarilal Nanda
{{small|(1898{{ndash}}1998)}}

|rowspan="6"| 80px

|rowspan="6"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Railways)

|rowspan="6"| Nehru I
Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira III

|rowspan="6" align="left"| {{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1951–1966)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1970–1971)

|Cabinet Minister

|24 September 1951

|27 May 1964

|{{ayd|1951|9|24|1964|5|27}}

!rowspan="6"| 16 years,
75 days

Acting Prime Minister

|27 May 1964

|9 June 1964

|{{ayd|1964|5|27|1964|6|9}}

Cabinet Minister

|9 June 1964

|11 January 1966

|{{ayd|1964|6|9|1966|1|11}}

Acting Prime Minister

|11 January 1966

|24 January 1966

|{{ayd|1966|1|11|1966|1|24}}

rowspan="2"| Cabinet Minister

|24 January 1966

|9 November 1966

|{{ayd|1966|1|24|1966|11|9}}

18 February 1970

|18 March 1971

|{{ayd|1970|2|18|1971|3|18}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="5"| 17

|rowspan="5"| Bali Ram Bhagat
{{small|(1922{{ndash}}2011)}}

|rowspan="5"| 80px

|rowspan="5"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of External Affairs)

|rowspan="5"| Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira II
Rajiv II

|rowspan="5" align="left"| {{color box|{{party color|INC}}}} INC (1956–1969)
{{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1971)
{{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1985–1986)

|rowspan="2"| Deputy Minister

|4 January 1956

|10 April 1962

|{{ayd|1956|1|4|1962|4|10}}

!rowspan="5"| 15 years, 296 days

16 April 1962

|21 September 1963

|{{ayd|1962|4|16|1963|9|21}}

Minister of State

|21 September 1963

|14 February 1969

|{{ayd|1963|9|21|1969|2|14}}

rowspan="2"| Cabinet Minister

|14 February 1969

|18 March 1971

|{{ayd|1969|2|14|1971|3|18}}

25 September 1985

|12 May 1986

|{{ayd|1985|9|25|1986|5|12}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="6"| 18

|rowspan="6"| Prakash Chandra Sethi
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}1996)}}

|rowspan="6"|

|rowspan="6"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Planning and Irrigation)

|rowspan="6"| Nehru III
Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira II
Indira III
Indira IV

|rowspan="6" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1962–1969)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1972, 1975–1977)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1980–1984)

|rowspan="2"| Deputy Minister

|8 June 1962

|9 June 1964

|{{ayd|1962|6|8|1964|6|9}}

!rowspan="6"| 15 years, 244 days

15 June 1964

|13 March 1967

|{{ayd|1964|6|15|1967|3|13}}

Minister of State

|13 March 1967

|2 May 1971

|{{ayd|1967|3|13|1971|5|2}}

rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

|2 May 1971

|29 January 1972

|{{ayd|1971|5|2|1972|1|29}}

25 December 1975

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1975|12|25|1977|3|24}}

14 January 1980

|31 October 1984

|{{ayd|1980|1|14|1984|10|31}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="4"| 19

|rowspan="4"| Krishna Chandra Pant
{{small|(1931{{ndash}}2012)}}

|rowspan="4"| 80px

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Defence)

|rowspan="4"| Indira II
Indira III
Charan Singh
Rajiv II

|rowspan="4" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1967–1969)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1977)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (Urs)}}}} INC(U) (1979–1980)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1984–1989)

|Minister of State

|13 March 1967

|9 November 1973

|{{ayd|1967|3|13|1973|11|9}}

!rowspan="4"| 15 years, 150 days

rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

|9 November 1973

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1973|11|9|1977|3|24}}

30 July 1979

|14 January 1980

|{{ayd|1979|7|30|1980|1|14}}

31 December 1984

|2 December 1989

|{{ayd|1984|12|31|1989|12|2}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="4"| 20

|rowspan="2"| Kamal Nath
{{small|(born 1946)}}

|rowspan="2"| 80px

|rowspan="2"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Urban Development and Parliamentary Affairs)

|rowspan="2"| Rao
Manmohan I
Manmohan II

|rowspan="2" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1991–1996)
{{colour box|{{party color|INC}}}} INC (2004–2014)

|Minister of State{{refn|With Independent Charge.|group= n}}

|21 June 1991

|16 May 1996

|{{ayd|1991|6|21|1996|5|16}}

!rowspan="4"| 14 years, 334 days

Cabinet Minister

|22 May 2004

|26 May 2014

|{{ayd|2004|5|22|2014|5|26}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan Singh
{{small|(born 1932)}}

|rowspan="2"| 80px

|rowspan="2"| Prime Minister

|rowspan="2"| Rao
Manmohan I
Manmohan II

|rowspan="2" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1991–1996)
{{colour box|{{party color|INC}}}} INC (2004–2014)

|Cabinet Minister

|21 June 1991

|16 May 1996

|{{ayd|21 Jun 1991|16 May 1996}}

Prime Minister

|22 May 2004

|26 May 2014

|{{ayd|2004|5|22|2014|5|26}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="3"| 21

|rowspan="3"| Hansraj Bhardwaj
{{small|(1937{{ndash}}2020)}}

|rowspan="3"| 80px

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Law and Justice)

|rowspan="3"| Rajiv II
Rao
Manmohan I

|rowspan="3" align="left"| {{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1984–1989, 1991–1996)
{{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (2004–2009)

|rowspan="2"| Minister of State{{refn|With Independent Charge from 21 June 1991 till 2 July 1992.|group= n}}

|31 December 1984

|2 December 1989

|{{ayd|1984|12|31|1989|12|2}}

!rowspan="3"| 14 years, 301 days

21 June 1991

|16 May 1996

|{{ayd|1991|6|21|1996|5|16}}

Cabinet Minister

|22 May 2004

|22 May 2009

|{{ayd|2004|5|22|2009|5|22}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="2"| 22

|rowspan="2"| P. V. Narasimha Rao
{{small|(1921{{ndash}}2004)}}

|rowspan="2"| 80px

|rowspan="2"| Prime Minister

|rowspan="2"| Indira IV
Rajiv I
Rajiv II

|rowspan="2" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1980–1989, 1991–1996)

|Cabinet Minister

|14 January 1980

|2 December 1989

|{{ayd|1980|1|14|1989|12|2}}

!rowspan="2"| 14 years, 652 days

Prime Minister

|21 June 1991

|16 May 1996

|{{ayd|1991|6|21|1996|5|16}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="2"| 23

|rowspan="2"| Yashwantrao Chavan
{{small|(1913{{ndash}}1984)}}

|rowspan="2"| 80px

|rowspan="2"| Deputy Prime Minister
(Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Home Affairs)

|rowspan="2"| Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira II
Indira III
Charan Singh

|rowspan="2" align="left"| {{colorbox|{{party color|INC}}}} INC (1962–1969)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC (1969–1977)
{{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (Urs)}}}} INC(U) (1979–1980)

|Cabinet Minister

|21 November 1962

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1962|11|21|1977|3|24}}

!rowspan="2"| 14 years, 293 days

Deputy Prime Minister

|28 July 1979

|14 January 1980

|{{ayd|1979|7|28|1980|1|14}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="4"| 24

|rowspan="4"| Keshav Dev Malviya
{{small|(1904{{ndash}}1981)}}

|rowspan="4"| 80px

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Petroleum, Chemicals and Fertilizers)

|rowspan="4"| Nehru II
Nehru III
Nehru IV
Indira III

|rowspan="4" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1952–1963)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1974–1977)

|Deputy Minister

|12 August 1952

|7 December 1954

|{{ayd|1952|8|12|1954|12|7}}

!rowspan="4"| 14 years,
25 days

Minister of State{{refn|With Cabinet rank from 7 December 1954 – 17 April 1957.|group= n}}

|7 December 1954

|10 April 1962

|{{ayd|1954|12|7|1962|4|10}}

rowspan="2"| Cabinet Minister

|10 April 1962

|26 June 1963

|{{ayd|1962|4|10|1963|6|26}}

11 January 1974

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1974|1|11|1977|3|24}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="4"| 25

|rowspan="4"| Ziaur Rahman Ansari
{{small|(1925{{ndash}}1992)}}

|rowspan="4"|

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Environment and Forests)

|rowspan="4"| Indira Gandhi II
Indira Gandhi III
Rajiv Gandhi

|rowspan="4" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1973–1977)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1980–1989)

|Deputy Minister

|6 February 1973

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1973|2|6|1977|3|24}}

!rowspan="4"| 13 years, 317 days

rowspan="2"| Minister of State

|3 March 1980

|31 October 1984

|{{ayd|1980|3|3|1984|10|31}}

4 November 1984

|25 June 1988

|{{ayd|1984|11|4|1988|6|25}}

Cabinet Minister

|25 June 1988

|2 December 1989

|{{ayd|1988|6|25|1989|12|2}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="3"| 26

|rowspan="3"| Shivraj Patil
{{small|(born 1935)}}

|rowspan="3"| 80px

|rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Home Affairs)

|rowspan="3"| Indira IV
Rajiv I
Rajiv II
Manmohan I

|rowspan="3"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1980–1989)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (2004–2008)

|rowspan="2"| Minister of State{{refn|With Independent charge from 15 January 1982 – 29 January 1983, and from 25 June 1988–2 December 1989.|group= n}}

|19 October 1980

|31 October 1984

|{{ayd|1980|10|19|1984|10|31}}

!rowspan="3"| 13 years, 232 days

4 November 1984

|2 December 1989

|{{ayd|1984|11|4|1989|12|2}}

Cabinet Minister

|22 May 2004

|30 November 2008

|{{ayd|2004|5|22|2008|11|30}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="4"| 27

|rowspan="4"| Ram Niwas Mirdha
{{small|(1924{{ndash}}2010)}}

|rowspan="4"| 80px

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Textiles, Health and Family Welfare)

|rowspan="4"| Indira II
Indira III
Indira IV
Rajiv I
Rajiv II

|rowspan="4" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1970–1977)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1983–1989)

|rowspan="3"| Minister of State{{refn|With Independent charge from 29 January 1983–31 October 1984, and from 4 November 1984–15 February 1988.|group= n}}

|26 June 1970

|24 March 1977

|{{ayd|1970|6|26|1977|3|24}}

!rowspan="4"| 13 years, 210 days

29 January 1983

|31 October 1984

|{{ayd|1983|1|29|1984|10|31}}

4 November 1984

|15 February 1988

|{{ayd|1984|11|4|1988|2|15}}

Cabinet Minister

|15 February 1988

|2 December 1989

|{{ayd|1988|2|15|1989|12|2}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="4"| 28

|rowspan="4"| Selja Kumari
{{small|(born 1962)}}

|rowspan="4"| 80px

|rowspan="4"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister of Social Justice and Empowerment)

|rowspan="4"| Rao
Manmohan I
Manmohan II

|rowspan="4" align="left"| {{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1992–1996)
{{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (2004–2014)

|Deputy Minister

|2 July 1992

|15 September 1995

|{{ayd|1992|7|2|1995|9|15}}

!rowspan="4"| 13 years, 199 days

rowspan="2"| Minister of State{{refn|With Independent charge from 23 May 2004.|group= n}}

|15 September 1995

|16 May 1996

|{{ayd|1995|9|15|1996|5|16}}

22 May 2004

|22 May 2009

|{{ayd|2004|5|22|2009|5|22}}

Cabinet Minister

|28 May 2009

|28 January 2014

|{{ayd|2009|5|28|2014|1|28}}

style="border-top:#A2A9B1 solid 2px"

!rowspan="6"| 29

|rowspan="6"| Dinesh Singh
{{small|(1925{{ndash}}1995)}}

|rowspan="6"| 80px

|rowspan="6"| Cabinet Minister
(Minister without portfolio)

|rowspan="6"| Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I
Indira II
Rajiv II
Rao

|rowspan="6" align="left"| {{colour box|{{party color|Indian National Congress}}}} INC (1962–1969)
{{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (R)}}}} INC(R) (1969–1971)
{{color box|{{party color|Indian National Congress (I)}}}} INC(I) (1988–1989, 1993–1995)

|rowspan="2"| Deputy Minister

|8 May 1962

|9 June 1964

|{{ayd|1962|5|8|1964|6|9}}

!rowspan="6"| 13 years, 185 days

15 June 1964

|24 January 1966

|{{ayd|1964|6|15|1966|1|24}}

Minister of State

|24 January 1966

|13 March 1967

|{{ayd|1966|1|24|1967|3|13}}

rowspan="3"| Cabinet Minister

|13 March 1967

|18 March 1971

|{{ayd|1967|3|13|1971|3|18}}

14 February 1988

|2 December 1989

|{{ayd|1988|2|14|1989|12|2}}

18 January 1993

|30 November 1995{{note label|†|†|†}}

|{{ayd|1993|1|18|1995|11|30}}

=Union ministers who later served as chief minister=

=Indian leaders who died in office=

Governors

=Governors=

class="wikitable plainrowheaders"

!style="width:17em"| Governor

!style="width:10em"| State

!Took office

!Date of death

!Age

!Cause of death

scope="row"| Muhammad Saleh Akbar Hydari

|Assam

|4 May 1947

|28 December 1948

|{{age|12 Oct 1894|28 Dec 1948}}

|Stroke

Girija Shankar Bajpai

|Maharashtra

|30 May 1952

|5 December 1954

|{{age|3 Apr 1891|5 Dec 1954}}

|Cerebral Haemorrhage

Harendra Coomar Mookerjee

|West Bengal

|1 November 1951

|7 August 1956

|{{age|3 Oct 1887|7 Aug 1956}}

|

Fazl Ali

|Assam

|15 May 1956

|22 August 1959

|{{age|19 Sep 1886|22 Aug 1959}}

|

P. Subbarayan

|Maharashtra

|17 April 1962

|6 October 1962

|{{age|11 Sep 1889|6 Oct 1962}}

|

P. V. Cherian

|Maharashtra

|14 November 1964

|8 November 1969

|{{age|9 Jul 1964|8 Nov 1969}}

|

Ali Yavar Jung

|Maharashtra

|26 February 1971

|11 December 1976

|70

|

Surendra Nath

|Punjab

|7 August 1991

|9 July 1994

|68

|Plane crash

Saiyid Nurul Hasan

|West Bengal

|6 February 1990

|12 July 1993

|{{age|26 Dec 1921|12 Jul 1993}}

|Renal failure

Marri Chenna Reddy

|Tamil Nadu

|31 May 1993

|2 December 1996

|{{age|13 January 1919|2 December 1996}}

|Cardiac arrest

Darbara Singh

|Rajasthan

|1 May 1998

|24 May 1998

|{{age|25 Feb 1927|24 May 1998}}

|Heart attack

Sikander Bakht

|Kerala

|18 April 2002

|23 February 2004

|{{age|24 August 1918|23 February 2004}}

|Complications from intestinal surgery

Nirmal Chandra Jain

|Rajasthan

|14 May 2003

|22 September 2003

|{{age|24 Sep 1928|22 Sep 2003}}

|Heart attack

Ram Prakash Gupta

|Madhya Pradesh

|7 May 2003

|1 May 2004

|{{age|26 Oct 1923|1 May 2004}}

|Prolonged illness

M. O. H. Farook

|Kerala

|8 September 2011

|26 January 2012

|{{age|6 September 1937|26 January 2012}}

|Multiple myeloma

Shiv Charan Mathur

|Assam

|4 July 2008

|25 June 2009

|{{age|14 February 1927|25 June 2009}}

|Brief illness

Shilendra Kumar Singh

|Rajasthan

|6 September 2007

|1 December 2009

|{{age|24 January 1932|1 December 2009}}

|Brief illness

Prabha Rau

|Rajasthan

|2 December 2009

|26 April 2010

|{{age|4 March 1935|26 April 2010}}

|Cardiac arrest

Syed Ahmed

|Manipur

|16 May 2015

|27 September 2015

|{{age|6 March 1943|27 September 2015}}

|Cancer

Balram Das Tandon

|Chhattisgarh

|25 July 2014

|14 August 2018

|{{age|1 November 1927|14 August 2018}}

|Cardiac arrest

Lalji Tandon

|Madhya Pradesh

|29 July 2019

|21 July 2020

|{{age|12 April 1935|21 July 2020}}

|COVID-19 complications

=Lieutenant Governors/Administrators=

class="wikitable"

!style="width:15em"| Governor

!style="width:10em"| State

!Took office

!Date of death

!Age

!Cause of death

K. R. Malkani

|Puducherry

|31 July 2002

|27 October 2003

|{{age|19 Nov 1921|27 Oct 2003}}

|Cardiac arrest

Govind Singh Gurjar

|Puducherry

|23 July 2008

|6 April 2009

|{{age|9 Mar 1932|6 Apr 2009}}

|Kidney disease

Dineshwar Sharma

|Lakshadweep

|3 November 2019

|4 December 2020

|{{age|23 Mar 1954|4 Dec 2020}}

|Intracerebral hemorrhage

Chief Ministers

class="wikitable plainrowheaders"

!style="width:15em"| Chief Minister

!style="width:10em"| State

!Took office

!Date of death

!Age

!Cause of death

scope=row| Gopinath Bordoloi

|Assam

|11 February 1946

|5 August 1950

|{{age|6 June 1890|5 August 1950}}

|Heart attack

scope=row| Ravishankar Shukla

|Madhya Pradesh

|26 January 1950

|31 December 1956

|{{age|2 August 1877|31 December 1956}}

scope=row| Dayanand Bandodkar

|Goa, Daman and Diu

|23 March 1972

|12 August 1973

|{{age|12 March 1911|12 August 1973}}

|Heart attack

scope=row| Barkatullah Khan

|Rajasthan

|9 July 1971

|11 October 1973

|{{age|25 October 1920|11 October 1973}}

|Heart attack

scope=row| Sheikh Abdullah

|Jammu and Kashmir

|9 July 1977

|8 September 1982

|{{age|5 December 1905|8 September 1982}}

|Prolonged illness

scope=row| M. G. Ramachandran

|Tamil Nadu

|9 June 1980

|24 December 1987

|{{age|17 January 1917|24 December 1987}}

|Prolonged illness

scope=row| Hiteswar Saikia

|Assam

|30 June 1991

|22 April 1996

|{{age|3 October 1934|22 April 1996}}

|Cardiac arrest

scope=row| Mufti Mohammad Sayeed

|Jammu and Kashmir

|1 March 2015

|7 January 2016

|{{age|12 January 1936|7 January 2016}}

|Multi-organ failure

scope=row| J. Jayalalithaa

|Tamil Nadu

|23 May 2015

|5 December 2016

|{{age|24 February 1948|5 December 2016}}

|Cardiac arrest

scope=row| Manohar Parrikar

|Goa

|14 March 2014

|17 March 2019

|{{age|13 December 1955|17 March 2019}}

|Pancreatic cancer

State politicians

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"

!style="width:14em"| Name

!style="width:8em"| State

!Position held

!Date of death

!class="unsortable"| Age

!Cause of death

M. Karunanidhi{{efn|M. Karunanidhi was the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu from 1969 until 1976, from 1989 until 1991, from 1996 until 2001, and from 2006 until 2011.}}

|Tamil Nadu

|Member, Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly for Tiruvarur

|7 August 2018

|{{age|3 June 1924|7 August 2018}}

|Multi organ failure

Donkupar Roy{{efn|Donkupar Roy was the Chief Minister of Meghalaya from 2008 until 2009.}}

|Meghalaya

|Speaker, Meghalaya Legislative Assembly

|28 July 2019

|{{age|10 November 1954|28 July 2019}}

|Multi organ failure

Pranab Kumar Gogoi

|Assam

|Member, Assam Legislative Assembly for Sibsagar

|3 February 2020

|{{age|19 Aug 1936|3 Feb 2020}}

|Age-related ailments

Parasnath Yadav

|Uttar Pradesh

|Member, Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly for Malhani

|12 June 2020

|{{age|12 Jan 1949|12 Jun 2020}}

|Bladder cancer

Tamonash Ghosh

|West Bengal

|Member, West Bengal Legislative Assembly for Falta

|24 June 2020

|60

|COVID-19 complications

Kamal Rani Varun

|Uttar Pradesh

|Minister of Technical Education, Uttar Pradesh

|2 August 2020

|{{age|3 May 1958|2 August 2020}}

|COVID-19 complications

Kailash Chandra Trivedi

|Rajasthan

|Member, Rajasthan Legislative Assembly for Sahara

|7 October 2020

|

|COVID-19 complications

C. M. Chang

|Nagaland

|Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate change, and Justice and Law, Nagaland

|12 October 2020

|{{age|1 April 1942|12 October 2020}}

|COVID-19 complications

Tarun Gogoi{{efn|Tarun Gogoi was the Chief Minister of Assam from 2001 until 2016.}}

|Assam

|Member, Assam Legislative Assembly for Titabar

|23 November 2020

|{{ay|1 Apr 1936|23 Nov 2020}}

|COVID-19 complications

Jagarnath Mahto

|Jharkhand

|Minister of School Education and Literacy Development, Prohibition and Excise, Jharkhand

|6 April 2023

|{{age|1 January 1967|6 April 2023}}

|Multi organ failure

Oommen Chandy{{efn|Oommen Chandy was the Chief Minister of Kerala from 2004 and 2006, and from 2011 and 2016.}}

|Kerala

|Member, Kerala Legislative Assembly for Puthuppally

|18 July 2023

|{{age|31 October 1943|18 July 2023}}

|Throat cancer

Surjya Narayan Patro

|Odisha

|Member, Odisha Legislative Assembly for Digapahandi

|2 September 2023

|{{age|24 December 1948|2 September 2023}}

|Age-related ailments

Ashutosh Tandon

|Uttar Pradesh

|Member, Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly for Lucknow East

|9 November 2023

|{{age|12 May 1960|9 Nov 2023}}

|Heart failure

=Relations between political leaders=

  • {{note label|†|†|†}} Died/Assassinated in office
  • {{note label|‡|‡|‡}} Succeeded in office by a relative

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:90%"

!style="width:11em"| Country

!colspan="2"| Leader 1

!style="width:24em"| Position held

!colspan="2"| Leader 2

!style="width:24em"| Position held

!Relation

{{flag|Indonesia}}

|60px

|Sukarno

|President of Indonesia {{small|(1945{{ndash}}1967)}}

|60px

|Megawati Sukarnoputri

|President of Indonesia {{small|(2001{{ndash}}2004)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Daughter

{{flag|Argentina}}

|60px

|Juan Perón{{ref label|†|†|†}}{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|President of Argentina {{small|(1946{{ndash}}1955, 1973{{ndash}}1974)}}

|60px

|Isabel Perón

|President of Argentina {{small|(1974{{ndash}}1976)}}

|Husband{{ndash}}Wife

{{flag|India}}

|60px

|style="width:13em"| Jawaharlal Nehru{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|Prime Minister of India {{small|(1947{{ndash}}1964)}}

|60px

|style="width:13em"| Indira Gandhi{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|Prime Minister of India {{small|(1966{{ndash}}1977, 1980{{ndash}}1984)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Daughter

rowspan="2"| {{flag|Ceylon}}
{{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|rowspan="2"| Prime Minister of Ceylon {{small|(1956{{ndash}}1959)}}

|60px

|Sirimavo Bandaranaike

|Prime Minister of Ceylon/Sri Lanka {{small|(1960{{ndash}}1965, 1970{{ndash}}1977, 1994{{ndash}}2000)}}

|Husband{{ndash}}Wife

60px

|Chandrika Kumaratunga

|Prime Minister of Sri Lanka {{small|(1994)}}
President of Sri Lanka {{small|(1994{{ndash}}2005)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Daughter

{{flag|Haiti}}

|60px

|François Duvalier{{ref label|†|†|†}}{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|President of Haiti {{small|(1957{{ndash}}1971)}}

|60px

|Jean-Claude Duvalier

|President of Haiti {{small|(1971{{ndash}}1986)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Singapore}}

|60px

|Lee Kuan Yew

|Prime Minister of Singapore {{small|(1959{{ndash}}1990)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Lee Hsien Loong

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Prime Minister of Singapore {{small|(2004{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Ceylon}}
{{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|60px

|Sirimavo Bandaranaike{{efn|Sirimavo Bandaranaike succeeded her daughter as the Prime Minister in 1994.}}

|Prime Minister of Ceylon/Sri Lanka {{small|(1960{{ndash}}1965, 1970{{ndash}}1977, 1994{{ndash}}2000)}}

|60px

|Chandrika Kumaratunga

|Prime Minister of Sri Lanka {{small|(1994)}}
President of Sri Lanka {{small|(1994{{ndash}}2005)}}

|Mother{{ndash}}Daughter

{{flag|Philippines}}

|60px

|Diosdado Macapagal

|President of the Philippines {{small|(1961{{ndash}}1965)}}

|60px

|Gloria Macapagal Arroyo

|President of the Philippines {{small|(2001{{ndash}}2010)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Daughter

{{flag|Kenya}}

|60px

|Jomo Kenyatta{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|Prime Minister of Kenya {{small|(1963{{ndash}}1964)}}
President of Kenya {{small|(1964{{ndash}}1978)}}

|60px

|Uhuru Kenyatta

|Prime Minister of Kenya {{small|(2013{{ndash}}2022)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Chile}}

|60px

|Eduardo Frei Montalva

|President of Chile {{small|(1964{{ndash}}1970)}}

|60px

|Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle

|President of Chile {{small|(1994{{ndash}}2000)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Philippines}}

|60px

|Ferdinand Marcos

|President of the Philippines {{small|(1965{{ndash}}1986)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Bongbong Marcos

|bgcolor="lightblue"| President of the Philippines {{small|(2022{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|India}}

|60px

|Indira Gandhi{{ref label|†|†|†}}{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|Prime Minister of India {{small|(1966{{ndash}}1977, 1980{{ndash}}1984)}}

|60px

|Rajiv Gandhi

|Prime Minister of India {{small|(1984{{ndash}}1989)}}

|Mother{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Togo}}

|60px

|Gnassingbé Eyadéma{{ref label|†|†|†}}{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|President of Togo {{small|(1967{{ndash}}2005)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Faure Gnassingbé

|bgcolor="lightblue"| President of Togo {{small|(2005, 2005{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Gabon}}

|60px

|Omar Bongo{{ref label|†|†|†}}{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|President of Gabon {{small|(1967{{ndash}}2009)}}

|60px

|Ali Bongo

|President of Gabon {{small|(2009{{ndash}}2023)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Canada}}

|60px

|Pierre Trudeau

|Prime Minister of Canada {{small|(1968{{ndash}}1979, 1980{{ndash}}1984)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Justin Trudeau

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Prime Minister of Canada {{small|(2015{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Equatorial Guinea}}

|60px

|Francisco Macías Nguema{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|President of Equatorial Guinea {{small|(1968{{ndash}}1979)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo

|bgcolor="lightblue"| President of Equatorial Guinea {{small|(1979{{ndash}}present)}}

|Uncle{{ndash}}Nephew

rowspan="2"| {{flag|Malaysia}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Abdul Razak Hussein{{ref label|†|†|†}}{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|rowspan="2"| Prime Minister of Malaysia {{small|(1970{{ndash}}1976)}}

|

|Hussein Onn

|Prime Minister of Malaysia {{small|(1976{{ndash}}1981)}}

|Brothers-in-law

60px

|Najib Razak

|Prime Minister of Malaysia {{small|(2009{{ndash}}2018)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Syria}}

|60px

|Hafiz al-Assad{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|Prime Minister of Syria {{small|(1970{{ndash}}1971)}}
President of Syria {{small|(1971{{ndash}}2000)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"|

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Bashar al-Assad

|bgcolor="lightblue"| President of Syria {{small|(2000{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Bangladesh}}

|60px

|Sheikh Mujibur Rahman{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|President of Bangladesh {{small|(1971{{ndash}}1972, 1972{{ndash}}1975)}},
Prime Minister of Bangladesh {{small|(1972{{ndash}}1975)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sheikh Hasina

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Prime Minister of Bangladesh {{small|(1996{{ndash}}2001, 2009{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Daughter

{{flag|Pakistan}}

|60px

|Zulfikar Ali Bhutto

|President of Pakistan {{small|(1971{{ndash}}1973)}}
Prime Minister of Pakistan {{small|(1973{{ndash}}1977)}}

|60px

|Benazir Bhutto

|Prime Minister of Pakistan {{small|(1988{{ndash}}1990, 1993{{ndash}}1996)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Daughter

{{flag|Bangladesh}}

|60px

|Ziaur Rahman{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|President of Bangladesh {{small|(1977{{ndash}}1981)}}

|60px

|Khaleda Zia

|Prime Minister of Bangladesh {{small|(1991{{ndash}}1996, 2001{{ndash}}2006)}}

|Husband{{ndash}}Wife

{{flag|Djibouti}}

|60px

|Hassan Gouled Aptidon{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|President of Djibouti {{small|(1977{{ndash}}1999)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Ismaïl Omar Guelleh

|bgcolor="lightblue"| President of Djibouti {{small|(1999{{ndash}}present)}}

|Uncle{{ndash}}Nephew

{{flag|Maldives}}

|60px

|Maumoon Abdul Gayoom

|President of the Maldives {{small|(1978{{ndash}}2008)}}

|60px

|Abdulla Yameen

|President of the Maldives {{small|(2013{{ndash}}2018)}}

|Half-brothers

{{flag|Philippines}}

|60px

|Corazon Aquino

|President of the Philippines {{small|(1986{{ndash}}1992)}}

|60px

|Benigno Aquino III

|President of the Philippines {{small|(2010{{ndash}}2016)}}

|Mother{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Pakistan}}

|60px

|Benazir Bhutto

|Prime Minister of Pakistan {{small|(1988{{ndash}}1990, 1993{{ndash}}1996)}}

|60px

|Asif Ali Zardari

|President of Pakistan {{small|(2008{{ndash}}2013)}}

|Wife{{ndash}}Husband

{{flag|United States}}

|60px

|George H. W. Bush

|President of the United States {{small|(1989{{ndash}}1993)}}

|60px

|George W. Bush

|President of the United States {{small|(2001{{ndash}}2009)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Chad}}

|60px

|Idriss Déby{{ref label|†|†|†}}{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|President of Chad {{small|(1990{{ndash}}2021)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Mahamat Déby

|bgcolor="lightblue"| President of the Transitional Military Council {{small|(2021{{ndash}}2022)}}
Transitional President of Chad {{small|(2022{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Zaire}}/
{{flag|Democratic Republic of the Congo}}

|60px

|Étienne Tshisekedi

|Prime Minister of Zaire {{small|(1991, 1992{{ndash}}1993, 1997)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Félix Tshisekedi

|bgcolor="lightblue"| President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo {{small|(2019{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Azerbaijan}}

|60px

|Heydar Aliyev{{efn|Heydar Aliyev held various positions in the Soviet-era Azerbaijan.}}

|President of Azerbaijan {{small|(1993{{ndash}}2003)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Ilham Aliyev

|bgcolor="lightblue"| President of Azerbaijan {{small|(2003{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Son

{{flag|Pakistan}}

|60px

|Nawaz Sharif

|Prime Minister of Pakistan {{small|(1990{{ndash}}1993, 1997{{ndash}}1999, 2013{{ndash}}2017)}}

|60px

|Shehbaz Sharif

|Prime Minister of Pakistan {{small|(2022{{ndash}}2023)}}

|Brothers

rowspan="2"| {{flag|Thailand}}

|rowspan="2"| 60px

|rowspan="2"| Thaksin Shinawatra

|rowspan="2"| Prime Minister of Thailand {{small|(2001{{ndash}}2006)}}

|60px

|Somchai Wongsawat

|Prime Minister of Thailand {{small|(2008)}}

|Brothers-in-law

60px

|Yingluck Shinawatra

|Prime Minister of Thailand {{small|(2011{{ndash}}2014)}}

|Siblings

{{flag|Estonia}}

|60px

|Siim Kallas

|Prime Minister of Estonia {{small|(2002{{ndash}}2003)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 60px

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Kaja Kallas

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Prime Minister of Estonia {{small|(2021{{ndash}}present)}}

|Father{{ndash}}Daughter

{{flag|Argentina}}

|60px

|Néstor Kirchner{{ref label|‡|‡|‡}}

|President of Argentina {{small|(2003{{ndash}}2007)}}

|60px

|Cristina Fernández de Kirchner

|President of Argentina {{small|(2007{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Husband{{ndash}}Wife

{{flag|Malawi}}

|60px

|Bingu wa Mutharika{{ref label|†|†|†}}

|President of Malawi {{small|(2004{{ndash}}2012)}}

|60px

|Peter Mutharika

|President of Malawi {{small|(2014{{ndash}}2020)}}

|Brothers

{{flag|Sri Lanka}}

|60px

|Mahinda Rajapaksa

|Prime Minister of Sri Lanka {{small|(2004{{ndash}}2005, 2018, 2019{{ndash}}2022)}}
President of Sri Lanka {{small|(2005{{ndash}}2015)}}

|60px

|Gotabaya Rajapaksa

|President of Sri Lanka {{small|(2019{{ndash}}2022)}}

|Brothers

{{flag|Thailand}}

|60px

|Somchai Wongsawat

|Prime Minister of Thailand {{small|(2008)}}

|60px

|Yingluck Shinawatra

|Prime Minister of Thailand {{small|(2011{{ndash}}2014)}}

|Brother-in-law{{ndash}}
Sister-in-law

Refer

Bangladesh

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

!{{abbr|No.|Number}}

!Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name

!style="width:8em"| Term began

!style="width:8em"| Term ended

!style="width:12em"| Appointed by
{{small|(President of India)}}

!style="width:16em"| Presented credentials to
{{small|(President of Bangladesh)}}

colspan="7"| High Commissioners of India to the People's Republic of Bangladesh
1

|

|Subimal Dutt

|February 1972

|June 1974

|rowspan="2"| V. V. Giri

|Abu Sayeed Chowdhury

2

|

|Samar Sen

|July 1974

|November 1976

|Mohammad Mohammadullah

3

|

|K. P. S. Menon Jr.

|January 1977

|September 1979

|Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed

|Abu Sadat Mohammad Sayem

4

|

|Muchkund Dubey

|October 1979

|October 1982

|Neelam Sanjiva Reddy

|Ziaur Rahman

5

|

|I. P. Khosla

|November 1982

|August 1985

|rowspan="2"| Zail Singh

|A. F. M. Ahsanuddin Chowdhury

6

|

|I. S. Chadha

|October 1985

|February 1989

|rowspan="2"| Hussain Muhammad Ershad

7

|70px

|Krishnan Srinivasan

|February 1989

|March 1992

|rowspan="2"| Ramaswamy Venkataraman

8

|

|K. Raghunath

|April 1992

|March 1995

|rowspan="2"| Abdur Rahman Biswas

9

|

|Deb Mukharji

|March 1995

|July 2000

|Shankar Dayal Sharma

10

|

|M. L. Tripathi

|July 2000

|October 2003

|K. R. Narayanan

|Shahabuddin Ahmed

11

|

|Veena Sikri

|December 2003

|November 2006

|rowspan="2"| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam

|rowspan="2"| Iajuddin Ahmed

12

|

|P. R. Chakravarty

|January 2007

|December 2009

13

|

|Rajeet Mittar

=Nepal=

{{Infobox official post

| post = Ambassador of India to Nepal

| native_name = {{lang|hi|नेपाल में भारत के राजदूत}}

| insignia = File:Emblem of India.svg

| insigniasize = 80px

| insigniacaption = Emblem of India

| image =

| imagesize =

| alt =

| imagecaption =

| incumbent = Naveen Srivastava

| acting =

| incumbentsince = 25 June 2022

| department = Embassy of India, Kathmandu
Ministry of External Affairs

| style = His/Her Excellency

| appointer = President of India

| inaugural = Surjit Singh Majithia

| formation = 1947

| salary =

| website = {{url|indembkathmandu.gov.in}}

| footnotes =

}}

The Ambassador of India to the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal ({{langx|hi|नेपाल में भारत के राजदूत}}) is the official representative of the government of India to the government of Nepal and the head of the Indian Embassy in Kathmandu.

Naveen Srivastava, an officer of the Indian Foreign Service, is the current ambassador and presented his credentials to President Bidhya Devi Bhandari on 25 June 2022.

List

class="wikitable"

!No.

!style="width:21em"| Name

!style="width:9em"| Term began

!style="width:9em"| Term ended

!style="width:12em"| Appointer
{{small|(President)}}

!style="width:11em"| Presented credentials

1

|Surjit Singh Majithia

|1947

|1949

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Lord Louis Mountbatten
{{small|(Governor-General)}}}}

|rowspan="4"| {{center|King Tribhuvan}}

2

|Chandeshwar Prasad Narayan Singh

|1949

|1952

3

|B. K. Gokhale

|October 1952

|December 1954

|rowspan="3"| {{center|Rajendra Prasad}}

4

|Bhagwan Sahay

|1954

|1959

5

|Harishwar Dayal

|1 February 1960

|19 May 1964

|rowspan="4"| {{center|King Mahendra}}

6

|Shriman Narayan

|20 November 1964

|17 December 1967

|{{center|S. Radhakrishnan}}

7

|Raj Bahadur

|5 January 1968

|22 January 1971

|{{center|Zakir Husain}}

8

|Lallan Prasad Singh

|22 December 1971

|5 September 1973

|rowspan="2"| {{center|V. V. Giri}}

9

|Maharaja Krishna Rasgotra

|8 December 1973

|17 October 1976

|rowspan="9"| {{center|King Birendra}}

10

|N. B. Menon

|28 November 1976

|31 March 1979

|{{center|Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed}}

11

|N. P. Jain

|30 June 1979

|28 July 1982

|{{center|Neelam Sanjiva Reddy}}

12

|Harish Chandra Sarin

|31 January 1983

|31 January 1986

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Zail Singh}}

13

|A. R. Deo

|24 February 1986

|31 December 1989

14

|Lt. Gen. (Retd.) Srinivas Kumar Sinha, {{post-nominals|country=IND|PVSM|size=80%}}

|20 February 1990

|2 January 1991

|rowspan="2"| {{center|R. Venkataraman}}

15

|Bimal Prasad

|12 January 1991

|31 January 1995

16

|Krishna V. Rajan

|15 March 1995

|13 June 2000

|{{center|Shankar Dayal Sharma}}

17

|Deb Mukharji

|14 June 2000

|30 November 2001

|rowspan="2"| {{center|K. R. Narayanan}}

18

|Indu Prakash Singh

|1 December 2001

|17 June 2002

|rowspan="3"| {{center|King Gyanendra}}

19

|Shyam Saran

|31 October 2002

|25 July 2004

|rowspan="2"| {{center|A. P. J. Abdul Kalam}}

20

|Shiv Shankar Mukherjee

|6 October 2004

|23 April 2008

21

|Rakesh Sood

|25 April 2008

|11 August 2011

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Pratibha Patil}}

|{{center|Girija Prasad Koirala}}

22

|Jayant Prasad

|25 August 2011

|25 August 2013

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Ram Baran Yadav}}

23

|Ranjit Rae

|2 September 2013

|28 February 2017

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Pranab Mukherjee}}

24

|Manjeev Singh Puri

|25 March 2017

|31 December 2019

|rowspan="3"| {{center|Bidhya Devi Bhandari}}

25

|Vinay Mohan Kwatra

|1 March 2020

|16 April 2022

|rowspan="2"| {{center|Ram Nath Kovind}}

26

|Naveen Srivastava

|25 June 2022

|Incumbent

Prime Ministers

class="wikitable sortable"

! Image

! style="width:13em"| Minister

! Religion

! colspan="2"| Party

! Constituency

! Position

! From

! To

! Ministry

70px

|Manmohan Singh

|Sikh

|{{party name with colour|INC}}

|Assam
(Rajya Sabha)

|Prime Minister of India
Minister of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions
Department of Atomic Energy
Department of Space

|22 May 2004

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan I
Manmohan II

Cabinet Ministers

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:93%"

! Image

! style="width:11em"| Minister

! Religion

! colspan="2"| Party

! Constituency

! Position

! From

! To

! Ministry

rowspan="3"| 70px

|rowspan="3"| Maulana Azad

|rowspan="3"| Muslim

|{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="2"| Rampur

|Minister of Education

|15 August 1947

|17 April 1957

|Nehru I
Nehru II

Minister of Natural Resources and Scientific Research

|13 April 1952

|17 April 1957

|Nehru II

Gurgaon

|Minister of Education and Scientific Research

|17 April 1957

|22 February 1958

|Nehru III

70px

|Baldev Singh

|Sikh

|{{party name with colour|INC}}

|East Punjab
(Constituent Assembly)

|Minister of Defence

|15 August 1947

|13 May 1952

|Nehru I

70px

|Amrit Kaur

|Sikh

|{{party name with colour|INC}}

|Mandi-Mahasu

|Minister of Health

|15 August 1947

|16 April 1957

|Nehru I
Nehru II

|C. H. Bhabha

|Parsi

|{{party name with colour|INC}}

|

|Minister of Commerce

|15 August 1947

|13 May 1952

|Nehru I

rowspan="2"| 70px

|rowspan="2"| M. C. Chagla

|rowspan="2"| Muslim

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Maharashtra
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Education

|21 November 1963

|13 November 1966

|Nehru IV
Nanda I
Shastri
Nanda II
Indira I

Minister of External Affairs

|13 November 1966

|5 September 1967

|Indira I
Indira II

rowspan="6"| 70px

|rowspan="6"| Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed

|rowspan="6"| Muslim

|{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="6"| Assam
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Irrigation and Power

|24 January 1966

|13 November 1996

|rowspan="2"| Indira I

Minister of Education

|13 November 1966

|13 March 1967

Minister of Industrial Development and Company Affairs

|13 March 1967

|14 February 1969

|rowspan="3"| Indira II

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (R)|rowspan=3}}

|Minister of Industrial Development, Internal Trade and Company Affairs

|14 February 1969

|27 June 1970

Minister of Food and Agriculture

|27 June 1970

|2 May 1971

Minister of Agriculture

|2 May 1971

|3 July 1974

|Indira III

70px

|Moinul Hoque Choudhury

|Muslim

|{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (R)}}

|Dhubri

|Minister of Industrial Development

|18 March 1971

|22 July 1972

|Indira III

rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Gurdial Singh Dhillon

|rowspan="2"| Sikh

|{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (R)}}

|Tarn Taran

|Minister of Shipping and Transport

|1 December 1975

|24 March 1977

|Indira III

{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Firozpur

|Minister of Agriculture

|12 May 1986

|14 February 1988

|Rajiv II

rowspan="2"| 70px

|rowspan="2"| Parkash Singh Badal

|rowspan="2"| Sikh

|{{party name with colour|Shiromani Akali Dal|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Faridkot

|Minister of Communications

|26 March 1977

|28 March 1977

|rowspan="2"| Desai

Minister of Agriculture

|28 March 1977

|17 June 1977

rowspan="6"| 70px

|rowspan="6"| George Fernandes

|rowspan="6"| Christian

|{{party name with colour|Janata Party|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="4"| Muzaffarpur

|Minister of Communications

|28 March 1977

|6 July 1977

|rowspan="2"| Desai

Minister of Industry

|6 July 1977

|15 July 1979

{{party name with colour|Janata Dal|rowspan=2}}

|Minister of Railways

|6 December 1989

|10 November 1990

|rowspan="2"| V. P. Singh

Minister of Kashmir Affairs

|13 March 1990

|30 May 1990

rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|Samata Party}}"|

|rowspan="2"| SAP

|rowspan="2"| Nalanda

|rowspan="2"| Minister of Defence

|19 March 1998

|16 March 2001

|Vajpayee II
Vajpayee III

15 October 2001

|22 May 2004

|Vajpayee III

rowspan="2"| 70px

|rowspan="2"| Surjit Singh Barnala

|rowspan="2"| Sikh

|{{party name with colour|Shiromani Akali Dal|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Sangrur

|Minister of Agriculture and Irrigation

|18 June 1977

|28 July 1979

|Desai

Minister of Chemicals and Fertilizers
Minister of Food and Consumer Affairs

|19 March 1998

|13 October 1999

|Vajpayee II

rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Fazlur Rahman

|rowspan="2"| Muslim

|{{party name with color|Janata Party (Secular)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Bettiah

|Minister of Labour

|30 July 1979

|14 January 1980

|rowspan="2"| Charan Singh

Minister of Muslim Waqfs

|7 December 1979

|14 January 1980

rowspan="5"| 70px

|rowspan="5"| A. B. A. Ghani Khan Choudhury

|rowspan="5"| Muslim

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=5}}

|rowspan="5"| Malda

|Minister of Energy

|14 January 1980

|2 September 1982

|rowspan="3"| Indira IV

Minister of Irrigation

|16 January 1980

|9 June 1980

Minister of Coal

|16 January 1980

|15 January 1982

Minister of Railways

|15 January 1982

|31 December 1984

|Indira IV
Rajiv I

Minister of Programme Implementation

|25 September 1985

|4 May 1987

|Rajiv II

rowspan="6"| 70px

|rowspan="6"| Buta Singh

|rowspan="6"| Sikh

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=5}}

|Ropar

|Minister of Parliamentary Affairs
Minister of Sports
Minister of Works and Housing

|29 January 1983

|31 December 1984

|Indira IV
Rajiv I

rowspan="5"| Jalore

|Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development

|31 December 1984

|25 September 1985

|rowspan="3"| Rajiv II

Minister of Agriculture

|25 September 1985

|12 May 1986

Minister of Home Affairs

|12 May 1986

|2 December 1989

Minister of Civil Supplies, Consumer Affairs and Public Distribution

|10 February 1995

|20 February 1996

|Rao

bgcolor="{{party color|Independent politician}}"|

|IND

|Minister of Communications

|19 March 1998

|20 April 1998

|Vajpayee II

rowspan="2"|

|rowspan="2"| Abdul Ghafoor

|rowspan="2"| Muslim

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Siwan

|Minister of Works and Housing

|31 December 1984

|25 September 1985

|rowspan="2"| Rajiv II

Minister of Urban Development

|25 September 1985

|22 October 1986

|Ziaur Rahman Ansari

|Muslim

|{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Unnao

|Minister of Environment and Forests

|25 June 1988

|2 December 1989

|Rajiv II

70px

|Manmohan Singh

|Sikh

|{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|Assam
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Finance

|21 June 1991

|16 May 1996

|Rao

rowspan="6"| 70px

|rowspan="6"| Ghulam Nabi Azad

|rowspan="6"| Muslim

|{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Washim

|Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs

|21 June 1991

|18 January 1993

|rowspan="3"| Rao

Minister of Civil Aviation and Tourism

|9 January 1993

|16 May 1996

Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs

|18 January 1996

|16 May 1996

{{party name with colour|INC|rowspan=3}}

|rowspan="3"| Jammu and Kashmir
(Rajya Sabha)

|Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs
Minister of Urban Development

|23 May 2004

|1 November 2005

|Manmohan I

Minister of Health and Family Welfare

|28 May 2009

|26 May 2014

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan II

Minister of Water Resources

|1 February 2014

|26 May 2014

rowspan="2"| 70px

|rowspan="2"| A. K. Antony

|rowspan="2"| Christian

|{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="2"| Kerala
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Civil Supplies, Consumer Affairs and Public Distribution

|18 January 1993

|8 February 1995

|Rao

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|Minister of Defence

|24 October 2006

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan I
Manmohan II

rowspan="3"| 70px

|rowspan="3"| A. R. Antulay

|rowspan="3"| Muslim

|{{party name with colour|Indian National Congress (I)|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="3"| Kolaba

|Minister of Health and Family Welfare

|11 June 1995

|16 May 1996

|rowspan="2"| Rao

Minister of Water Resources

|7 February 1996

|16 May 1996

{{party name with colour|INC}}

|Minister of Minority Affairs

|29 January 2006

|22 May 2009

|Manmohan I

rowspan="5"| 70px

|rowspan="5"| Sukhdev Singh Dhindsa

|rowspan="5"| Sikh

|{{party name with color|Shiromani Akali Dal|rowspan=5}}

|rowspan="5"| Punjab
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Works and Estates

|22 November 1999

|26 November 1999

|rowspan="5"| Vajpayee III

Minister of Urban Employment and Poverty Alleviation

|26 November 1999

|27 May 2000

Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports

|2 May 2000

|7 November 2000

Minister of Mines

|27 May 2000

|7 November 2000

Minister of Chemicals and Fertilizers

|7 November 2000

|22 May 2004

rowspan="2"| 70px

|rowspan="2"| Syed Shahnawaz Hussain

|rowspan="2"| Muslim

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Kishanganj

|Minister of Civil Aviation

|1 September 2001

|24 May 2003

|rowspan="2"| Vajpayee III

Minister of Textiles

|24 May 2003

|22 May 2004

70px

|Farooq Abdullah

|Muslim

|{{party name with color|Jammu and Kashmir National Conference}}

|Srinagar

|Minister of New and Renewable Energy

|28 May 2009

|26 May 2014

|Manmohan II

rowspan="2"| 70px

|rowspan="2"| M. S. Gill

|rowspan="2"| Sikh

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Punjab
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports

|28 May 2009

|19 January 2011

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan II

Minister of Statistics and Programme Implementation

|19 January 2011

|12 July 2011

rowspan="2"| 70px

|rowspan="2"| Oscar Fernandes

|rowspan="2"| Christian

|{{party name with color|INC|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Karnataka
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Road Transport and Highways

|17 June 2013

|26 May 2014

|rowspan="2"| Manmohan II

Minister of Labour and Employment

|15 December 2013

|26 May 2014

70px

|Najma Heptulla

|Muslim

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|Madhya Pradesh
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Minority Affairs

|26 May 2014

|12 July 2016

|Modi I

70px

|Harsimrat Kaur Badal

|Sikh

|{{party name with colour|Shiromani Akali Dal}}

|Bathinda

|Minister of Food Processing Industries

|26 May 2014

|17 September 2020

|Modi I
Modi II

rowspan="6" bgcolor="lightblue"| 70px

|rowspan="6" bgcolor="lightblue"| Smriti Irani

|rowspan="6"| Parsi
(by marriage)

|rowspan="6" bgcolor="{{party color|Bharatiya Janata Party}}"|

|rowspan="6"| BJP

|rowspan="3"| Gujarat
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Human Resource Development

|27 May 2014

|5 July 2016

|rowspan="3"| Modi I

Minister of Textiles

|5 July 2016

|30 May 2019

Minister of Information and Broadcasting

|18 July 2017

|14 May 2018

rowspan="3"| Amethi

|Minister of Textiles

|31 May 2019

|7 July 2019

|rowspan="3"| Modi II

bgcolor="lightblue"| Minister of Women and Child Development

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 31 May 2019

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Incumbent

bgcolor="lightblue"| Minister of Minority Affairs

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 6 July 2022

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Incumbent

70px

|Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi

|Muslim

|{{party name with colour|BJP}}

|Jharkhand
(Rajya Sabha)

|Minister of Minority Affairs

|3 September 2017

|6 July 2022

|Modi I
Modi II

rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightblue"| 70px

|rowspan="2" bgcolor="lightblue"| Kiren Rijiju

|rowspan="2"| Buddhist

|{{party name with colour|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| Arunachal West

|Minister of Law and Justice

|7 July 2021

|18 May 2023

|rowspan="2"| Modi II

bgcolor="lightblue"| Minister of Earth Sciences

|bgcolor="lightblue"| 18 May 2023

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Incumbent

Ministers of State

=State reps, Swearing-in Agong=

class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%; text-align:center"

!rowspan="2"| Agong

!colspan="9"| Royals

!colspan="4"| Governors

style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Johor}}
Johor

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Kedah}}
Kedah

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Kelantan}}
Kelantan

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Negeri Sembilan}}
Neg. Sembilan

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Pahang}}
Pahang

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Perak}}
Perak

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Perlis}}
Perlis

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Selangor}}
Selangor

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Terengganu}}
Terengganu

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Malacca}}
Malacca

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Penang}}
Penang

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Sabah}}
Sabah

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Sarawak}}
Sarawak

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Terengganu}}
XIII
{{nobold|(2006)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah
(TYDPA)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ismail Petra,
Sultan
(Witness)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Ja'afar,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Azlan Shah,
Sultan
(Chair)

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Kedah}}
XIV
{{nobold|(2011)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ibrahim,
Sultan

|Tunku Annuar,
Pengerusi Jemaah Pemangku Raja

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Muhammad V,
Sultan
(TYDPA)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Muhriz,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ahmad Shah Al-Musta’in Billah,
Sultan
(Witness)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Azlan Shah,
Sultan
(Witness)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Syed Sirajuddin,
Sultan
(Chair)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah,
Sultan

|Tengku Baharuddin,
Tengku Sri Temenggung Raja

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Mohd Khalil Yaakob,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Abdul Rahman Abbas,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Juhar Mahiruddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|Mohamad Asfia Awang Nassar,
Pemangku Yang di-Pertua Negeri

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Kelantan}}
XV
{{nobold|(2016)}}

|Tunku Idris Iskandar,
Tunku Temenggong

|Tengku Sallehuddin,
Tengku Temenggong

|Tengku Muhammad Fa-iz Petra,
Pemangku Raja

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Muhriz,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar

|Tengku Abdullah Ri'ayatuddin Al-Mustafa Billah Shah,
Pemangku Raja

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Nazrin Shah,
Sultan
(TYDPA)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Syed Sirajuddin,
Sultan
(Witness)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah,
Sultan
(Chair)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin,
Sultan
(Witness)

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Mohd Khalil Yaakob,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Abdul Rahman Abbas,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Juhar Mahiruddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|Mohamad Asfia Awang Nassar,
Pemangku Yang di-Pertua Negeri

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Pahang}}
XVI
{{nobold|(2019)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ibrahim,
Sultan

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sallehuddin,
Sultan

|Tengku Muhammad Fa-iz Petra,
Tengku Mahkota

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Muhriz,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar

|Tengku Hassanal Ibrahim Alam Shah,
Pemangku Raja

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Nazrin Shah,
Sultan
(TYDPA)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Syed Sirajuddin,
Sultan
(Witness)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah,
Sultan
(Chair)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin,
Sultan
(Witness)

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Mohd Khalil Yaakob,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Abdul Rahman Abbas,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Juhar Mahiruddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Abdul Taib Mahmud,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Johor}}
XVII
{{nobold|(2024)}}

|Tunku Ismail Idris,
Pemangku Raja

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sallehuddin,
Sultan

|Tengku Muhammad Fakhry Petra,
Tengku Mahkota

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Muhriz,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar
(Witness)

|Tengku Hassanal Ibrahim Alam Shah,
Pemangku Raja

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Nazrin Shah,
Sultan
(TYDPA)

|Tuanku Syed Faizuddin Putra,
Pemangku Raja

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah,
Sultan
(Witness)

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin,
Sultan
(Chair)

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Mohd Ali Rustam,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Ahmad Fuzi Abdul Razak,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Juhar Mahiruddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

|bgcolor="lightyellow"| Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri

=State reps, Installation Malaysia=

class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%"

!rowspan="2"| Agong

!colspan="9"| Royals

!colspan="4"| Governors

colspan="14"|
style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Johor}}
Johor

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Kedah}}
Kedah

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Kelantan}}
Kelantan

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Negeri Sembilan}}
Neg. Sembilan

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Pahang}}
Pahang

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Perak}}
Perak

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Perlis}}
Perlis

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Selangor}}
Selangor

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Terengganu}}
Terengganu

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Malacca}}
Malacca

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Penang}}
Penang

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Sabah}}
Sabah

!style="width:9em"| {{flagicon|Sarawak}}
Sarawak

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Johor}}
VIII
{{nobold|(1984)}}
colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Perak}}
IX
{{nobold|(1989)}}

|

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Abdul Halim,
Sultan Kedah &
Sultanah Bahiyah,
Sultanah Kedah

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ismail Petra,
Sultan Kelantan &
Raja Perempuan Tengku Anis,
Raja Perempuan Kelantan

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Ja'afar,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan &
Tunku Ampuan Najihah,
Tunku Ampuan Negeri Sembilan

|Tengku Abdullah Al-Haj,
Pemangku Raja Pahang &
Tengku Azizah Aminah Maimunah,
Tengku Puan Pahang

|Raja Nazrin Shah,
Pemangku Raja Perak

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Syed Putra,
Raja Perlis &
Raja Perempuan Budriah,
Raja Perempuan Perlis

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Salahuddin,
Sultan Selangor

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Mahmud,
Sultan Terengganu &
Tengku Ampuan Bariah,
Tengku Ampuan Besar Terengganu

|Syed Ahmad Shahabuddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Malacca &
Marfuza Sheikh Mohd Osman

|Hamdan Sheikh Tahir,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Penang &
Siti Zainab

|Mohammad Said Keruak,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah &
Bandong Hasbollah

|Ahmad Zaidi Adruce,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak &
Rosmiati Kendati

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Negeri Sembilan}}
X
{{nobold|(1994)}}

|Tunku Ibrahim Ismail,
Tunku Mahkota Johor &
Raja Zarith Sofiah

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Abdul Halim,
Sultan Kedah &
Sultanah Bahiyah,
Sultanah Kedah

|Tengku Abdul Aziz,
Tengku Sri Utama Raja Kelantan &
Tengku Merjan

|Tunku Naquiyuddin,
Pemangku Yang di-Pertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan &
Tunku Nurul Hayati,
Tunku Puan Muda Negeri Sembilan

|Tengku Abdullah Al-Haj,
Pemangku Raja Pahang &
Tengku Azizah Aminah Maimunah,
Tengku Puan Pahang

|Raja Nazrin Shah,
Pemangku Raja Perak

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Syed Putra,
Raja Perlis &
Raja Perempuan Budriah,
Raja Perempuan Perlis

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Salahuddin,
Sultan Selangor

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Mahmud,
Sultan Terengganu &
Tengku Ampuan Bariah,
Tengku Ampuan Besar Terengganu

|Syed Ahmad Shahabuddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Malacca &
Marfuza Sheikh Mohd Osman

|Hamdan Sheikh Tahir,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Penang &
Siti Zainab

|Mohammad Said Keruak,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah &
Bandong Hasbollah

|Ahmad Zaidi Adruce,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak &
Rosmiati Kendati

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Selangor}}
XI
colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Perlis}}
XII
{{nobold|(2002)}}

|Tunku Ibrahim Ismail,
Tunku Mahkota Johor &
Raja Zarith Sofiah

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Abdul Halim,
Sultan Kedah

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ismail Petra,
Sultan Kelantan &
Raja Perempuan Tengku Anis,
Raja Perempuan Kelantan

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Ja'afar,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan &
Tunku Ampuan Najihah,
Tunku Ampuan Negeri Sembilan

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ahmad Shah,
Sultan Pahang &
Sultanah Kalsom,
Sultanah Pahang

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Azlan Shah,
Sultan Perak &
Raja Permaisuri Tuanku Bainun,
Raja Permaisuri Perak

|Tuanku Syed Faizuddin Putra,
Pemangku Raja Perlis &
Tuanku Lailatul Shahreen Akashah Khalil,
Raja Puan Muda Perlis

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah,
Sultan Selangor

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin,
Sultan Terengganu

|Syed Ahmad Shahabuddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Malacca &
Marfuza Sheikh Mohd Osman

|Abdul Rahman Abbas,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Penang &
Majimor binti Shariff

|Sakaran Dandai,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah &
Siti Rukaiyah Abdullah

|Abang Muhammad Salahuddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak &
Norkiah Abdullah

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Terengganu}}
XIII
{{nobold|(2006)}}

|Tunku Ibrahim Ismail,
Tunku Mahkota Johor &
Raja Zarith Sofiah

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Abdul Halim,
Sultan Kedah &
Sultanah Haminah,
Sultanah Kedah

|

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Ja'afar,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan &
Tunku Ampuan Najihah,
Tunku Ampuan Negeri Sembilan

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ahmad Shah,
Sultan Pahang &
Sultanah Kalsom,
Sultanah Pahang

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Azlan Shah,
Sultan Perak &
Raja Permaisuri Tuanku Bainun,
Raja Permaisuri Perak

|Tuanku Syed Faizuddin Putra,
Raja Muda Perlis &
Tuanku Lailatul Shahreen Akashah Khalil,
Raja Puan Muda Perlis

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah,
Sultan Selangor

|Tengku Muhammad Ismail,
Pemangku Raja Terengganu

|Mohd Khalil Yaakob,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Malacca &
Zurina Kassim

|Abdul Rahman Abbas,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Penang &
Majimor binti Shariff

|Ahmadshah Abdullah,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah &
Dayang Masuyah Awang Japar

|Abang Muhammad Salahuddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak &
Norkiah Abdullah

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Kedah}}
XIV
{{nobold|(2012)}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ibrahim,
Sultan Johor &
Raja Zarith Sofiah,
Permaisuri Johor

|Tunku Annuar,
Tunku Bendahara Kedah, Pengerusi Jemaah Pemangku Raja Kedah &
Noor Suzanna Abdullah,
Toh Puan Bendahara of Kedah

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Muhammad V,
Sultan Kelantan

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Muhriz,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan &
Tuanku Aishah Rohani,
Tunku Ampuan Besar Negeri Sembilan

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Ahmad Shah,
Sultan Pahang &
Sultanah Kalsom,
Sultanah Pahang

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Azlan Shah,
Sultan Perak &
Raja Permaisuri Tuanku Bainun,
Raja Permaisuri Perak

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Syed Sirajuddin,
Raja Perlis &
Tuanku Tengku Fauziah,
Raja Perempuan Perlis

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah,
Sultan Selangor

|Tengku Baharuddin,
Tengku Sri Temenggung Raja Terengganu &
Noor Intan Zurina

|Mohd Khalil Yaakob,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Malacca &
Zurina Kassim

|Abdul Rahman Abbas,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Penang &
Majimor binti Shariff

|Juhar Mahiruddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah &
Norlidah R. M. Jasni

|Abang Muhammad Salahuddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak &
Norkiah Abdullah

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Kelantan}}
XV
{{nobold|(2017)}}

|Tunku Ismail Idris,
Tunku Mahkota Johor &
Khaleeda Bustamam

|Tunku Sallehuddin,
Raja Muda Kedah &
Temenggong Maliha,
Puan Muda Kedah

|Tengku Muhammad Fa-iz Petra,
Pemangku Raja Kelantan

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Muhriz,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan &
Tuanku Aishah Rohani,
Tunku Ampuan Besar Negeri Sembilan

|Tengku Abdullah Al-Haj,
Tengku Mahkota Pahang &
Tengku Azizah Aminah Maimunah,
Tengku Puan Pahang

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Nazrin Shah,
Sultan Perak &
Tuanku Zara Salim,
Raja Permaisuri Perak

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Syed Sirajuddin,
Raja Perlis

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah,
Sultan Selangor &
Tengku Permaisuri Norashikin,
Tengku Permaisuri Selangor

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin,
Sultan Terengganu &
Sultanah Nur Zahirah,
Sultanah Terengganu

|Mohd Khalil Yaakob,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Malacca &
Zurina Kassim

|Abdul Rahman Abbas,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Penang &
Majimor binti Shariff

|Juhar Mahiruddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah &
Norlidah R. M. Jasni

|Abdul Taib Mahmud,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak &
Ragad Waleed Alkurdi

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Pahang}}
XVI
{{nobold|(2019)}}

|Tunku Idris Iskandar,
Tunku Temenggong Johor

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sallehuddin,
Sultan Kedah &
Sultanah Maliha,
Sultanah Kedah

|Tengku Muhammad Fa-iz Petra,
Tengku Mahkota Kelantan &
Sofie Louise Johansson Petra,
Che Puan Mahkota Kelantan

|Tunku Ali Redhauddin,
Tunku Besar Seri Menanti

|Tengku Hassanal Ibrahim Alam Shah,
Pemangku Raja Pahang

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Nazrin Shah,
Sultan Perak &
Tuanku Zara Salim,
Raja Permaisuri Perak

|Tuanku Syed Faizuddin Putra,
Pemangku Raja Perlis &
Tuanku Lailatul Shahreen Akashah Khalil,
Raja Puan Muda Perlis

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah,
Sultan Selangor &
Tengku Permaisuri Norashikin,
Tengku Permaisuri Selangor

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin,
Sultan Terengganu &
Sultanah Nur Zahirah,
Sultanah Terengganu

|Mohd Khalil Yaakob,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Malacca &
Zurina Kassim

|Abdul Rahman Abbas,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Penang &
Majimor binti Shariff

|Juhar Mahiruddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah &
Norlidah R. M. Jasni

|Abdul Taib Mahmud,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak &
Ragad Waleed Alkurdi

colspan="14"|
{{flagicon|Johor}}
XVII

{{nobold|(2024)}}

|Tunku Ismail Idris,
Pemangku Sultan Johor &
Khaleeda,
Che' Puan Mahkota Johor

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Sallehuddin,
Sultan Kedah &
Sultanah Maliha,
Sultanah Kedah

|Tengku Muhammad Fakhry Petra,
Tengku Mahkota Kelantan

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Tuanku Muhriz,
Yang di-Pertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan &
Tuanku Aishah Rohani,
Tunku Ampuan Besar Negeri Sembilan

|Tengku Hassanal Ibrahim Alam Shah,
Pemangku Raja Pahang

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Nazrin Shah,
Sultan Perak &
Tuanku Zara Salim,
Raja Permaisuri Perak

|Tuanku Syed Faizuddin Putra,
Pemangku Raja Perlis &
Tuanku Lailatul Shahreen Akashah Khalil,
Raja Puan Muda Perlis

|{{N/A}}

|bgcolor="lightblue"| Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin,
Sultan Terengganu &
Sultanah Nur Zahirah,
Sultanah Terengganu

|Ahmad Fuzi Abdul Razak,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Malacca &
Khadijah Mohd Nor

|Mohd Ali Rustam,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Penang &
Asmah Abdul Rahman

|Juhar Mahiruddin,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah &
Norlidah R. M. Jasni

|Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar,
Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak &
Fauziah Mohd Sanusi

=Seniority of Malay Sultans=

class="wikitable"

! style="width:11em"| Start date

! style="width:11em"| End date

! Reason of new order

! Seniority order

31 August 1957

| 13 July 1958

| Independence of Malaya

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ibrahim of Johor (from 7 September 1895)
  2. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Abu Bakar of Pahang (from 22 June 1932)
  3. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Abdul Rahman of Negeri Sembilan (from 3 August 1933)
  4. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Badlishah of Kedah (from 13 May 1943)
  5. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ibrahim of Kelantan (from 21 June 1944)
  6. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Hisamuddin of Selangor (from 14 September 1945)
  7. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  8. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  9. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Yussuf Izzuddin Shah of Perak (from 31 March 1948)
14 July 1958

| 8 May 1959

| Death of Badlishah of Kedah

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ibrahim of Johor (from 7 September 1895)
  2. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Abu Bakar of Pahang (from 22 June 1932)
  3. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Abdul Rahman of Negeri Sembilan (from 3 August 1933)
  4. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ibrahim of Kelantan (from 21 June 1944)
  5. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Hisamuddin of Selangor (from 14 September 1945)
  6. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  7. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  8. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Yussuf Izzuddin Shah of Perak (from 31 March 1948)
  9. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
8 May 1959

| 1 April 1960

| Death of Ibrahim of Johor

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Abu Bakar of Pahang (from 22 June 1932)
  2. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Abdul Rahman of Negeri Sembilan (from 3 August 1933)
  3. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ibrahim of Kelantan (from 21 June 1944)
  4. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Hisamuddin of Selangor (from 14 September 1945)
  5. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  6. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  7. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Yussuf Izzuddin Shah of Perak (from 31 March 1948)
  8. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  9. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ismail of Johor (from 8 May 1959)
5 April 1960

| 9 July 1960

| Death of Abdul Rahman of Negeri Sembilan

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Abu Bakar of Pahang (from 22 June 1932)
  2. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ibrahim of Kelantan (from 21 June 1944)
  3. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Hisamuddin of Selangor (from 14 September 1945)
  4. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  5. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  6. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Yussuf Izzuddin Shah of Perak (from 31 March 1948)
  7. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  8. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ismail of Johor (from 8 May 1959)
  9. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Munawir of Negeri Sembilan (from 5 April 1960)
10 July 1960

| 1 September 1960

| Death of Ibrahim of Kelantan

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Abu Bakar of Pahang (from 22 June 1932)
  2. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Hisamuddin of Selangor (from 14 September 1945)
  3. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  4. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  5. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Yussuf Izzuddin Shah of Perak (from 31 March 1948)
  6. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  7. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ismail of Johor (from 8 May 1959)
  8. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Munawir of Negeri Sembilan (from 5 April 1960)
  9. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Yahya Petra of Kelantan (from 10 July 1960)
3 September 1960

| 4 January 1963

| Death of Hisamuddin of Selangor

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Abu Bakar of Pahang (from 22 June 1932)
  2. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  3. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  4. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Yussuf Izzuddin Shah of Perak (from 31 March 1948)
  5. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  6. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ismail of Johor (from 8 May 1959)
  7. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Munawir of Negeri Sembilan (from 5 April 1960)
  8. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Yahya Petra of Kelantan (from 10 July 1960)
  9. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
5 January 1963

| 14 April 1967

| Death of Yussuf Izzuddin Shah of Perak

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Abu Bakar of Pahang (from 22 June 1932)
  2. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  3. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  4. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  5. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ismail of Johor (from 8 May 1959)
  6. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Munawir of Negeri Sembilan (from 5 April 1960)
  7. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Yahya Petra of Kelantan (from 10 July 1960)
  8. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
  9. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Idris Al-Mutawakil Alallahi Shah of Perak (from 5 January 1963)
18 April 1967

| 5 May 1974

| Death of Munawir of Negeri Sembilan

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Abu Bakar of Pahang (from 22 June 1932)
  2. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  3. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  4. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  5. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ismail of Johor (from 8 May 1959)
  6. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Yahya Petra of Kelantan (from 10 July 1960)
  7. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
  8. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Idris Al-Mutawakil Alallahi Shah of Perak (from 5 January 1963)
  9. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan (from 18 April 1967)
7 May 1974

| 29 March 1979

| Death of Abu Bakar of Pahang

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  2. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  3. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  4. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ismail of Johor (from 8 May 1959)
  5. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Yahya Petra of Kelantan (from 10 July 1960)
  6. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
  7. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Idris Al-Mutawakil Alallahi Shah of Perak (from 5 January 1963)
  8. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan (from 18 April 1967)
  9. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
30 March 1979

| 20 September 1979

| Death of Yahya Petra of Kelantan

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  2. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu (from 16 December 1945)
  3. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  4. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ismail of Johor (from 8 May 1959)
  5. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
  6. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Idris Al-Mutawakil Alallahi Shah of Perak (from 5 January 1963)
  7. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan (from 18 April 1967)
  8. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  9. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ismail Petra of Kelantan (from 30 March 1979)
21 September 1979

| 10 May 1981

| Death of Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  2. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  3. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ismail of Johor (from 8 May 1959)
  4. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
  5. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Idris Al-Mutawakil Alallahi Shah of Perak (from 5 January 1963)
  6. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan (from 18 April 1967)
  7. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  8. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ismail Petra of Kelantan (from 30 March 1979)
  9. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mahmud of Terengganu (from 21 September 1979)
11 May 1981

| 14 May 1998

| Death of Ismail of Johor

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  2. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  3. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
  4. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Idris Al-Mutawakil Alallahi Shah of Perak (from 5 January 1963)
  5. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan (from 18 April 1967)
  6. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  7. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ismail Petra of Kelantan (from 30 March 1979)
  8. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mahmud of Terengganu (from 21 September 1979)
  9. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Iskandar of Johor (from 11 May 1981)
3 February 1984

| 14 May 1998

| Death of Idris Al-Mutawakil Alallahi Shah of Perak

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  2. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  3. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
  4. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan (from 18 April 1967)
  5. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  6. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ismail Petra of Kelantan (from 30 March 1979)
  7. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mahmud of Terengganu (from 21 September 1979)
  8. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Iskandar of Johor (from 11 May 1981)
  9. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Azlan Shah of Perak (from 3 February 1984)
15 May 1998

| 16 April 2000

| Death of Mahmud of Terengganu

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Putra of Perlis (from 4 December 1945)
  2. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  3. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
  4. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan (from 18 April 1967)
  5. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  6. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ismail Petra of Kelantan (from 30 March 1979)
  7. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Iskandar of Johor (from 11 May 1981)
  8. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Azlan Shah of Perak (from 3 February 1984)
  9. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mizan Zainal Abidin of Terengganu (from 15 May 1998)
17 April 2000

| 21 November 2001

| Death of Putra of Perlis

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  2. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Salahuddin of Selangor (from 3 September 1960)
  3. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan (from 18 April 1967)
  4. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  5. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ismail Petra of Kelantan (from 30 March 1979)
  6. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Iskandar of Johor (from 11 May 1981)
  7. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Azlan Shah of Perak (from 3 February 1984)
  8. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mizan Zainal Abidin of Terengganu (from 15 May 1998)
  9. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Sirajuddin of Perlis (from 17 April 2000)
22 November 2001

| 28 December 2008

| Death of Salahuddin of Selangor

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  2. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan (from 18 April 1967)
  3. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  4. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ismail Petra of Kelantan (from 30 March 1979)
  5. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Iskandar of Johor (from 11 May 1981)
  6. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Azlan Shah of Perak (from 3 February 1984)
  7. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mizan Zainal Abidin of Terengganu (from 15 May 1998)
  8. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Sirajuddin of Perlis (from 17 April 2000)
  9. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Sharafuddin of Selangor (from 22 November 2001)
29 December 2008

| 22 January 2010

| Death of Ja'afar of Negeri Sembilan

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  2. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  3. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ismail Petra of Kelantan (from 30 March 1979)
  4. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Iskandar of Johor (from 11 May 1981)
  5. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Azlan Shah of Perak (from 3 February 1984)
  6. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mizan Zainal Abidin of Terengganu (from 15 May 1998)
  7. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Sirajuddin of Perlis (from 17 April 2000)
  8. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Sharafuddin of Selangor (from 22 November 2001)
  9. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Muhriz of Negeri Sembilan (from 29 December 2008)
23 January 2010

| 13 September 2010

| Death of Iskandar of Johor

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  2. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  3. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Ismail Petra of Kelantan (from 30 March 1979)
  4. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Azlan Shah of Perak (from 3 February 1984)
  5. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mizan Zainal Abidin of Terengganu (from 15 May 1998)
  6. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Sirajuddin of Perlis (from 17 April 2000)
  7. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Sharafuddin of Selangor (from 22 November 2001)
  8. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Muhriz of Negeri Sembilan (from 29 December 2008)
  9. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ibrahim Iskandar of Johor (from 23 January 2010)
13 September 2010

| 28 May 2014

| Abdication of Ismail Petra of Kelantan

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  2. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  3. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Azlan Shah of Perak (from 3 February 1984)
  4. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mizan Zainal Abidin of Terengganu (from 15 May 1998)
  5. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Sirajuddin of Perlis (from 17 April 2000)
  6. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Sharafuddin of Selangor (from 22 November 2001)
  7. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Muhriz of Negeri Sembilan (from 29 December 2008)
  8. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ibrahim Iskandar of Johor (from 23 January 2010)
  9. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Muhammad V of Kelantan (from 13 September 2010)
29 May 2014

| 11 September 2017

| Death of Azlan Shah of Perak

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Abdul Halim of Kedah (from 14 July 1958)
  2. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  3. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mizan Zainal Abidin of Terengganu (from 15 May 1998)
  4. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Sirajuddin of Perlis (from 17 April 2000)
  5. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Sharafuddin of Selangor (from 22 November 2001)
  6. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Muhriz of Negeri Sembilan (from 29 December 2008)
  7. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ibrahim Iskandar of Johor (from 23 January 2010)
  8. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Muhammad V of Kelantan (from 13 September 2010)
  9. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Nazrin Shah of Perak (from 29 May 2014)
12 September 2017

| 11 January 2019

| Death of Abdul Halim of Kedah

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Ahmad Shah of Pahang (from 7 May 1974)
  2. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mizan Zainal Abidin of Terengganu (from 15 May 1998)
  3. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Sirajuddin of Perlis (from 17 April 2000)
  4. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Sharafuddin of Selangor (from 22 November 2001)
  5. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Muhriz of Negeri Sembilan (from 29 December 2008)
  6. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ibrahim Iskandar of Johor (from 23 January 2010)
  7. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Muhammad V of Kelantan (from 13 September 2010)
  8. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Nazrin Shah of Perak (from 29 May 2014)
  9. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Sallehuddin of Kedah (from 12 September 2017)
11 January 2019

| present

| Abdication of Ahmad Shah of Pahang

|

  1. {{flagdeco|Terengganu}} Mizan Zainal Abidin of Terengganu (from 15 May 1998)
  2. {{flagdeco|Perlis}} Sirajuddin of Perlis (from 17 April 2000)
  3. {{flagdeco|Selangor}} Sharafuddin of Selangor (from 22 November 2001)
  4. {{flagdeco|Negeri Sembilan}} Muhriz of Negeri Sembilan (from 29 December 2008)
  5. {{flagdeco|Johor}} Ibrahim Iskandar of Johor (from 23 January 2010)
  6. {{flagdeco|Kelantan}} Muhammad V of Kelantan (from 13 September 2010)
  7. {{flagdeco|Perak}} Nazrin Shah of Perak (from 29 May 2014)
  8. {{flagdeco|Kedah}} Sallehuddin of Kedah (from 12 September 2017)
  9. {{flagdeco|Pahang}} Abdullah of Pahang (from 11 January 2019)

=Duration of seniority=

=List of current chief justices=

class="sortable wikitable"

! State

! style="width:18em"| Court

! Title

! Name

! Assumed office

{{flag|Afghanistan}}

|Supreme Court{{Efn|This court is not independent of either the legislature and/or executive of that country.|name=independence}}

|Chief Justice

|Abdul Hakim Haqqani

|15 August 2021

rowspan="2"| {{flag|Albania}}

|Constitutional Court

|President

|Holta Zaçaj

|20 February 2023

Supreme Court

|Chief Justice

|Sokol Sadushi

|17 October 2023

rowspan="2"| {{flag|Algeria}}

|Constitutional Court

|President

|Omar Belhadj

|16 November 2021

Supreme Court

|President

|Sulayman Budi

|

{{flag|Andorra}}

|Superior Court of Justice

|

|

=Old Indian politicians=

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:93%"

!Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name

!Date of birth

!Age

!style="width:35em"| Posts held

!colspan="2"| Party

60px

|V. S. Achuthanandan

|20 October 1923

|{{age|20 October 1923}}

|Chief Minister of Kerala (2006{{ndash}}2011)

|{{party name with color|CPI(M)}}

60px

|L. K. Advani

|8 November 1927

|{{age|8 November 1927}}

|Deputy Prime Minister of India (2002{{ndash}}2004)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|

|Shafiqur Rahman Barq

|11 July 1930

|{{age|11 July 1930}}

|Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha (1996{{ndash}}1999, 2004{{ndash}}2014, 2019{{ndash}}present)

|{{party name with color|Samajwadi Party}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|60px

|Manmohan Singh

|26 September 1932

|{{age|26 September 1932}}

|Prime Minister of India (2004{{ndash}}2014)
Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha (1991{{ndash}}2019, 2019{{ndash}}present)

|{{party name with color|INC}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|60px

|H. D. Deve Gowda

|18 May 1933

|{{age|18 May 1933}}

|Prime Minister of India (1996{{ndash}}1997)
Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha (1996{{ndash}}1998, 2020{{ndash}}present)

|{{party name with color|Janata Dal (Secular)}}

60px

|Murli Manohar Joshi

|5 January 1934

|{{age|5 January 1934}}

|Union Cabinet Minister of Home Affairs (1996)
Union Cabinet Minister of Human Resource Development(1998{{ndash}}2004)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

60px

|Ram Naik

|17 April 1934

|{{age|17 April 1934}}

|Governor of Uttar Pradesh (2014{{ndash}}2019)
Union Cabinet Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas (1999{{ndash}}2004)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

60px

|Biswabhusan Harichandan

|3 August 1934

|{{age|3 August 1934}}

|Governor of Chhattisgarh (2023{{ndash}}2024)
Governor of Andhra Pradesh (2019{{ndash}}2023)

|colspan="2"| N/A

60px

|Pratibha Patil

|19 December 1934

|{{age|19 December 1934}}

|President of India (2007{{ndash}}2012)

|colspan="2"| N/A

60px

|Shivraj Patil

|12 October 1935

|{{age|12 October 1935}}

|Governor of Punjab (2010{{ndash}}2014)
Speaker of the Lok Sabha (1991{{ndash}}1996)
Union Cabinet Minister of Home Affairs (2004{{ndash}}2008)

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|Charanjit Singh Atwal

|15 March 1937

|{{age|15 March 1937}}

|Deputy Speaker of the Lok Sabha (2004{{ndash}}2009)
Speaker of the Punjab Legislative Assembly (1997{{ndash}}2002, 2012{{ndash}}2017)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

60px

|Mohammad Hamid Ansari

|1 April 1937

|{{age|1 April 1937}}

|Vice President of India (2007{{ndash}}2017)

|colspan="2"| N/A

60px

|Yashwant Sinha

|6 November 1937

|{{age|6 November 1937}}

|Union Cabinet Minister of Finance (1990{{ndash}}1991, 1998{{ndash}}2002)
Union Cabinet Minister of External Affairs (2002{{ndash}}2004)

|{{party name with color|IND}}

bgcolor="lightblue"

|60px

|Sharad Pawar

|12 December 1940

|{{age|12 December 1940}}

|Union Cabinet Minister of Defence (1991{{ndash}}1993)
Union Cabinet Minister of Agriculture (2004{{ndash}}2014)
Chief Minister of Maharashtra (1978{{ndash}}1980, 1988{{ndash}}1990, 1990{{ndash}}1991, 1993{{ndash}}1995)
Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha (2014{{ndash}}present)

|{{party name with color|Nationalist Congress Party (Sharadchandra Pawar)}}

60px

|Najma Heptulla

|13 April 1940

|{{age|13 April 1940}}

|Governor of Manipur (2016{{ndash}}2021)
Union Cabinet Minister of Minority Affairs (2014{{ndash}}2016)
Deputy Chairperson of the Rajya Sabha (1985{{ndash}}1986, 1988{{ndash}}2004)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

=State elections since May 2014=

class="wikitable"

!style="width:13em"| State

!Year

!colspan="2"| Party before election

!colspan="2"| Party after election

!Chief Minister before election

!Chief Minister after election

Andhra Pradesh

|2014

|colspan="2"| President's rule

|{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}} (NDA)

|Vacant

|Chandrababu Naidu

Telangana

|2014

|colspan="2"| N/A

|{{party name with color|Telangana Rashtra Samithi}}

|Did not exist

|K. Chandrashekar Rao

Arunachal Pradesh

|2014

|{{party name with color|INC}} (UPA)

|{{party name with color|INC}} (UPA)

|Nabam Tuki

|Nabam Tuki

Odisha

|2014

|{{party name with color|Biju Janata Dal}}

|{{party name with color|Biju Janata Dal}}

|Naveen Patnaik

|Naveen Patnaik

Sikkim

|2014

|{{party name with color|Sikkim Democratic Front}}

|{{party name with color|Sikkim Democratic Front}}

|Pawan Kumar Chamling

|Pawan Kumar Chamling

Maharashtra

|2014

|colspan="2"| President's rule

|bgcolor="{{party color|National Democratic Alliance}}"|

|BJP{{snd}}SS (NDA)

|Vacant

|Devendra Fadnavis

Haryana

|2014

|{{party name with color|INC}} (UPA)

|{{party name with color|BJP}} (NDA)

|Bhupinder Singh Hooda

|Manohar Lal Khattar

=Finance Secretaries=

  • 1960{{ndash}}1964: Lakshmi Kant Jha
  • 1964{{ndash}}1966: S. Bhoothalingam
  • 1976{{ndash}}1980: Manmohan Singh
  • 1983{{ndash}}1985: P. K. Kaul
  • 1985{{ndash}}1989: S. Venkitaramanan
  • 1991{{ndash}}1992: Bimal Jalan
  • 1993{{ndash}}1998: Montek Singh Ahluwalia
  • 1998{{ndash}}1999: Vijay Kelkar
  • 15 November 2000{{snd}}4 November 2001: Ajit Kumar
  • 4 November 2001{{snd}}9 July 2002: C. M. Vasudev
  • 9 July 2002{{snd}}30 June 2003: S. Narayan
  • 1 July 2003{{snd}}October 2004: Dinesh Chandra Gupta
  • 10 January 2006{{snd}}30 October 2006: Adarsh Kishore
  • 1 November 2006{{snd}}4 July 2007: Ashok Jha
  • 4 July 2007 – 5 September 2008: Duvvuri Subbarao
  • 23 September 2008{{snd}}12 May 2009: Arun Ramanathan
  • 12 May 2009{{snd}}3 February 2011: Ashok Chawla
  • 3 February 2011 {{ndash}} 31 May 2011: Sushama Nath
  • 1 June 2011 {{ndash}} 19 July 2011: Sunil Mitra
  • 19 July 2011{{ndash}}10 December 2013: Raminder Singh Gujral
  • 10 December 2013{{snd}} 15 April 2014: Sumit Bose
  • 15 April 2014 {{snd}} 29 October 2014: Arvind Mayaram
  • 29 October 2014 – 30 August 2015: Rajiv Mehrishi
  • 31 August 2015 {{ndash}}31 May 2016: Ratan P Watal
  • 1 June 2016 – 30 October 2017: Ashok Lavasa
  • 1 November 2017 – 30 November 2018: Hasmukh Adhia
  • 4 December 2018 – 28 February 2019: Ajay Narayan Jha
  • 1 March 2019 – 26 July 2019: Subhash Chandra Garg
  • 1 August 2019 – 29 February 2020: Rajiv Kumar
  • 3 March 2020{{snd}}28 February 2021: Ajay Bhushan Pandey
  • 28 April 2021{{snd}}present: T. V. Somanathan

=Longest serving Malay Chief Ministers=

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"

!rowspan="2"| No

!rowspan="2"| Portrait

!rowspan="2" style="width:14em"| Name
{{small|(Lifespan)}}

!rowspan="2" style="width:8em"| State

!colspan="3"| Term of office

!rowspan=2 colspan="2"| Political party

style="width:8em"| Took office

!style="width:8em"| Left office

!style="width:6em"| Time in office

|60px

|{{small|Tun Pehin Sri Haji}}
Abdul Taib Mahmud
{{small|(born 1936)}}

|Sarawak

|26 March 1981

|28 February 2014

|{{ayd|26 Mar 1981|28 Feb 2014}}

|{{party name with color|Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu}}

|

|{{small|Tun Dato' Sri Utama}}
Lim Chong Eu
{{small|(1919{{ndash}}2010)}}

|Penang

|19 May 1969

|25 October 1990

|{{ayd|19 May 1969|25 Oct 1990}}

|{{party name with color|Parti Gerakan Rakyat Malaysia|shortname=GERAKAN}}

|

|{{small|Tan Sri Dato' Sri Diraja Haji}}
Adnan Yaakob
{{small|(born 1950)}}

|Pahang

|25 May 1999

|15 May 2018

|{{ayd|25 May 1999|15 May 2018}}

|{{party name with color|United Malays National Organisation}}

|

|{{small|Tan Sri Dato' Haji}}
Abdul Ghani Othman
{{small|(born 1946)}}

|Johor

|3 May 1995

|14 May 2013

|{{ayd|3 May 1995|14 May 2013}}

|{{party name with color|United Malays National Organisation}}

|60px

|{{small|Tan Sri Dr.}}
Koh Tsu Koon
{{small|(born 1949)}}

|Penang

|25 October 1990

|11 March 2008

|{{ayd|25 Oct 1990|11 Mar 2008}}

|{{party name with color|Parti Gerakan Rakyat Malaysia|shortname=GERAKAN}}

|

|{{small|Tan Sri Dato' Haji}}
Othman Saat
{{small|(1927–2007)}}

|Johor

|4 February 1967

|4 April 1982

|{{ayd|4 Feb 1967|4 Apr 1982}}

|{{party name with color|United Malays National Organisation}}

|60px

|{{small|Tan Sri Datuk Seri Panglima}}
Musa Aman
{{small|(born 1951)}}

|Sabah

|27 March 2003

|12 May 2018

|{{ayd|27 Mar 2003|12 May 2018}}

|{{party name with color|United Malays National Organisation}}

|60px

|{{small|Tan Sri}}
Wong Pow Nee
{{small|(1911{{ndash}}2002)}}

|Penang

|31 August 1957

|12 May 1969

|{{ayd|31 Aug 1957|12 May 1969}}

|{{party name with color|Malaysian Chinese Association}}

|

|{{small|Tan Sri Dato Seri Diraja}}
Osman Aroff
{{small|(born 1940)}}

|Johor

|28 January 1985

|16 June 1996

|{{ayd|28 January 1985|16 June 1996}}

|{{party name with color|United Malays National Organisation}}

|60px

|{{small|Tun Datuk Patinggi Haji}}
Abdul Rahman Ya'kub
{{small|(1928{{ndash}}2015)}}

|Sarawak

|7 July 1970

|26 March 1981

|{{ayd|7 Jul 1970|26 Mar 1981}}

|{{party name with color|Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu}}

|60px

|Lim Guan Eng
{{small|(born 1960)}}

|Penang

|11 March 2008

|14 May 2018

|{{ayd|11 Mar 2008|14 May 2018}}

|{{party name with color|Democratic Action Party}}

=Film personalities who were members of parliament=

Lok Sabha

class="wikitable"

!Portrait

!style="width:15em"| Name

!style="width:17em"| Constituency

!colspan="2"| Party

!Terms

!LS

!Tenure

45px

|Amitabh Bachchan

|Allahabad (Uttar Pradesh)

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|1

|8th

|1984 {{ndash}} 1987

45px

|Vyjayanthimala Bali

|Madras South (Tamil Nadu)

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|2

|8th, 9th

|1980{{snd}}1989

rowspan="2"| 45px

|rowspan="2"| Sunil Dutt

|rowspan="2"| Mumbai North West (Maharashtra)

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|rowspan="2"| 5

|8th, 9th, 10th

|1984 {{ndash}} 1996

{{party name with color|INC}}

|13th, 14th

|1999 {{ndash}} 2005

45px

|Rajesh Khanna

|New Delhi (Delhi)

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress (I)}}

|1

|10th

|1992 {{ndash}} 1996

|Nitish Bharadwaj

|Jamshedpur (Bihar)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|1

|11th

|1996{{snd}}1998

rowspan="2"| 45px

|rowspan="2"| Vinod Khanna

|rowspan="2"| Gurdaspur (Punjab)

|{{party name with color|BJP|rowspan=2}}

|rowspan="2"| 4

|12th, 13th, 14th

|1998{{snd}}2009

16th

|2014{{snd}}2017

rowspan="2"| 45px

|rowspan="2"| Raj Babbar

|Agra (Uttar Pradesh)

|{{party name with color|Samajwadi Party}}

|rowspan="2"| 3

|13th, 14th

|1998{{snd}}2009

Firozabad (Uttar Pradesh)

|{{party name with color|Indian National Congress}}

|15th

|2009{{snd}}2014

45px

|Daggubati Ramanaidu

|Bapatla (Andhra Pradesh)

|{{party name with color|Telugu Desam Party}}

|1

|13th

|1999 {{ndash}} 2004

45px

|Dharmendra

|Bikaner (Rajasthan)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|1

|14th

|2004 {{ndash}} 2009

45px

|Govinda Ahuja

|Mumbai North (Maharashtra)

|{{party name with color|INC}}

|1

|14th

|2004 {{ndash}} 2009

45px

|Babul Supriyo

|Asansol (West Bengal)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|2

|16th, 17th

|2014 {{ndash}} 2021

|Moon Moon Sen

|Bankura (West Bengal)

|{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress}}

|1

|16th

|2014 {{ndash}} 2019

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Kirron Kher

|Chandigarh

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|2

|16th, 17th

|2014 {{ndash}} present

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Hema Malini

|Mathura (Uttar Pradesh)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|2

|16th, 17th

|2014 {{ndash}} present

|Sandhya Roy

|Medinipur (West Bengal)

|{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress}}

|1

|16th

|2014 {{ndash}} 2019

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Manoj Kumar Tiwari

|North East Delhi (NCT of Delhi)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|2

|16th, 17th

|2014 {{ndash}} present

45px

|Bhagwant Mann

|Sangrur (Punjab)

|{{party name with color|Aam Aadmi Party}}

|2

|16th, 17th

|2014 {{ndash}} 2022

45px

|George Baker

|Anglo-Indian (Nominated)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|1

|16th

|2014{{snd}}2019

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Navneet Ravi Rana

|Amravati (Maharashtra)

|{{party name with color|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|1

|17th

|2019 {{ndash}} present

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Smriti Irani

|Amethi (Uttar Pradesh)

|{{party name with color|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|1

|17th

|2019 {{ndash}} present

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|

|Locket Chatterjee

|Hooghly (West Bengal)

|{{party name with color|Bharatiya Janata Party}}

|1

|17th

|2019 {{ndash}} present

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Ravi Kishan Shukla

|Gorakhpur (Uttar Pradesh)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|1

|17th

|2019 {{ndash}} present

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Sunny Deol

|Gurdaspur (Punjab)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|1

|17th

|2019 {{ndash}} present

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Mimi Chakraborty

|Jadavpur (West Bengal)

|{{party name with color|Trinamool Congress}}

|1

|17th

|2019 {{ndash}} present

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Sumalatha Ambareesh

|Mandya (Karnataka)

|{{party name with color|Independent|shortname=IND}}

|1

|17th

|2019 {{ndash}} present

bgcolor="lightyellow"

|45px

|Dinesh Lal "Nirahua" Yadav

|Azamgarh (Uttar Pradesh)

|{{party name with color|BJP}}

|1

|17th

|2022 {{ndash}} present

=Educational qualifications, current Lok Sabha=

Doctorate of Philosophy (Ph.D.)

  • Dr. K. Jayakumar: Ph.D., M.Tech. (Management), M.I.E., PgD in RT&M and Ind. Dev., B.E. (Mechanical Engineering)
  • Dr. Nishikant Dubey: Ph.D., M.B.A.
  • Prof. Dr. Ram Shankar Katheria: Ph.D., M.A.
  • Dr. Sanjeev Balyan: Ph.D. (Veterinary Anatomy), M.V.Sc. (Veterinary Sciences), B.V.Sc. & A.H
  • Dr. Shashi Tharoor: Ph.D., M.A.L.D., M.A., B.A. (Hons)
  • General Dr. V. K. Singh (Retd.): Ph.D., PgD in Training and Development of HR, Master of Strategic Studies

Doctorate of Medicine (M.D.)

  • Dr. Heena Gavit: M.D. (General Medicine), M.B.B.S., LL.B.
  • Dr. Jitendra Singh: M.D. (Medicine), M.B.B.S., Fellowship (Diabetes), MNAMS (Diabetes and Endocrinology)
  • Dr. S. Senthilkumar: M.D. (Radio Diagnosis), M.B.B.S.
  • Dr. Sanjay Jaiswal: M.D. (General Medicine), M.B.B.S.

Master of Surgery (M.S.)

Master of Arts (M.A.)

Master of Commerce (M.Com.)

Master of Science (M.Sc.)

Master of Philosophy (M.Phil.)

Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (M.B.B.S.)

Bachelor of Ayurveda, Medicine and Surgery (B.A.M.S.)

Bachelor of Commerce (B.Com.)

Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.)

Bachelor of Engineering (B.E.)

Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech.)

Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.)

Ayurveda Vigyanacharya (A.V.M.S.)

  • Dr. Dhal Singh Bisen: A.V.M.S., D.H.B. (Ayurved Vigyanacharya with Modern Medicine and Surgery, Diploma in Trauma and Biochemistry)

Unspecified

=Mamata ministry=

  • Mamata Banerjee: Chief Minister, health and family welfare, home and hill affairs, personnel and administration, land and land reforms and refugee and rehabilitation, and information and cultural affairs and North Bengal development (10-May-2021)
  • Subrata Mukherjee-
  • Panchayat and rural development; public enterprises and industrial reconstruction
  • Consumer affairs, self help group and self employment (21-Aug-2021)
  • Partha Chatterjee- Industry, commerce and enterprise, information technology and electronics and parliamentary affairs.
  • Amit Mitra- Finance, planning and statistics, programme monitoring
  • Sadhan Pande-
  • Consumer affairs, self help group and self employment (until 21-Aug-2021)
  • Without portfolio (21-Aug-2021)
  • Jyoti Priya Mallick- Forest, non-conventional and renewable energy sources
  • Bankim Chandra Hazra- Sundarbans affairs
  • Manas Ranjan Bhunia- Water resources investigation and development
  • Saumen Kumar Mahapatra- Irrigation and waterways
  • Moloy Ghatak- Law, judicial and public works
  • Aroop Biswas- Power, youth affairs and sports
  • Ujjal Biswas- Correctional administration
  • Arup Roy- Co-operation
  • Rathin Ghosh- Food and supply
  • Firhad Hakim- Transport, housing
  • Chandranath Sinha- Micro, small and medium enterprises and textiles
  • Sobhandeb Chattopadhyay- Agriculture
  • Bratya Basu- School education, higher education
  • Pulak Roy- Public health engineering
  • Dr Shashi Panja- Women and child development and social welfare
  • Md Ghulam Rabbani- Minority affairs and madrasah education
  • Biplab Mitra- Agricultural marketing
  • Javed Ahmed Khan- Disaster management and civil defence
  • Swapan Debnath- Animal resources development
  • Siddhiquallah Choudhary- Mass education extension and library services

Ministers of state (Independent charge)

  • Becharam Manna- Labour
  • Subrata Saha- Food processing industries and horticulture
  • Humayun Kabir- Technical education, training and skill development
  • Akhil Giri- Fisheries
  • Chandrima Bhattacharya- Urban development and municipal affairs, and MoS in health and family welfare and land and land reforms and refugee and rehabilitation
  • Ratna De Nag- Environment, science and technology and bio-technology
  • Sandhyarani Tudu- Pashimanchal unnayan affairs, MoS in parliamentary affairs
  • Bulu Chik Baraik- Backward classes welfare, tribal development
  • Sujit Bose- Fire and emergency services
  • Indranil Sen- Tourism and MoS in information and cultural affairs

Ministers of state

  • Dilip Mondal- Transport
  • Akhruzzaman- Power
  • Seuli Saha- Panchayat and rural development
  • Srikant Mahato- Micro, small and medium enterprises and textiles
  • Yeasmin Sabina- Irrigation and waterways, North Bengal development
  • Birbaha Hansda- Forests
  • Jyotsna Mandi- Food and supplies
  • Paresh Chandra Adhikary- School education
  • Manoj Tiwari- Youth and sports.

=Fifth Deuba cabinet=

{{div col|colwidth=40em}}

;Prime Minister:

; Deputy Prime Minister:

;Finance:

;Physical Infrastructure and Transport

;Home Affairs

;Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation

;Communication and Information Technology

  • 17 January 2023 {{ndash}} present: Rekha Sharma (CPN (MC))

;Urban Development

;Agriculture and Livestock Development

;Industry, Commerce and Supplies

;Land Management, Cooperatives and Poverty Alleviation

;Water Supply

;Foreign Affairs

;Health and Population

;Women, Children and Senior Citizen

;Defence

;Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation

;Federal Affairs and General Administration

; Education, Science and Technology

;Labour, Employment and Social Security

;Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs

{{div col end}}

=Dahal cabinet=

{{Cabinet table start|hiderefcol=y}}

!Remarks

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Prime Minister

| minister1 = Sher Bahadur Deuba

| minister1_termstart = 13 July 2021

| minister1_termend = 26 December 2022

| minister1_party = Nepali Congress

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table end}}

=Anwar Ibrahim cabinet=

=Cabinet=

{{Cabinet table start|hiderefcol=y}}

!Constituency

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Prime Minister

| minister1 = Najib Razak

| minister1_termstart = 3 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Pekan

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Deputy Prime Minister

| minister1 = Muhyiddin Yassin

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Pagoh

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister in the Prime Minister's Department

| minister1 = Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz {{small|(Legal Affairs)}}

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Padang Rengas

| minister2 = Nor Mohamed Yakcop {{small|(Economic Planning Unit)}}

| minister2_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister2_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister2_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister2_ref = Tasek Gelugor

| minister3 = {{nobold|Maj. Gen. (Rtd)}} Jamil Khir Baharom {{small|(Religious Affairs)}}

| minister3_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister3_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister3_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister3_ref = Senator

| minister4 = Koh Tsu Koon {{small|(Unity and Performance Management)}}

| minister4_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister4_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister4_party = Parti Gerakan Rakyat Malaysia

| minister4_ref = Senator

| minister5 = Idris Jala {{small|(Performance Management and Delivery Unit)}}

| minister5_termstart = 28 August 2009

| minister5_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister5_party = IND

| minister5_ref = Senator

| minister6 = G. Palanivel

| minister6_termstart = 9 August 2011

| minister6_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister6_party = Malaysian Indian Congress

| minister6_ref = Senator

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Finance

| minister1 = Najib Razak

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Pekan

| minister2 = Ahmad Husni Hanadzlah

| minister2_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister2_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister2_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister2_ref = Tambun

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Defence

| minister1 = Ahmad Zahid Hamidi

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Bagan Datuk

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Home Affairs

| minister1 = Hishammuddin Hussein

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Sembrong

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of International Trade and Industry

| minister1 = Mustapa Mohamed

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Jeli

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Education

| minister1 = Muhyiddin Yassin

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Pagoh

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Natural Resources and Environment

| minister1 = Douglas Uggah Embas

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu

| minister1_ref = Betong

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Federal Territories and Urban Wellbeing

| minister1 = Raja Nong Chik

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Senator

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Transport

| minister1 = Ong Tee Keat

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 4 June 2010

| minister1_party = Malaysian Chinese Association

| minister1_ref = Pandan

| minister2 = Kong Cho Ha

| minister2_termstart = 4 June 2010

| minister2_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister2_party = Malaysian Chinese Association

| minister2_ref = Lumut

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Agriculture and Agro-based Industry

| minister1 = Noh Omar

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Tanjong Karang

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Health

| minister1 = Liow Tiong Lai

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = Malaysian Chinese Association

| minister1_ref = Bentong

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Tourism

| minister1 = Ng Yen Yen

| minister1_termstart = 16 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = Malaysian Chinese Association

| minister1_ref = Raub

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Housing and Local Government

| minister1 = Kong Cho Ha

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 4 June 2010

| minister1_party = Malaysian Chinese Association

| minister1_ref = Lumut

| minister2 = Chor Chee Heung

| minister2_termstart = 4 June 2010

| minister2_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister2_party = Malaysian Chinese Association

| minister2_ref = Alor Setar

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Foreign Affairs

| minister1 = Anifah Aman

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Kimanis

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Higher Education

| minister1 = Mohamed Khaled Nordin

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Pasir Gudang

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Human Resources

| minister1 = Subramaniam Sathasivam

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = Malaysian Indian Congress

| minister1_ref = Segamat

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Domestic Trade, Co-operatives and Consumerism

| minister1 = Ismail Sabri Yaakob

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Bera

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Rural and Regional Development

| minister1 = Shafie Apdal

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Semporna

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Works

| minister1 = Shaziman Abu Mansor

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Tampin

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation

| minister1 = Maximus Ongkili

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Sabah Party

| minister1_ref = Kota Marudu

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Energy, Green Technology and Water

| minister1 = Peter Chin Fah Kui

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = Sarawak United Peoples' Party

| minister1_ref = Miri

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Plantation Industries and Commodities

| minister1 = Bernard Giluk Dompok

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Progressive Kinabalu Organisation

| minister1_ref = Penampang

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Women, Family and Community Development

| minister1 = Shahrizat Abdul Jalil

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 8 April 2012

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Senator

| minister2 = Najib Razak

| minister2_termstart = 8 April 2012

| minister2_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister2_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister2_ref = Pekan

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Youth and Sports

| minister1 = Ahmad Shabery Cheek

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Kemaman

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Information, Communications, Arts and Culture

| minister1 = Rais Yatim

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Jelebu

}}

{{Cabinet table end}}

=Deputy=

{{Cabinet table start|hiderefcol=y}}

!Constituency

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister's Department

| minister1 = Mashitah Ibrahim

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Senator

| minister2 = Ahmad Maslan

| minister2_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister2_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister2_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister2_ref = Pontian

| minister3 = Devamany S. Krishnasamy

| minister3_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister3_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister3_party = Malaysian Indian Congress

| minister3_ref = Cameron Highlands

| minister4 = Murugiah Thopasamy

| minister4_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister4_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister4_party = People's Progressive Party (Malaysia)

| minister4_ref = Senator

| minister5 = Liew Vui Keong

| minister5_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister5_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister5_party = Liberal Democratic Party (Malaysia)

| minister5_ref = Sandakan

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Deputy Minister of Finance

| minister1 = Awang Adek Hussin

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Senator

| minister2 = Chor Chee Heung

| minister2_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister2_termend = 4 June 2010

| minister2_party = Malaysian Chinese Association

| minister2_ref = Alor Setar

| minister3 = Donald Lim Siang Chai

| minister3_termstart = 4 June 2010

| minister3_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister3_party = Malaysian Chinese Association

| minister3_ref = Senator

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Deputy Minister of Defence

| minister1 = Abdul Latiff Ahmad

| minister1_termstart = 10 April 2009

| minister1_termend = 15 May 2013

| minister1_party = United Malays National Organisation

| minister1_ref = Mersing

}}

{{Cabinet table end}}

=Sri Lanka=

Minister of Public Management Reforms

Mahinda ministries

{{Cabinet table start|hiderefcol=y}}

!style="width:17em"| Remarks

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = President
Minister of Defence and Urban Development
Minister of Finance and Planning

| minister1 = Manmohan Singh

| minister1_termstart = 19 November 2005

| minister1_termend = 9 January 2015

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Prime Minister

| minister1 = Ratnasiri Wickremanayake

| minister1_termstart = 19 November 2005

| minister1_termend = 21 April 2010

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

| minister2 = D. M. Jayaratne

| minister2_termstart = 21 April 2010

| minister2_termend = 9 January 2015

| minister2_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister2_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table ministry}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of Good Governance and Infrastructure

| minister1 = Ratnasiri Wickremanayake

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of Urban Affairs

| minister1 = A. H. M. Fowzie

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of Rural Affairs

| minister1 = Athauda Seneviratne

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of Consumer Welfare

| minister1 = S. B. Nawinne

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of International Monetary Co-operation

| minister1 = Sarath Amunugama

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of National Resources

| minister1 = Piyasena Gamage

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of Social Welfare

| minister1 = Milroy Fernando

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of Food and Nutrition

| minister1 = P. Dayaratna

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = UNP(D)

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of Human Resources

| minister1 = D. E. W. Gunasekera

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = CPSL

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Senior Minister of Scientific Affairs

| minister1 = Tissa Vitharana

| minister1_termstart = 22 November 2010

| minister1_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister1_party = Lanka Sama Samaja Party

| minister1_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table ministry}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Foreign Affairs

| minister1 = Mangala Samaraweera

| minister1_termstart = 23 November 2005

| minister1_termend = 27 January 2007

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

| minister2 = Rohitha Bogollagama

| minister2_termstart = 28 January 2007

| minister2_termend = 9 April 2010

| minister2_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister2_ref =  

| minister3 = G. L. Peiris

| minister3_termstart = 23 April 2010

| minister3_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister3_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister3_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table ministry}}

{{Cabinet table minister

| title = Minister of Public Administration and Home Affairs

| minister1 = Sarath Amunugama

| minister1_termstart = 23 November 2005

| minister1_termend = 28 January 2007

| minister1_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister1_ref =  

| minister2 = Karu Jayasuriya

| minister2_termstart = 28 January 2007

| minister2_termend = 9 December 2008

| minister2_party = UNP(D)

| minister2_ref =  

| minister3 = Sarath Amunugama

| minister3_termstart = 31 December 2008

| minister3_termend = 9 April 2010

| minister3_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister3_ref =  

| minister4 = John Seneviratne

| minister4_termstart = 23 April 2010

| minister4_termend = 12 January 2015

| minister4_party = Sri Lanka Freedom Party

| minister4_ref =  

}}

{{Cabinet table end}}

=List=

{{div col|colwidth=40em}}

;Disaster Management

;Disaster Management and Human Rights

;Resettlement and Disaster Relief Services

;Disaster Management

;Healthcare and Nutrition

;Health

;Agriculture, Environment, Irrigation and Mahaweli Development

;Agricultural Development and Agrarian Services

;Agriculture

;Local Government and Provincial Councils

;Education

;Higher Education

;Educational Services

;Railways and Transport

;Transport

;Private Transport Services

;Ports and Aviation

;Highways

;Highways and Road Transport

;Highways, Ports and Shipping

;Civil Aviation

;Parliamentary Affairs

;Sports and Public Recreation

;Sport

;Youth Affairs

; Youth Affairs and Skills Development

;Sugar Industry Development

;Botanical Gardens and Public Recreation

{{div col end}}

=Current Indian ambassadors=

Resident heads of mission

class="wikitable"

! Mission !! Location !! Type !! Head of mission !! Position !! Took office !! List !! Link

{{flag|Afghanistan}}

|Kabul

|Embassy

|Rudendra Tandon

|Ambassador

|September 2020

|

|[http://eoi.gov.in/kabul/ EOI, Kabul]

{{flag|Algeria}}

|Algiers

|Embassy

|Vishwa Nath Goel

|Chargé d'Affaires

|

|List

|[https://www.indianembassyalgiers.gov.in/ EOI, Algiers]

{{flag|Angola}}

|Luanda

|Embassy

|Vidhu P. Nair

|Ambassador

|1 February 2024

|List

|[https://www.indembangola.gov.in/ EOI, Angola]

{{flag|Argentina}}
{{flag|Uruguay}}

|Buenos Aires

|Embassy

|Dinesh Bhatia

|Ambassador

|21 August 2019

|

|[https://www.indembarg.gov.in/ EOI, Buenos Aires]

{{flag|Armenia}}
{{flag|Georgia}}

|Yerevan

|Embassy

|Nilakshi Saha Sinha

|Ambassador

|29 March 2023

|

|[https://eoiyerevan.gov.in/ EOI, Yerevan]

{{flag|Australia}}
{{flag|Nauru}}

|Canberra

|High Commission

|Gopal Baglay

|High Commissioner

|January 2024

|List

|[https://www.hcicanberra.gov.in/ HCI, Canberra]

{{flag|Austria}}

|Vienna

|

class="wikitable"

!Host country !! List !!Ambassador/High Commissioner !!Took office !! Websites !! RefsArm

{{Flag|Australia}} {{Collapsible list| title = Accredited to:|{{flag|Nauru}}}}

|

| Gopal Baglay

Jan 2024

|

{{cite news |title=Manpreet Vohra appointed India's High Commissioner to Australia |url=https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/manpreet-vohra-appointed-indias-high-commissioner-to-australia/article33962037.ece |access-date=14 August 2021 |work=The Hindu |date=1 March 2021 |language=en-IN}}
{{Flag|Austria}}|Jaideep Mazumdar2019

| [https://eoivienna.gov.in/ EOI, Vienna]

{{Flag|Azerbaijan}}|Sridharan MadhusudanMay 2023

| [https://www.indianembassybaku.gov.in/ EOI, Baku]

{{Flag|Bahrain}}|Vinod K JacobAugust 2023

| [http://eoi.gov.in/bahrain/ EOI, Baharain]

{{Flag|Bangladesh}}ListPranay Verma (Ambassador Designate)July 2022

| [https://www.hcidhaka.gov.in/ HCI, Dhaka]

{{cite news |title=Diplomat Vikram Kumar Doraiswami appointed India's next envoy to Bangladesh |url=https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/vikram-kumar-doraiswami-made-next-high-commissioner-of-india-to-bangladesh/story-V2mG27FFEy4CbfNtyZFKMK.html |accessdate=17 August 2020 |work=Hindustan Times |date=13 August 2020 |language=en}}
{{Flag|Belarus}}| Alok Ranjan Jha18 May 2021

| [https://www.indembminsk.in/ EOI, Minsk]

{{cite news |title=Shri Alok Ranjan Jha appointed as the next Ambassador of India to the Republic of Belarus |url=https://mea.gov.in/press-releases.htm?dtl/33865/Shri_Alok_Ranjan_Jha_appointed_as_the_next_Ambassador_of_India_to_the_Republic_of_Belarus |access-date=26 May 2021 |work=mea.gov.in}}
{{Flag|Belgium}}|Santosh Jha17 July 2020

| [https://www.indianembassybrussels.gov.in/ Official Website]

{{cite news |title=Santosh Jha appointed as next Ambassador of India to Belgium |url=https://www.aninews.in/news/world/asia/santosh-jha-appointed-as-next-ambassador-of-india-to-belgium20200615232854/ |access-date=4 February 2021 |work=ANI News |publisher=ANI News |language=en}}
{{Flag|Bhutan}}List

|Sudhakar Dalela

April 2019

| [http://www.indembthimphu.gov.in/ EOI, Thimpu]

{{flag|Bosnia and Herzegovina}}|Partha Sathpathy|[https://www.eoibudapest.gov.in/ EOI, Hungary and Bosnia & Herzegovina]
{{Flag|Botswana}}|Bharath Kumar KuthatiJuly 2023

| [https://www.hcigaborone.gov.in/ HCI, Gaborone]

{{Flag|Brazil}}| Suresh ReddySeptember 2020

| [https://eoibrasilia.gov.in/ EOI, Brasilia]

{{Flag|Brunei Darussalam}}|Alok Amitabh DimriMarch 2022

| [https://www.hcindiabrunei.gov.in/ HCI, Brunei]

{{Flag|Bulgaria}}| Sanjay Rana10 February 2021

| [https://www.indembsofia.gov.in/ EOI, Sofia]

{{flag|Burkina Faso}}| Vijay Singh Chauhan24 March 2019

| [https://www.eoiburkinafaso.gov.in/ EOI, Ouagadougou]

{{Flag|Cambodia}}| Devyani KhobragadeSeptember 2020

| [https://www.embindpp.gov.in/ EOI, Phonm Penh]

{{flag|Cameroon}}| Anindya Banerjee21 February 2022

| [http://hciyaounde.gov.in/index.php HCI, Yaounde]

{{Flag|Canada}}| Sanjay Kumar VermaJune 2022

| [https://www.hciottawa.gov.in/ HCI, Ottawa]

|{{cite news |title=Ajay Bisaria appointed India's next High Commissioner to Canada {{!}} India News - Times of India |url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/ajay-bisaria-appointed-indias-next-high-commissioner-to-canada/articleshow/73804604.cms |accessdate=17 August 2020 |work=The Times of India |date=31 January 2020 |language=en}}

{{Flag|Chile}}| Subrata Bhattacharjee28 May 2021

| [https://www.indianembassysantiago.gov.in/ EOI, Santiago]

{{cite news |title=Shri Subrata Bhattacharjee appointed as the next Ambassador of India to the Republic of Chile |url=https://mea.gov.in/press-releases.htm?dtl/33880/Shri_Subrata_Bhattacharjee_appointed_as_the_next_Ambassador_of_India_to_the_Republic_of_Chile |access-date=12 June 2021 |work=mea.gov.in}}
{{Flag|China}}List

| Pradeep Kumar Rawat

7 January 2019

| [https://eoibeijing.gov.in/ EOI, Beijing]

{{Flag|Colombia}}|Vanna Luma2022

| [https://www.eoibogota.gov.in/ EOI, Bogota]

{{Flag|DR Congo}} {{Collapsible list| title = Accredited to:|{{Flag|Gabon}}|{{Flag|Central African Republic}}}}

|

| Ram Karan Verma

18 November 2020

| [https://eoi.gov.in/kinshasa/ EOI, Kinshasa]

{{flag|Republic of the Congo|name=Congo, Republic of}}| Madan Lal Raigar20 October 2023

| [https://www.eoibrazzaville.gov.in/ EOI, Brazzavile]

{{flag|Cote D'Ivoire}} {{Collapsible list

| title = Accredited to:|{{flag|Liberia}}

}}

|

| Rajesh Ranjan

9 January 2023

| [https://www.eoiabidjan.gov.in/ EOI, Abidjaan]

{{Flag|Croatia}}| Rajkumar Shrivastava12 June 2020

| [https://www.indianembassyzagreb.gov.in/ EOI, Zagreb]

{{Flag|Cuba}}| S. Janakiraman| [https://eoi.gov.in/havana/ EOI, Havana]
{{Flag|Cyprus}}| Madhumita Hazarika Bhagat11 November 2019

| [https://hci.gov.in/nicosia/ HCI, Nicosia]

{{Flag|Czech Republic}}|Hemant H. Kotalwar| [https://www.eoiprague.gov.in/ EOI, Prague]
{{Flag|Denmark}}| Pooja Kapoor10 February 2021

| [https://www.indianembassycopenhagen.gov.in/ EOI, Copenhegen]

{{flag|Djibouti}}| Ashok KumarApril 2019

| [https://www.eoidjibouti.gov.in/ EOI, Djibouti]

{{Flag|Egypt}}| Ajit Vinayak Gupte10 February 2021

| [https://www.eoicairo.gov.in/ EOI, Cairo]

{{flag|Equatorial Guinea}}| Man Mohan BhanotApril 2019

| [http://www.eoimalabo.gov.in/ EOI, Malabo]

{{flag|Eswatini}}| N Ram Prasad01 August 2023

| [https://www.hcimbabane.gov.in/ HCI, Mbabane]

{{Flag|Eritrea}}

|

|Subhash Chand

|May 2019

|

|

{{flag|Ethiopia}}{{efn|Indian ambassador to Ethiopia also serves as the permanent representative of India to {{flag|African Union}}}}

|

| Robert Shetkintong

October 2020

| [https://eoiaddisababa.gov.in/ EOI, Addis Ababa]

{{Flag|Fiji}} {{Collapsible list| title = Accredited to:|{{flag|Nauru}}|{{flag|Tuvalu}}|{{flag|Cook Islands}}}}

|

| P. S. Karthigeyan

8 July 2021

| [https://www.indiainfiji.gov.in/ HCI, Suva]

{{Flag|Finland}}|Raveesh Kumar17 July 2020

| [https://www.indembhelsinki.gov.in/ EOI, Helsinki]

{{Flag|France}} {{Collapsible list| title = Accredited to:|{{flag|Monaco}}}}

| List

| Jawed Ashraf

13 July 2020

| [https://www.eoiparis.gov.in/ EOI, Paris]

| {{cite news |title=Jawed Ashraf set to be the next envoy to France |url=https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/jawed-ashraf-set-to-be-the-next-envoy-to-france/story-VBLDbaA2plS6YhvZMLeVQO.html |access-date=13 March 2021 |work=Hindustan Times |date=14 January 2020 |language=en}}

{{Flag|Germany}}

|List

|Parvathaneni Harish

| 6 November 2021

|[https://www.indianembassyberlin.gov.in/index EOI, Berlin]

| {{cite news |title=Shri Harish Parvathaneni appointed as the next Ambassador of India to the Federal Republic of Germany |url=http://www.mea.gov.in/press-releases.htm?dtl/34197/Shri+Harish+Parvathaneni+appointed+as+the+next+Ambassador+of+India+to+the+Federal+Republic+of+Germany |access-date=16 December 2021 |work=www.mea.gov.in}}

{{Flag|Ghana}}

|

|C. Sugandha Rajaram

|6 December 2019

|[https://www.hciaccra.gov.in/ HCI, Accra]

|

{{Flag|Greece}}

|List

|Rudrendra Tandon

|3 October 2019

|[https://www.indianembassy.gr/ EOI, Athens]

|

{{Flag|Guatemala}}

|

|Manoj Kumar Mohapatra

|December 2021

|[https://indemguatemala.gov.in/index.php EOI, Guatemala]

|

{{Flag|Guinea}}

|

|T. C. barupal

|

|

|

{{Flag|Guyana}}

|

|K. J. Srinivasa{{Cite web|date=2019-08-15|title=New Indian High Commissioner to Guyana accredited|url=https://www.stabroeknews.com/2019/08/15/news/guyana/new-indian-high-commissioner-to-guyana-accredited/|access-date=2021-02-13|website=Stabroek News|language=en-US}}

|14 August 2019

|[https://indemguatemala.gov.in/index.php HCI, Georgetown]

|

{{flag|Honduras}}B. S. Mubarak1 February 2019

|

|

{{Flag|Hungary}}

|

|Partha Sathpathy

|

|

|

{{Flag|Iceland}}| B. Shyam31 July 2021

| [https://indianembassyreykjavik.gov.in/ EOI, Reykjavik]

{{cite news |title=Shri B. Shyam appointed as the next Ambassador of India to the Republic of Iceland |url=https://mea.gov.in/press-releases.htm?dtl/33885/Shri_B_Shyam_appointed_as_the_next_Ambassador_of_India_to_the_Republic_of_Iceland |access-date=12 June 2021 |work=mea.gov.in}}
{{Flag|Indonesia}}

|

|Sandeep Chakravorty

August 2023

|[https://www.indianembassyjakarta.gov.in/ EOI, Jakarta]

|

{{Flag|Iran}}

|

|Rudra Gaurav Shreshth

|

|

|

{{Flag|Iraq}}| Prashant Pise

| August 2021

|

|

{{Flag|Ireland}}| Akhilesh Mishra5 August 2021

| [https://www.indianembassydublin.gov.in/ EOI, Dublin]

|

{{Flag|Israel}}

|List

|Sanjeev Singla

|October 2019

|

|

{{Flag|Italy}}

|

|Neena Malhotra

|

|

|

{{Flag|Jamaica}}

|

|R. Masakui

|

|

|

{{Flag|Japan}}

|

|Sibi George

|

|

|

{{Flag|Jordan}}

|

|Anwar Haleem

|

|

|

{{Flag|Kazakhstan}}|Subhadarshini Tripathi10 February 2021

|

{{Flag|Kenya}}

|List

|Ms. Namgya Khampa|

|

|

|

{{Flag|North Korea}}

|

| -Vacant-

|

|

|

{{Flag|Korea}}

|

|Amit Kumar

|

|

|

{{Flag|Kuwait}}

|

|Adarsh Swaika

|

|

|

{{Flag|Kyrgyzstan}}

|

|A. K. Chatterjee

|

|

|

{{Flag|Lebanon}}

|

|Md. Noor Rahman Sheikh

|

|

|

{{Flag|Lesotho}}

|

|Jaideep Sarkar

|5 September 2019

|

|

{{Flag|Liberia}}| Pradip Kumar Yadav24 May 2021

| [ EOI, Monoriva]

{{cite news |title=Pradip Kumar Yadav appointed as next ambassador of India to Liberia |url=https://www.aninews.in/news/world/asia/pradip-kumar-yadav-appointed-as-next-ambassador-of-india-to-liberia20210522181957/ |access-date=3 June 2021 |work=ANI News |language=en}}
{{Flag|Libya}}

|

|Vacant

|

|

|

{{Flag|Madagascar}}

|List

|Wilson Babu

|January 2019

|

|

{{Flag|Malawi}}

|

|S. Gopalakrishnan

|

|

|

{{Flag|Malaysia}}|B. Nagabhushana Reddy10 August 2021

| [https://hcikl.gov.in/ HCI, Kuala Lumpur]

|

{{Flag|Maldives}}

|

|Munu Mahawar (High Commissioner

October, 2021[https://hci.gov.in/male/ Official Website]

|

{{Flag|Mali}}

|

|Anjani Kumar

7 November 2019|
{{Flag|Malta}}| Gloria Gangte10 February 2021

|

{{Flag|Mauritius}}

|

|K. Nandini Singla

|

|

|

{{Flag|Mexico}} (with {{flag|Niue}}, {{flag|Samoa}})

|

|Mridul Kumar

|

|

|

{{Flag|Mongolia}}

|

|T. Suresh Babu

|

|

|

{{Flag|Morocco}}| Rajesh Vaishnaw
{{Flag|Mozambique}}| Ankan Banerjee10 February 2021

|

{{Flag|Myanmar}}

|

|Vinay Kumar

|24 February 2022

|[https://embassyofindiayangon.gov.in/index/ EOI Yangon]

|

{{Flag|Namibia}}

|

|M Subbarayudu

|

|

|

{{Flag|Nepal}}

|

|Naveen Srivastava

|17 May 2022{{cite news |title=Naveen Srivastava appointed as India's ambassador to Nepal |url=https://www.businesstoday.in/latest/economy/story/naveen-srivastava-appointed-as-indias-ambassador-to-nepal-333976-2022-05-17

|accessdate=17 May 2022 |work=BusinessToday.In}}

|

|

{{Flag|Netherlands}}

|

|Mrs. Reenat Sandhu

|

|https://www.indianembassynetherlands.gov.in/

|

{{Flag|New Zealand}}

|

|Neeta Bhushan

|

|

|

{{Flag|Niger}}

|

|Rajesh Agrawal

|

|

|

{{Flag|Nigeria}}{{efn|Along with Chad}}

|

|G Balasubramaniam

|1 March 2019

|

|

{{Flag|Norway}}

|

|Acquino Vimal

|September 2019

|

|

{{Flag|Oman}}

|

|Amit Narang

|21 August 2018

|

|

{{Flag|Pakistan}}

|List

| M. Suresh Kumar (Chargé d'Affaires a.i.)

|

|

|

{{Flag|Papua New Guinea}}

|

|S Inbasekar

|

|

|

{{Flag|Paraguay}}

|

|Yogeshwar Sangwan

|5 February 2022

| [http://eoiasuncion.gov.in/ EOI, Asuncion]

|

{{Flag|Peru}}

|

|Krishna R. Urs

|

|

|

{{Flag|Philippines}}

|

|Shambhu S. Kumaran {{Cite web|title=Shri Shambhu S. Kumaran has been appointed as the next Ambassador of India to the Republic of Philippines|url=https://mea.gov.in/press-releases.htm?dtl/32750/Shri_Shambhu_S_Kumaran_has_been_appointed_as_the_next_Ambassador_of_India_to_the_Republic_of_Philippines|access-date=2020-07-28|website=mea.gov.in}}

|10 June 2020

|

|

{{Flag|Poland}}| Nagma Mohammad Mallick9 July 2021

| [https://www.indianembassywarsaw.gov.in/ EOI, Warshaw]

|

{{Flag|Portugal}}

|

|Manish Chauhan

|

|

|

{{Flag|Qatar}}| Deepak Mittal29 April 2020

| [https://www.indianembassyqatar.gov.in/ EOi, Doha]

|

{{Flag|Romania}}ListRahul Shrivastava5 June 2020[https://www.eoibucharest.gov.in/ Official Website]{{cite news |title=Shri Rahul Shrivastava appointed as the next Ambassador of India to Romania |url=https://www.mea.gov.in/press-releases.htm?dtl/32737/Shri+Rahul+Shrivastava+appointed+as+the+next+Ambassador+of+India+to+Romania |accessdate=17 August 2020 |work=www.mea.gov.in |date=5 June 2020}}
{{Flag|Russia}}

|List

| Pawan Kapoor

|

|

|

{{Flag|Saudi Arabia}}

|

|Suhel Ajaz Khan{{Cite web |last=ANI |date=2023-01-17 |title=Suhel Ajaz Khan assumes charge as new Indian envoy to Saudi Arabia |url=https://theprint.in/world/suhel-ajaz-khan-assumes-charge-as-new-indian-envoy-to-saudi-arabia/1318680/ |access-date=2023-01-30 |website=ThePrint |language=en-US}}

|16 January 2023

|[https://www.eoiriyadh.gov.in/ EOI, Riyadh]

|

{{Flag|Senegal}}

|

|Dinkar Asthana

|August, 2022

|

|

{{Flag|Serbia}}| Shubhdarshini TripathiSeptember 2023

| [https://www.eoibelgrade.gov.in/ EOI, Belgrade]

|

{{Flag|Seychelles}}

|

|Kartik Pande

|November 2022

|

|

{{Flag|Singapore}}

|

|Shilpak Ambule

|

|{{Cite web|title=Periasamy Kumaran takes over as the High Commissioner of India to Singapore|url=https://www.connectedtoindia.com/periasamy-kumaran-takes-over-as-the-high-commissioner-of-india-to-singapore-7691.html|access-date=2021-06-17|website=www.connectedtoindia.com}}

|

{{Flag|Slovak Republic}}

|

|Apoorva Srivastava

|15 October 2022

|{{url|https://eoibratislava.gov.in/}}

|

{{Flag|Slovenia}}

|

|Namrata S

|

|

|

{{Flag|South Africa}}

|

|Prabhat Kumar

|July/August 2023

|

|

{{Flag|Sudan}}

|

|B. S. Mubarak

|

|

|

{{Flag|Sri Lanka}}

|

|Gopal Baglay

1 February 2020{{url|https://hcicolombo.gov.in/}}

| {{cite news |title=Gopal Baglay appointed Indian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka {{!}} India News - Times of India |url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/gopal-baglay-appointed-indian-high-commissioner-to-sri-lanka/articleshow/73847883.cms |accessdate=3 February 2020 |work=The Times of India |agency=PTI |language=en}}

{{Flag|Sudan}}

|

|Ravindra Prasad Jaiswal

|

|

|

{{Flag|Suriname}}

|

|Shankar Bala Chandran

|

|

|

{{Flag|Sweden}} & {{Flag|Latvia}}

|

|Tanmaya Lal

|

|

|

{{Flag|Switzerland}} & {{Flag|Liechtenstein}}

|List

|Vani Rao

|

|

|

{{Flag|Tajikistan}}

|

|JP Singh

|

|

|

{{Flag|Tanzania}}List

|Binaya Srikanta Pradhan

20 July 2021

| [https://hcindiatz.gov.in/index.php Dar Es Salaam]

|

{{Flag|Thailand}}

|

|Nagesh Singh

|

|

|

{{Flag|Trinidad and Tobago}} (with {{flag|Grenada}})|Raju Sharma (Chargé d'Affaires a.i.)July 2022{{efn|additional charge}}

|

|

{{Flag|Tunisia}}

|

|N. J. Gangte

|

|

|

{{Flag|Turkey}}

|

Virander Paul

|

|

{{Flag|Turkmenistan}}

|

|Vidhu P. Nair

|

|

|

{{Flag|Ukraine}}

|

|Harsh Kumar

|

|

|

{{Flag|United Arab Emirates}}

|List

|Pavan Kapoor {{cite news|url=https://gulfnews.com/uae/india-appoints-new-ambassador-to-the-uae-1.1566971940033|title=india-appoints-new-ambassador-to-the-uae|work=gulfnews|access-date=29 August 2019}}

|28 August 2019

|

|

{{Flag|United Kingdom}}

|List

|Vikram Doraiswami (High Commissioner Designate)

[https://www.hcilondon.gov.in/ Official Website]

|{{cite news |title=Gaitri Issar Kumar takes over as Indian high commissioner to the UK |url=https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/gaitri-issar-kumar-takes-over-as-indian-high-commissioner-to-the-uk/story-XqN9uWsJEgkvsERL0as4uJ.html |accessdate=15 August 2020 |work=Hindustan Times |date=5 July 2020 |language=en}}

{{Flag|United States}}

|List

|Taranjit Singh Sandhu{{cite news |title=Taranjit Singh Sandhu appointed India's Ambassador to US |url=https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/taranjit-singh-sandhu-appointed-indias-ambassador-to-us-mea/article30674818.ece |accessdate=1 February 2020 |work=The Hindu |date=28 January 2020 |language=en-IN}}

|28 January 2020

|

|

{{Flag|Uzbekistan}}

|

|Manish Prabhat{{cite web|url=https://www.mea.gov.in/press-releases.htm?dtl/32886/Shri+Manish+Prabhat+has+been+appointed+as+the+next+Ambassador+of+India+to+the+Republic+of+Uzbekistan#:~:text=Partnerships%20Development%20Partnerships-,Shri%20Manish%20Prabhat%20has%20been%20appointed%20as%20the%20next%20Ambassador,to%20the%20Republic%20of%20Uzbekistan.|title=Santosh Jha appointed as the next Ambassador of India to the Republic of Uzbekistan|accessdate=17 August 2010|date=10 August 2020}}

|10 August 2020

|

|

{{Flag|Venezuela}}

|

|Abhishek Singh

|2016

|

|

{{Flag|Vietnam}}

|

|Pranay Kumar Verma{{cite news|url=https://www.aninews.in/news/national/general-news/pranay-kumar-verma-named-indias-next-ambassador-to-vietnam20190301211144/|work=ani|title=verma-named-indias-next-ambassador-to-vietnam|accessdate=4 March 2019}}

|1 March 2019

|

|

{{Flag|Yemen}}

|

| -Vacant-

|

|

|

{{Flag|Zambia}}

|

|Ashok Kumar

|

|

|

{{Flag|Zimbabwe}}

|

|Vijay Khanduja

| [http://eoi.gov.in/harare/ Official Website]

=BJP State Presidents=

=Assam=

=Leaders of Indian states who died in office=

=Governors=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! Portrait

! style="width:16em"| Name

! style="width:11em"| State
{{small|(Role held since)}}

! style="width:10em"| Birth date

! style="width:10em"| Death date

! Age at death

! Cause of death

80px

| Girija Shankar Bajpai

| Bombay State
{{small|(since 1952)}}

| 3 April 1891

| 5 December 1954

| {{age|3 Apr 1891|5 Dec 1954}}

| Cerebral hemorrhage

80px

| P. Subbarayan

| Maharashtra
{{small|(since 1962)}}

| 11 September 1889

| 6 October 1962

| {{age|11 Sep 1889|6 Oct 1962}}

|

80px

| P. V. Cherian

| Maharashtra
{{Small|(since 1964)}}

| 9 July 1893

| 9 November 1969

| {{age|9 Jul 1893|9 Nov 1969}}

|

80px

| Ali Yavar Jung

| Maharashtra
{{small|(since 1971)}}

| February 1906

| 11 December 1976{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/12/14/archives/ali-yavar-jung.html|title=Ali Yavar Jung|website=The New York Times|date=13 December 1976}}

| 70

| Heart attack

80px

| Nirmal Chandra Jain

| Rajasthan
{{small|(since 2003)}}

| 24 September 1924

| 22 September 2003

| {{age|24 Sep 1924|22 Sep 2003}}

| Heart attack

80px

| Sikander Bakht

| Kerala
{{small|(since 2002)}}

| 24 August 1918

| 23 February 2004

| {{age|24 Aug 1918|23 Feb 2004}}

| Complications from surgery

80px

| Ram Prakash Gupta

| Madhya Pradesh
{{small|(since 2003)}}

| 26 October 1923

| 1 May 2004

| {{age|26 Oct 1923|1 May 2004}}

| Illness

80px

| Shiv Charan Mathur

| Assam
{{small|(since 2008)}}

| 14 February 1927

| 25 June 2009

| {{age|14 Feb 1927|25 Jun 2009}}

| Heart attack

80px

| Shilendra Kumar Singh

| Rajasthan
{{small|(since 2007)}}

| 24 January 1932

| 1 December 2009

| {{age|24 Jan 1932|1 Dec 2009}}

| Brief illness

80px

| Prabha Rau

| Rajasthan
{{small|(since 2009)}}

| 4 March 1935

| 26 April 2010

| {{age|4 Mar 1935|26 Apr 2010}}

| Heart attack

80px

| M. O. H. Farook

| Kerala
{{small|(since 2011)

| 6 September 1937

| 26 January 2012

| {{age|6 Sep 1937|26 Jan 2012}}

| Multiple myeloma

80px

| Syed Ahmed

| Manipur
{{small|(since 2015)}}

| 6 March 1943

| 27 September 2015

| {{age|6 Mar 1943|27 Sep 2015}}

| Cancer

80px

| Balram Das Tandon

| Chhattisgarh
{{small|(since 2014)}}

| 1 November 1927

| 14 August 2018

| {{age|1 Nov 1927|14 Aug 2018}}

| Heart attack

80px

| Lalji Tandon

| Madhya Pradesh
{{small|(since 2019)}}

| 12 April 1935

| 21 July 2020

| {{age|12 Apr 1935|21 Jul 2020}}

| COVID-19

=Chief Ministers=

;Colour key

  • {{colorbox|{{party color|INC}}}} INC (11)
  • {{colorbox|{{party color|AIADMK}}}} AIADMK (2)
  • {{colorbox|{{party color|BJP}}}} BJP (1)
  • {{colorbox|{{party color|DMK}}}} DMK (1)
  • {{colorbox|{{party color|Jammu and Kashmir National Conference}}}} JKNC (1)
  • {{colorbox|{{party color|Jammu and Kashmir People's Democratic Party}}}} JKPDP (1)
  • {{colorbox|{{party color|Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party}}}} MGP (1)

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! Portrait

! colspan="2" style="width:16em"| Name

! style="width:11em"| State
{{small|(Role held since)}}

! style="width:10em"| Birth date

! style="width:10em"| Death date

! Age at death

! Cause of death

80px

| style="width:0.005em" bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Gopinath Bordoloi

| Assam
{{small|(since 1946{{efn|As Premier of Assam until 26 January 1950}})}}

| 6 June 1890

| 5 August 1950

| {{age|6 June 1890|5 August 1950}}

| Heart attack

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Ravishankar Shukla

| Madhya Pradesh
{{small|(since 1950)}}

| 2 August 1877

| 31 December 1956

| {{age|2 Aug 1877|31 Dec 1956}}

| Heart attack

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Shri Krishna Sinha

| Bihar
{{small|(since 1947)}}

| 21 October 1887

| 31 January 1961

| {{age|21 Oct 1887|31 Jan 1961}}

|

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Bidhan Chandra Roy

| West Bengal
{{small|(since 1948{{efn|As Premier of West Bengal until 26 January 1950}})}}

| 1 July 1882

| 1 July 1962

| {{age|1 Jul 1882|1 Jul 1962}}

| Stroke

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Marotrao Kannamwar

| Maharashtra
{{small|(since 1962)}}

| 10 January 1900

| 24 November 1963

| {{age|10 Jan 1900|24 Nov 1963}}

|

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Balwantrai Mehta

| Gujarat
{{small|(since 1963)}}

| 19 February 1899

| 19 September 1965

| {{age|19 Feb 1899|19 Sep 1965}}

| Assassination

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}"|

| C. N. Annadurai

| Madras State
{{small|(1967{{ndash}}1969)}}
Tamil Nadu
{{small|(since 1969)}}

| 15 September 1909

| 3 February 1969

| {{age|15 Sep 1909|3 Feb 1969}}

| Cancer

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party}}"|

| Dayanand Bandodkar

| Goa, Daman and Diu
{{small|(1963{{ndash}}1966;
since 1967)}}

| 12 March 1911

| 12 August 1973

| {{age|12 Mar 1911|12 Aug 1973}}

| Heart attack

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Barkatullah Khan

| Rajasthan
{{small|(since 1971)}}

| 25 October 1920

| 11 October 1973

| {{age|25 Oct 1920|11 Oct 1973}}

| Heart attack

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Jammu and Kashmir National Conference}}"|

| Sheikh Abdullah

| Jammu and Kashmir
{{small|(1948{{ndash}}1953{{efn|As Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir}};
1975{{ndash}}1977;
since 1977)}}

| 5 December 1905

| 8 September 1982

| {{age|5 Dec 1905|8 Sep 1982}}

| Prolonged illness

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}"|

| M. G. Ramachandran

| Tamil Nadu
{{small|(1977{{ndash}}1980;
since 1980)}}

| 17 January 1917

| 24 December 1987

| {{age|17 Jan 1917|24 Dec 1987}}

| Kidney failure

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Chimanbhai Patel

| Gujarat
{{small|(1973{{ndash}}1974;
since 1990)}}

| 3 June 1929

| 17 February 1994

| {{age|3 Jun 1929|17 Feb 1994}}

| Heart failure

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Beant Singh

| Punjab
{{small|(since 1992)}}

| 19 February 1922

| 31 August 1995

| {{age|19 Feb 1922|31 Aug 1995}}

| Assassination

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy

| Andhra Pradesh
{{small|(since 2004)}}

| 8 July 1949

| 2 September 2009

| {{age|8 Jul 1949|2 Sep 2009}}

| Helicopter crash

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Indian National Congress}}"|

| Dorjee Khandu

| Arunachal Pradesh
{{small|(since 2007)}}

| 19 March 1955

| 30 April 2011

| {{age|19 March 1955|30 April 2011}}

| Helicopter crash

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Jammu and Kashmir People's Democratic Party}}"|

| Mufti Mohammad Sayeed

| Jammu and Kashmir
{{small|(2002{{ndash}}2005;
since 2015)}}

| 12 January 1936

| 7 January 2016

| {{age|12 Jan 1936|7 Jan 2016}}

| Multi-organ failure

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam}}"|

| J. Jayalalithaa

| Tamil Nadu
{{small|(1991{{ndash}}1996; 2001;
2002{{ndash}}2006;
2011{{ndash}}2014;
since 2015)}}

| 24 February 1948

| 5 December 2016

| {{age|24 Feb 1948|5 Dec 2016}}

| Cardiac arrest

80px

| bgcolor="{{party color|Bharatiya Janata Party}}"|

| Manohar Parrikar

| Goa
{{small|(2000{{ndash}}2005;
2012{{ndash}}2014;
since 2017)}}

| 13 December 1955

| 17 March 2019

| {{age|13 Dec 1955|17 Mar 2019}}

| Pancreatic cancer

=Borbora ministry=