G-23 (political group)

The G-23 was a group of 23 Indian members of parliament that were in the Indian National Congress party and that wrote a letter asking for stronger leadership.[1]

List of G-23 members

SerialNamePosts HeldState Current Status
1Ghulam Nabi Azad

Jammu and Kashmir

Left Congress in 2022 to form Democratic Progressive Azad Party.
2Anand Sharma

Himachal Pradesh

3Bhupinder Singh Hooda

Haryana

4Milind Deora
  • Cabinet Minister

Maharashtra

Left Congress in 2024 to join Shiv Sena.
5Mukul Wasnik
  • Cabinet Minister

Maharashtra

6Manish Tewari
  • Cabinet Minister

Punjab

7Shashi Tharoor
  • Cabinet Minister

Kerala

8Rajinder Kaur Bhattal
  • Chief Minister of Punjab
  • Deputy Chief Minister of Punjab
  • Leader of Opposition Punjab

Punjab

9Veerappa Moily
  • Chief Minister of Karnataka
  • Leader of Opposition Karnataka
  • Union Minister

Karnataka

10Prithviraj Chavan
  • Chief Minister of Maharashtra
  • Cabinet Minister

Maharashtra

11Kapil Sibal
  • Union Minister

Delhi

Left Congress in 2022.
12Vivek Tankha
  • Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

Madhya Pradesh

13Jitin Prasada
  • Cabinet Minister

Uttar Pradesh

Left Congress in 2021 to join Bharatiya Janata Party.
14Renuka Chowdhary
  • Union Minister

Andhra Pradesh

15PJ Kurien
  • Deputy Chairman of the Rajya Sabha

Kerala

16Raj Babbar
  • Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha
  • Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

Uttar Pradesh

17Kuldeep Sharma
  • Speaker Haryana

Haryana

18Yoganand Shastri
  • Speaker Delhi,
  • Minister in Delhi

Delhi

Left Congress in 2021 to join Nationalist Congress Party (now Nationalist Congress Party- Sharadchandra Pawar).
19Akhilesh Prasad Singh
  • Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha

Bihar

20Arvinder Singh Lovely
  • Minister in Delhi

Delhi

Left Congress in 2024 to re-join Bharatiya Janata Party.[2]
21Kaul Singh Thakur
  • Minister in Himachal Pradesh

Himachal Pradesh

22Ajay Arjun Singh
  • Leader of Opposition
  • Minister in Madhya Pradesh

Madhya Pradesh

23Sandeep Dikshit
  • Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

Delhi

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.