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Amarinder Singh

15th Chief Minister of Punjab, IndiaFor other people named Amrinder Singh, see Amrinder Singh (disambiguation).

Member of the Legislative *embly, Punjab:In office
11 March 2017:– 15 March 2022Preceded byPreneet KaurSucceeded byAjit Pal Singh KohliCons*uencyPatiala UrbanIn office
2002–2014Preceded bySurjit Singh KohliSucceeded byPreneet KaurCons*uencyPatiala TownIn office
1992–1997Preceded byHardial Singh RajlaSucceeded byJagtar Singh RajlaCons*uencySamanaIn office
1985–1992Preceded byAvtar SinghSucceeded byHarminder SinghCons*uencyTalwandi SaboMember of Parliament, Lok SabhaIn office
26 May 2014:– 23 November 2016Preceded byNavjot Singh SidhuSucceeded byGurjit Singh AujlaCons*uencyAmritsarIn office
1980–1984Preceded byGurcharan Singh TohraSucceeded byCharanjit Singh WaliaCons*uencyPatialaPersonal detailsBorn (1942-03-11) 11 March 1942 (age:80)
Patiala City, Patiala State, Punjab, British India
(now Patiala, Punjab, India)CitizenshipIndianNationalityIndianPolitical partyPunjab Lok CongressOther political
affiliationsIndian National Congress, Shiromani Akali Dal, Shiromani Akali Dal (Panthic)Spouse(s)Preneet Kaur ​(m.:1964)​Children2, including Raninder SinghParent(s)
  • Maharaja Yadavindra Singh
  • Maharani Mohinder Kaur
WebsiteOfficial websiteMilitary serviceAllegiance:IndiaBranch/service:Indian ArmyYears:of service1963–1966Rank CaptainUnitSikh RegimentBattles/warsIndo-Pakistani War of 1965Maharaja of Patiala (*ular)Reign17 June 1974– presentPredecessorYadavindra SinghHeir apparentRaninder SinghSignature

Amarinder Singh (born 11 March 1942), known publicly as Captain Amarinder Singh, is an Indian politician, military historian, former royal and former veteran who served as the 15th Chief Minister of Punjab. A former Member of the Legislative *embly from Patiala, he was also the president of Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee, the state division of the Indian National Congress. He has also previously served as the Chief Minister of Punjab from 2002 to 2007. His father was the last Maharaja of the princely state of Patiala. He has also served in the Indian Army from 1963 to 1966. In 1980, he won a seat in the Lok Sabha for the first time. As of February 2021, Singh also serves as the chairman of the Punjab Urdu Academy. Captain Singh resigned as the Chief Minister of Punjab on 18 September 2021.

Contents

  • 1 Personal life
  • 2 Army career
  • 3 Political career
    • 3.1 Chief Minister of Punjab
    • 3.2 Member of Parliament
    • 3.3 Chief Minister of Punjab, second term
    • 3.4 Punjab Lok Congress
    • 3.5 2022 Punjab *embly election
  • 4 Books
  • 5 Awards and recognition
  • 6 References

Personal life

Singh was born on 11 March 1942 in Patiala City, Patiala State, Punjab Province, British India into a royal Punjabi Jatt Sikh family of the Sidhu clan to parents Maharaja Sir Yadavindra Singh and Maharani Mohinder Kaur of Patiala. Amarinder Singh's family belongs to the Phulkian dynasty. He attended the Loreto Convent in Shimla, and Lawrence School in Kasauli, Solan District, before going to The Doon School in Dehradun. He has one son, Raninder Singh, and one daughter, Jai Inder Kaur. His wife, Preneet Kaur, served as an Member of Parliament and was Minister of State in the Ministry of External Affairs from 2009 to October 2012.

His elder sister Heminder Kaur is married to former Foreign Minister K. Natwar Singh. He is also related to Shiromani Akali Dal (A) supremo and former IPS Officer Simranjit Singh Mann. Mann's wife and Amarinder Singh's wife, Preneet Kaur, are sisters.

Army career

Singh served in the Indian Army from June 1963 to December 1966 after graduating from the National Defence Academy and the Indian Military Academy. He was commissioned into the Sikh Regiment. He served as the aide-de-camp to the General Officer Commanding-in-Chief Western Command, Lieutenant General Harbaksh Singh, from December 1964. He left the army in early 1965 to look after his family but returned to service with the start of the 1965 Indo-Pakistan War.

His father and grandfather were also in army and many times he said that "Army will always be my first love".

Political career

He was inducted into the Congress by Rajiv Gandhi, who was his friend from school and was first elected to the Lok Sabha in 1980. In 1984, he resigned from Parliament and from Congress as a protest against the Army action during Operation Blue Star. Subsequently, he joined the Shiromani Akali Dal was elected to the state legislature from Talwandi Sabo and became a minister in the state government for Agriculture, Forest, Development and Panchayats.

In 1992 he broke away from the Akali Dal and formed a splinter group named Shiromani Akali Dal (Panthic) which later merged with the Congress in 1998 (after his party's crushing defeat in Vidhan Sabha election in which he himself was defeated from his own cons*uency where he got only 856 votes) after Sonia Gandhi took over the reins of the party. He was defeated by Prof Prem Singh Chandumajra from Patiala Cons*uency in 1998 by a margin of 33,251 votes. He served as the President of Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee on three occasions from 1999 to 2002, 2010 to 2013 and 2015 to 2017.

He has been a member of the Punjab Vidhan Sabha for five terms representing Patiala (Urban) thrice, Samana and Talwandi Sabo once each.

Chief Minister of Punjab

He became Chief Minister of Punjab in 2002 and continued until 2007.

In September 2008, a special committee of Punjab Vidhan Sabha, during the tenure of a government led by Akali Dal-Bharatiya Janata Party, expelled him on the count of regularities in the transfer of land related to the Amritsar Improvement Trust. In 2010, the Supreme Court of India held his expulsion uncons*utional on the grounds that it was excessive and uncons*utional.

He was appointed as chairman of Punjab Congress Campaign Committee in 2008. Captain Amarinder Singh is also a Permanent Invitee to the Congress Working Committee since 2013.

Member of Parliament

He defeated senior BJP leader Arun Jaitley by a margin of more than 102,000 votes in 2014 general elections.

On 27 November 2015, Amarinder Singh was appointed President of Punjab Congress in the run up to Punjab elections slated for 2017.

Chief Minister of Punjab, second term

Main article: Second Amarinder Singh ministry

On 11 March 2017 Congress Party won the 2017 Punjab Legislative *embly election under his leadership. Amarinder Singh was sworn in as the 26th Chief Minister of Punjab on 16 March 2017 at Punjab Raj Bhavan, Chandigarh. The oath of office was administered by the Punjab governor, V.P. Singh Badnore. He was appointed president of the Jat Mahasabha in 2013.

During his tenure as chief minister, he came into conflict with a faction of the Congress headed by Navjot Singh Sidhu, and was criticized for being inaccessible to Congress MLAs, living in a farmhouse on the outskirts of Chandigarh instead of coming to the civil secretariat building. He also received criticism for not resolving the Bargari sacrilege case and for a perception that he had been insufficiently zealous in prosecuting previous CM Parkash Singh Badal for involvement in the case.

On 18 September 2021, he resigned as the Chief Minister of Punjab, as a consequence of conversations with the Congress high command that suggested the Punjab Congress MLAs were lacking confidence in his leadership. Singh publicly blamed Sidhu for the internal tension that led to the resignation, calling him "dangerous", "incompetent", and a "total disaster" and that he would fight any attempt to name Sidhu as the next CM of Punjab. Singh was eventually succeeded by Charanjit Singh Channi as the new chief minister.

Singh left the Congress Party, and on 28 October 2021, announced that he would be floating a new party soon and that he would be allying with the Bharatiya Janata Party.

Punjab Lok Congress

Punjab Lok Congress (PLC; English: Punjab People's Congress) is an Indian regional political party, in Punjab founded by Singh on 2 November 2021 after he resigned as Chief Minister of Punjab and quit the Indian National Congress. The party was formed following a split in Indian National Congress in Punjab. Singh has announced that his party will contest on all 117 seats in 2022 Punjab Legislative *embly election.

2022 Punjab *embly election

In 2022 Punjab Legislative *embly election, Singh lost from the Patiala Urban cons*uency to Aam Aadmi Party's Ajit Pal Singh Kohli.

Books

He has also written books on war and Sikh history which include A Ridge Too Far, Lest We Forget, The Last Sunset: Rise and Fall of La* Durbar and The Sikhs in Britain: 150 years of Photographs. Among his most recent works are Honour and Fidelity: India's Military Contribution to the Great War 1914 to 1918 released in Chandigarh on 6 December 2014, and The Monsoon War: Young Officers Reminisce – 1965 India-Pakistan War- which contains his memoirs of the 1965 Indo-Pak war.

Awards and recognition

The author Khushwant Singh released a biographic book *led, Captain Amarinder Singh: The People’s Maharaja in 2017.

References

    • Longest-serving chief ministers
    • Female chief ministers
    • From the Bharatiya Janata Party
    • From the Communist Party of India (Marxist)
    • From the Indian National Congress
    Category