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Sunday Shuffle: Cabinet 1.0 gains weight after expansion

The taciturn look on the face of BJP veteran Lal Krishna Advani sitting in the front row a seat away from Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the Rashtrapati Bhawan as the first expansion of the NDA ministry took place on Sunday told a tale. The induction of Manohar Parrikar and Suresh Prabhu were clear indications that the fulcrum of power within the NDA establishment rested with the Prime Minister and not anywhere else.

According to President House communique, in the late night reshuffle of portfolios, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley got additional charge of Information and Broadcasting whereas he handed over Defence portfolio to Manohar Parrikar. As expected Sadanand Gowda was divested of Railways, which was handed over to Suresh Prabhu. Gowda would be the new law minister. Rural Development went to Chaudhary Birender Singh. Surprisingly Harshvardhan was divested of the charge of Health Ministry, which was handed over to JP Nadda. Vardhan has been given Science and Technology, which was being held by Minister in PMO Jitender Singh, who would now hold independent charge of Ministry of North-East Affairs. 

The expansion was not without an exciting prelude, as Shiv Sena nominee Anil Desai was asked to return to Mumbai post-haste upon landing in the national capital. Despite running the risk of fall of his party’s minority government in Maharashtra, the prime minister decided to hold a red flag to one of the oldest constituents of the alliance by first not allowing himself to be blackmailed into shelling out ministerial berths in Maharashtra and two not paying heed to Sena leadership’s advice of not inducting Prabhu.

Prabhu has since resigned from the Shiv Sena and joined BJP. The Mumbai-based chartered accountant was one of the closest advisors of Modi during the run-up to the 2014 polls.  As a mark of protest against the cancellation of Narendra Modi’s keynote address at the Wharton India Economic Forum 2013, Prabhu had also called off his visit to the University. He was power minister in the Vajpayee government before being sidelined by Shiv Sena leadership.

The induction of Parrikar and Prabhu into the Cabinet has made it abundantly clear that the BJP leadership, which was so far dominated by the Delhi-based leaders, has come to be controlled by leaders from other centres with close liaison with the prime minister, including party president Amit Shah. With vacancies now arising in the party following induction of office-bearers like JP Nadda, Rajiv Pratap Rudy, Bandaru Dattatreyya and Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi into the ministry, Shah would have the opportunity to further consolidate his control over the orgainsation.

On the ‘efficacy’ of the move, it can be pointed out that the reshuffle could give the necessary push for economic regeneration as the promise of ‘achche din’ (good days) are still to trickle down to the common people. The Prime Minister has tried to induct faces which have the talent to give governance a push in matters of results.

The reshuffle has naturally taken care of the regional imbalances by giving due representation to Rajasthan and Himachal. It has paid due regards to those who facilitated its victory in Maharashtra and Haryana and have put focus on the upcoming polls in Jharkhand, in Bihar (2015) and later Uttar Pradesh (2017). However, the state of Uttarakhand, which returned MPs from all the five seats, remains unrepresented. On the other hand between Bihar and UP there are now 21 ministers in the 66-member council.


Full Cabinet with portfolios:

Rajnath Singh: Home Affairs 
Sushma Swaraj: External Affairs, Overseas Indian Affairs 
Arun Jaitley: Finance, Corporate Affairs, Information & Broadcasting 
M. Venkaiah Naidu: Urban Development, Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation, Parliamentary Affairs
Nitin Jairam Gadkari: Road Transport and Highways, Shipping 
Manohar Parrikar: Defence 
Suresh Prabhu: Railways 
DV Sadananda Gowda: Law and Justice 
Uma Bharati: Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation 
Dr. Najma A. Heptulla: Minority Affairs 
Ramvilas Paswan: Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution 
Kalraj Mishra: Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises 
Maneka Sanjay Gandhi: Women and Child Development 
Ananth Kumar:
Chemicals and Fertilizers 
Ravi Shankar Prasad: Communications and Information Technology 
Jagat Prakash Nadda: Health & Family Welfare 
Ashok Gajapathi Raju Pusapati: Civil Aviation 
Anant Geete: Heavy Industries and Public Enterprises 
Harsimrat Kaur Badal: Food Processing Industries 
Narendra Singh Tomar: Mines, Steel 
Chaudhary Birender Singh: Rural Development, Panchayati Raj, Drinking Water and Sanitation 
Jual Oram: Tribal Affairs 
Radha Mohan Singh: Agriculture 
Thaawar Chand Gehlot: Social Justice and Empowerment 
Smriti Zubin Irani: Human Resource Development 
Dr. Harsh Vardhan: Science and Technology, Earth Sciences 

MINISTERS OF STATE 
General V.K. Singh: Statistics and Programme Implementation (Independent Charge), External Affairs, Overseas Indian Affairs 
Inderjit Singh Rao: Planning (Independent Charge), Defence 
Santosh Kumar Gangwar: Textiles (Independent Charge) 
Bandaru Dattatreya: Labour and Employment (Independent Charge) 
Rajiv Pratap Rudy: Skill Development & Entrepreneurship (Independent Charge), Parliamentary Affairs 
Shripad Yesso Naik: AAYUSH (Independent Charge), Health and Family Welfare 
Dharmendra Pradhan: Petroleum and Natural Gas (Independent Charge) 
Sarbananda Sonowal: Youth Affairs and Sports (Independent Charge) 
Prakash Javadekar: Environment, Forest and Climate Change (Independent Charge) 
Piyush Goyal: Power (Independent Charge), Coal (Independent Charge), New and Renewable Energy (Independent Charge) 
Jitendra Singh: Development of North Eastern Region (Independent Charge), Prime Minister’s Office, Personnel, Public Grievances & Pensions, Department of Atomic Energy, Department of Space 
Nirmala Sitharaman: Commerce and Industry (Independent Charge) 
Dr. Mahesh Sharma: Culture (Independent Charge), Tourism (Independent Charge), Civil Aviation 
Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi: Minority Affairs, Parliamentary Affairs 
Ram Kripal Yadav: Drinking Water & Sanitation 
Haribhai Parthibhai Chaudhary: Home Affairs 
Sanwar Lal Jat: Water Resources, River Development & Ganga Rejuvenation 
Mohanbhai Kalyanjibhai Kundariya: Agriculture 
Giriraj Singh: Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises 
Hansraj Gangaram Ahir: Chemicals & Fertilizers 
G.M. Siddeshwara: Heavy Industries and Public Enterprises 
Manoj Sinha: Railways 
Nihalchand: Panchayati Raj 
Upendra Kushwaha: Human Resource Development 
Radhakrishnan P.: Road Transport & Highways, Shipping
Kiren Rijiju: Home Affairs 
Krishan Pal: Social Justice & Empowerment 
Sanjeev Kumar Balyan: Agriculture 
Manuskhbhai Dhanjibhai Vasava: Tribal Affairs 
Raosaheb Dadarao Danve: Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution 
Vishnu Deo Sai: Mines, Steel 
Sudarshan Bhagat: Rural Development 
(Dr.) Ram Shankar Katheria: Human Resource Development 
Y.S. Chowdary: Science and Technology, Earth Science 
Jayant Sinha: Finance 
Col. Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore: Information and Broadcasting 
Babul Supria (Babul Supriyo) Baral: Urban Development, Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation 
Sadhvi Niranjan Jyoti: Food Processing Industries 
Vijay Sampla: Social Justice and Empowerment 





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