With at least a dozen of the leading Union Cabinet ministers retaining the portfolios they had handled in the previous government, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has conveyed a message of continuity in governance. This is despite the induction of five members of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) partners into the Union Cabinet.
The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) members remain unchanged. Union ministers Rajnath Singh, Amit Shah, Nirmala Sitharaman, and S Jaishankar retained their portfolios of Defence, Home Affairs and Cooperation, Finance and Corporate Affairs, and External Affairs, respectively. Nitin Gadkari will continue to handle the Road Transport and Highways portfolio.
Union ministers Piyush Goyal, Ashwini Vaishnaw, Dharmendra Pradhan, Sarabananda Sonowal, Hardeep Puri, and Bhupender Yadav retained at least the principal portfolios that they had handled in the previous government. The PM divested them of their additional portfolios to accommodate newer entrants and allies. Goyal, for example, retained the Commerce and Industry portfolio, but Textiles, Consumer Affairs, Food, and Public Distribution were taken away. Vaishnaw retained Railways and Information Technology, but lost Telecom. He, however, got Information & Broadcasting Ministry too. In the last Cabinet, the I&B Ministry was with Anurag Thakur, who’s been dropped in Modi 3.0 despite winning in the recent elections. The Communications portfolio that Vaishnaw handled has now gone to Jyotiraditya Scindia, who was the Civil Aviation minister in the previous government. Among others, the ministries of Power and New and Renewable Energy were also separated.
Rashtrapati Bhavan announced the portfolios on Monday evening, almost 24 hours after the 72-member council of ministers took the oath of office and a couple of hours after the first meeting of the Union Cabinet, which approved government assistance for construction of 30 million houses under the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY). Earlier in the day, in his first decision after taking charge for the third time, the PM signed a file transferring the 17th installment of the PM-Kisan Samman Nidhi fund, amounting to nearly Rs 20,000 crore, to around 93 million farmers.
The significant change in the Cabinet was the return of JP Nadda, who was BJP president, to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, a portfolio he had managed in the Modi 1.0 government. The PM also entrusted him with the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilisers. Mansukh Mandaviya had handled the two portfolios in the previous government and will take care of Labour and Employment, Youth Affairs and Sports. The change in the Sports Ministry comes right ahead of the Olympics in July.
Shivraj Singh Chouhan, credited with turning around his state’s agriculture production during his stint as the chief minister of Madhya Pradesh, was tasked with the Rural Development, Agriculture, and Farmers Welfare portfolios. Manohar Lal Khattar, the former Haryana CM, was asked to look after Power, Housing and Urban Affairs ministries.
Among the allies, the PM entrusted Janata Dal (Secular)’s HD Kumaraswamy with the ministries of Heavy Industries and Steel. Janata Dal (United)’s Rajeev Ranjan Singh will take care of Panchayati Raj, Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying. Another of the BJP’s allies in Bihar, Jitan Ram Manjhi, will handle the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises portfolio. Telugu Desam Party’s K Rammohan Naidu is the new Minister of Civil Aviation, and Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas)’s Chirag Paswan is the Minister of Food Processing Industries.
G Kishan Reddy, BJP’s Telangana leader, who had taken care of the ministries of culture, tourism and Development of the North Eastern Region (DONER) in the previous government, will now take care of the ministries of Coal and Mine. C R Patil, the BJP’s Gujarat state unit chief known for his organisational skills, will handle the Jal Shakti Ministry.
Shiv Sena MP Prataprao Jadhav has been made the Minister of State (Independent Charge) for the Ayush Ministry and MoS for Health and Family Welfare. Rashtriya Lok Dal’s Jayant Chaudhary is the MoS (Independent Charge) of the Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship and the MoS in the Education Ministry.
Earlier in the day, media reports suggested that Union Minister and actor-turned-politician Suresh Gopi wanted to exit the council of ministers. Later, he called the reports “grossly incorrect”. Media platforms had reported that Gopi, the BJP’s first ever Lok Sabha MP from Kerala, was upset at being made an MoS. In other murmurs of discontent, Shiv Sena MP Shrirang Barne expressed disappointment over the party not getting a Cabinet berth. However, party MP Shrikant Shinde, the son of party chief and Maharashtra CM Eknath Shinde, clarified that the party was supporting the government unconditionally. However, the Sena MP’s comments came a day after the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) led by Ajit Pawar said the party would wait for a Cabinet berth rather than accepting a Minister of State position offered by the BJP.
The council of ministers, apart from Modi, has 30 Cabinet ministers, five Ministers of State (Independent Charge) and 36 Ministers of State.
Who gets what
Cabinet Ministers:
Narendra Modi |
Prime Minister; in-charge of Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions; Department of Atomic Energy; Department of Space; All important policy issues; and all other portfolios not allocated to any minister |
|
|
Rajnath Singh |
Defence |
Amit Shah |
Home Affairs; Minister of Cooperation |
Nitin Jairam Gadkari |
Road Transport and Highways |
Jagat Prakash Nadda |
Health and Family Welfare; Chemicals and Fertilizers |
Shivraj Singh Chouhan |
Agriculture and Farmers Welfare; Rural Development |
Nirmala Sitharaman |
Finance; Corporate Affairs |
Subrahmanyam Jaishankar |
External Affairs |
Manohar Lal |
Housing and Urban Affairs; Power |
H D Kumaraswamy |
Heavy Industries; Steel |
Piyush Goyal |
Commerce and Industry |
Dharmendra Pradhan |
Education |
Jitan Ram Manjhi |
MSME |
Rajiv Ranjan Singh alias Lalan Singh |
Panchayati Raj; Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying |
Sarbananda Sonowal |
Ports, Shipping and Waterways |
Virendra Kumar |
Social Justice and Empowerment |
Kinjarapu Rammohan Naidu |
Civil Aviation |
Pralhad Joshi |
Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution; New and Renewable Energy |
Jual Oram |
Tribal Affairs |
Giriraj Singh |
Textiles |
Ashwini Vaishnaw |
Railways; I&B; Electronics and IT |
Jyotiraditya M Scindia |
Communications; Development of North Eastern Region |
Bhupender Yadav |
Environment, Forest and Climate Change |
Gajendra Singh Shekhawat |
Culture; Tourism |
Annpurna Devi |
Women and Child Development |
Kiren Rijiju |
Parliamentary Affairs; Minority Affairs |
Hardeep Singh Puri |
Petroleum and Natural Gas |
Mansukh Mandaviya |
Labour and Employment; Youth Affairs and Sports |
G Kishan Reddy |
Coal; Mines |
Chirag Paswan |
Food Processing Industries |
C R Patil |
Jal Shakti |
Ministers of State (Independent Charge)
Rao Inderjit Singh |
Statistics and Programme Implementation; Planning; |
Jitendra Singh |
Science and Tech; Earth Sciences; PM’s Office; Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions; |
Arjun Ram Meghwal |
Law and Justice; Parliamentary Affairs |
Jadhav Prataprao Ganpatrao |
Ayush; Health and Family Welfare |
Jayant Chaudhary |
Skill Development and Entrepreneurship; Education |
Ministers of State
Jitin Prasada |
Commerce and Industry; Electronics and IT |
Shripad Yesso Naik |
Power; New and Renewable Energy |
Pankaj Chaudhary |
Finance |
Krishan Pal |
Cooperation |
Ramdas Athawale |
Social Justice and Empowerment |
Ram Nath Thakur |
Agriculture and Farmers Welfare |
Nityanand Rai |
Home Affairs |
Anupriya Patel |
Health and Family Welfare; Chemicals and Fertilizers |
V Somanna |
Jal Shakti; Railways |
Chandra Sekhar Pemmasani |
Rural Development; Communications |
S P Singh Baghel |
Fisheries, Animal Husbandry, Dairying; Panchayati Raj |
Sushri Sobha Karandlaje |
MSME; Labour and Employment |
Kirtivardhan Singh |
Environment & Climate Change; External Affairs |
B L Verma |
Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution; Social Justice and Empowerment |
Shantanu Thakur |
Ports, Shipping and Waterways |
Suresh Gopi |
Petroleum and Natural Gas; Tourism |
L Murugan |
I&B; Parliamentary Affairs |
Ajay Tamta |
Road Transport and Highways |
Bandi Sanjay Kumar |
Home Affairs |
Kamlesh Paswan |
Rural Development |
Bhagirath Choudhary |
Agriculture and Farmers Welfare |
Satish Chandra Dubey |
Coal; Mines |
Sanjay Seth |
Defence |
Ravneet Singh |
Food Processing Industries; Railways |
Durgadas Uikey |
Tribal Affairs |
Raksha Nikhil Khadse |
Youth Affairs and Sports |
Sukanta Majumdar |
Education; Development of North Eastern Region |
Savitri Thakur |
Women and Child Development |
Tokhan Sahu |
Housing and Urban Affairs |
Raj Bhushan Choudhary |
Jal Shakti |
Bhupathi Raju Srinivasa Varma |
Heavy Industries; Steel |
Harsh Malhotra |
Corporate Affairs; Road Transport and Highways |
Nimuben Jayantibhai Bambhaniya |
Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution |
Murlidhar Mohol |
Cooperation; Civil Aviation |
George Kurian |
Minority Affairs; Fisheries, Animal Husbandry, Dairying |
Pabitra Margherita |
External Affairs; Textiles |