Social Sciences, asked by laxmii123r, 5 months ago

The present chief minister of Karnataka is ______​

Answers

Answered by Murlli
3

Answer:

B.S Yediyurappa

Explanation:

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Answered by Trishadevuzz
0

Answer:

B. S. Yediyurappa

Chief minister of Karnataka

Explanation:

Bookanakere Siddalingappa Yediyurappa (born 27 February 1943)[3][4][5] is an Indian politician serving as the 19th and current Chief Minister of Karnataka. Yediyurappa is serving as the Chief Minister of Karnataka for the fourth time, the only Chief Minister to do so in the history of Karnataka and he is also the only person in the history of Karnataka to serve 3 times as Leader of the Opposition in the Karnataka Legislative Assembly. He is also an eight-times MLA from Shikaripura constituency in Shimoga district.

GovernorVajubhai ValaDeputy

Govind M. Karjol

C. N. Ashwath Narayan

Laxman Savadi

Preceded byH. D. KumaraswamyConstituencyShikaripuraIn office

17 May 2018 – 19 May 2018GovernorVajubhai ValaPreceded bySiddaramaiahSucceeded byH. D. KumaraswamyIn office

30 May 2008 – 31 July 2011GovernorRameshwar Thakur

H. R. BhardwajPreceded byPresident's ruleSucceeded byD. V. Sadananda GowdaIn office

12 November 2007 – 19 November 2007GovernorRameshwar ThakurPreceded byPresident's ruleSucceeded byPresident's ruleMember of Parliament, Lok SabhaIn office

16 May 2014 – 19 May 2018Preceded byB. Y. RaghavendraSucceeded byB. Y. RaghavendraConstituencyShimoga5th Deputy Chief Minister of KarnatakaIn office

3 February 2006 – 9 October 2007Chief MinisterH. D. KumaraswamyPreceded byM. P. PrakashSucceeded byR. Ashoka

K. S. EshwarappaLeader of the Opposition in the Karnataka Legislative Assembly[1]In office

27 December 1994 – 18 December 1996Preceded byR. V. DeshpandeSucceeded byMallikarjun KhargeIn office

09 June 2004 – 02 February 2006Preceded byJagadish ShettarSucceeded byDharam SinghIn office

25 May 2018 – 26 July 2019Preceded byJagadish ShettarSucceeded bySiddaramaiahMember of the Karnataka Legislative Assembly

Incumbent

Assumed office

16 May 2018Preceded byB. Y. RaghavendraConstituencyShikaripuraIn office

2004–2014Preceded byB. N. MahalingappaSucceeded byB. Y. RaghavendraConstituencyShikaripuraIn office

1983–1999Preceded byK. YenkatappaSucceeded byB. N. MahalingappaConstituencyShikaripuraPresident of Bharatiya Janata Party, KarnatakaIn office

8 April 2016 – 26 July 2019Preceded byPralhad JoshiSucceeded byNalin Kumar KateelIn office

1989–2003Succeeded byAnanth KumarPersonal detailsBorn

Bookanakere Siddalingappa Yediyurappa

27 February 1943 (age 77)[2]

Bookanakere, Kingdom of Mysore (present-day Karnataka, India)Political partyBharatiya Janata Party

(till 2012; 2014–present)Other political

affiliationsKarnataka Janata Paksha

(2012-2014)Spouse(s)

Mythradevi

(m. 1967; died 2004)

Children5, including B. Y. RaghavendraSignatureWebsiteyeddyurappa.in

In 2008, Yediyurappa became the Chief Minister after leading the BJP to a victory in the Karnataka Assembly elections, a first for the BJP in a South Indian state.[6] In 2011, he resigned after being indicted over a corruption case; he was acquitted in 2016.[7] Owing to alleged ill-treatment meted out to Yediyurappa by the BJP High Command, he left BJP and formed his own party, the Karnataka Janata Paksha.[8][9] However, in 2014 he merged his party with the BJP and was subsequently elected to the 16th Lok Sabha from the Shimoga constituency, which he quit after being elected to the Karnataka Legislative Assembly in May 2018.[10][11] On 17 May 2018, he was sworn in as the Chief Minister of Karnataka, his third term in the office.[12][13] Unable to get a majority support in the Assembly, he resigned just two days after taking office and H. D. Kumaraswamy took oath as CM.[14][15] After the government of H. D. Kumaraswamy lost its majority on 23 July 2019 with the resignation of 17 MLAs, he became chief minister of Karnataka and took oath as the Chief Minister of Karnataka on 26 July 2019 and proved his majority on 29 July 2019. In the December by-elections, BJP won 12 seats out of the 15 under his leadership and gained full majority of 117 seats.

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