Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
India

Decided Not To Contest 2019 Polls: Sushma Swaraj

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Nov, 2018 01:42 PM
    Citing health reasons, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, who was once touted as a prime ministerial candidate in the BJP, on Tuesday said she has decided not to contest the 2019 Lok Sabha election.
     
     
    “Candidates are decided by the party. But I have made up my mind that I won’t be contesting in the next elections,” the senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader said on the sidelines of an event here.
     
     
    “This is in keeping with my health.” The 66-year-old, Sushma Swaraj, who underwent a kidney transplant in 2016, said she had conveyed her decision to the party.
     
     
    The Vidisha MP’s decision not to contest in 2019 came even as campaigning for the November 28 assembly elections in Madhya Pradesh, where the BJP is seeking a fourth consecutive term in office, was in full swing.
     
     
    A former spokesperson of the party, Sushma Swaraj, was said to have been reticent in backing Modi when he was first appointed the chief campaigner for the BJP in 2013 ahead of the 2014 Lok Sabha elections but later made up with him to be included in his Cabinet.
     
     
    A prominent face of the BJP with her political career spanning for decades, Sushma Swaraj was the youngest member of the Haryana Assembly when she was elected to it in 1977 at age 25 and made a minister.
     
     
    She also served as Delhi’s fifth chief minister in 1998, becoming its first women chief minister. She represented the South Delhi Lok Sabha constituency in 1996 and 1998.
     
     
    She served as Union Cabinet Minister for Information and Broadcasting with additional charge of the Ministry of Telecommunications and Health Minister in Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s second government.
     
     
    Sushma Swaraj, a four-time Lok Sabha and two-time Rajya Sabha member, also won the Outstanding Parliamentarian Award in 2004 and served as the Leader of the Opposition during UPA-II government between 2009 to 2014. replacing party veteran LK Advani.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Some Within My Party Didn't Like It: Rahul Gandhi On Hugging PM Modi

    Some Within My Party Didn't Like It: Rahul Gandhi On Hugging PM Modi
    In his address in Hamburg, Germany, Rahul Gandhi also said there is a big job problem in India.

    Some Within My Party Didn't Like It: Rahul Gandhi On Hugging PM Modi

    For My Sisters In Kerala: 4-Year-Old Donates Piggy Bank Flood Relief

    For My Sisters In Kerala: 4-Year-Old Donates Piggy Bank Flood Relief
    Aparajita Saha, a resident of Jadavpur, had saved around Rs. 14,800 from the gifts she had received during her birthday to buy a CD player to rehearse for her dance classes.

    For My Sisters In Kerala: 4-Year-Old Donates Piggy Bank Flood Relief

    Punjab Minister Advises Navjot Sidhu To Apologise To Families Of Soldiers

    Navjot Sidhu was widely criticised for hugging the Pakistan Army chief during his visit to Pakistan to attend the swearing-in ceremony of Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan.

    Punjab Minister Advises Navjot Sidhu To Apologise To Families Of Soldiers

    In Germany, Rahul Gandhi Blames Unemployment For Lynchings

    In Germany, Rahul Gandhi Blames Unemployment For Lynchings
    In his address in Germany's Hamburg, Rahul Gandhi traced the creation of ISIS to warn against a similar situation at home if people are excluded from the development process.

    In Germany, Rahul Gandhi Blames Unemployment For Lynchings

    'Indian Women Don't Want To Move Out Of City After Marriage'

    'Indian Women Don't Want To Move Out Of City After Marriage'
    Indian women are no longer willing to uproot their life after marriage, reveals a matchmaking service user data.

    'Indian Women Don't Want To Move Out Of City After Marriage'

    Here's How Much Longer You'd Live If There Was No Air Pollution In India

    Here's How Much Longer You'd Live If There Was No Air Pollution In India
    If air pollution were removed as a risk for death, people in the world could live at least a year longer and in India, which is battling a severe air pollution, the benefit would be even more -- about 1.5 years, says study.

    Here's How Much Longer You'd Live If There Was No Air Pollution In India