Manish Sisodia | |||||||||||||||
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1st Deputy Chief Minister of Delhi | |||||||||||||||
Assumed office 14 February 2015 | |||||||||||||||
Lieutenant Governor | Najeeb Jung Anil Baijal Vinai Kumar Saxena | ||||||||||||||
Cabinet | Kejriwal ministry - III | ||||||||||||||
Chief Minister | Arvind Kejriwal | ||||||||||||||
Preceded by | Post created | ||||||||||||||
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Member of the Delhi Legislative Assembly | |||||||||||||||
Assumed office 10 February 2015 | |||||||||||||||
Preceded by | President's Rule | ||||||||||||||
Constituency | Patparganj | ||||||||||||||
In office 8 December 2013 – 10 February 2014 | |||||||||||||||
Preceded by | Anil Kumar Choudhary | ||||||||||||||
Succeeded by | President's Rule | ||||||||||||||
Constituency | Patparganj | ||||||||||||||
Personal details | |||||||||||||||
Born | Hapur, Uttar Pradesh, India | 5 January 1972||||||||||||||
Nationality | Indian | ||||||||||||||
Political party | Aam Aadmi Party | ||||||||||||||
Alma mater | Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan | ||||||||||||||
Manish Sisodia (born 2 February 1972) is an Indian politician and Deputy Chief Minister of Government of Delhi. He has been the Deputy Chief Minister of Delhi since February 2015. He is also an elected (third consecutive term) MLA from Patparganj constituency.[1] In Government of NCT of Delhi, he holds the portfolios of Education, Higher Education, Technical Education, Public Works Department,[2] Labour,[3] Finance, Planning, Excise, GST, Vigilance, Services, Tourism, Land & Building, Art, Culture & Language. [4]
Previously, he was a cabinet minister in the Government of NCT of Delhi between December 2013 and February 2014. Prior to being elected to the Legislative Assembly of Delhi in December 2013, Sisodia was a social activist and journalist. He is a member of the National Executive Committee of the Aam Aadmi Party, and is also a founding member of the Aam Aadmi Party.
Sisodia has written a book Shiksha: My Experiments as an Education Minister, which chronicles the journey of education reforms in Delhi and has received wide acclaim for its practical insights on education transformation.[5]
Manish Sisodia was born in a Hindu family[6] of Phagauta village in Hapur district of Uttar Pradesh. Born to a father who was a public school teacher, he was enrolled into the government school in his village. Later, he commenced his career as a journalist after completing a diploma in journalism,[7] awarded by Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan in 1993. Manish Sisodia also worked as radio jockey in FM radio station during his early career. He used to host several programs like "Zero Hour" for All India Radio in 1996 and then worked for Zee News as a reporter, news producer and news reader between 1997 and 2005.[8]
Sisodia's association with the Chief Minister of Delhi and AAP's founding chief Arvind Kejriwal goes back to their time together as leaders of the non-profit Parivartan, founded by the latter to take up cases of citizens who struggled to engage with the government without paying hefty bribes to officials.[citation needed] After formally quitting journalism, Sisodia along with Kejriwal founded Kabir, a non-profit that organised public hearings with government officials and people. He was one of the key members of the group that drafted the Right to Information Act.[9]
Subsequently, Sisodia became a key participant in the Anna Hazare led India Against Corruption movement of 2011 that sought a Jan Lokpal bill. He was involved in drafting the first version of that proposed legislation and was jailed for his involvement in protests.[10]
Sisodia was one of the key founding members of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). He became a member of its Political Affairs Committee. He was elected as a Member of the Legislative Assembly in the December 2013 Delhi Assembly election, when he defeated Nakul Bhardwaj, a Bharatiya Janata Party candidate, by 11,476 votes in the Patparganj constituency of East Delhi.[11][12] In the February 2015 Delhi Assembly election, which resulted in a landslide victory for AAP, he was again elected from Patparganj, defeating Vinod Kumar Binny of the Bharatiya Janata Party by over 28,761 votes.[13] In 2020 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, he again defeated Ravinder Singh Negi, a BJP candidate by over 3000 votes.[14]
He is a cabinet minister in the Third Kejriwal ministry and holds the charge of below listed departments of the Government of Delhi.
When the AAP came to power in Delhi, Sisodia decided to bring in radical reforms to the ailing public education system. One of the first decisions he took as Delhi's Finance Minister in 2015 was to double the funding for the public education program. Every year since then, the Delhi government has allocated a quarter of its total budget to education, making it the highest proportion in the country.[15] One of the most visible hallmarks of these reforms is the reconstructed building infrastructure: modern classrooms equipped with tech-based teaching aids, and also football fields, field hockey turfs, auditoriums and science laboratories.[16] Delhi also has parent-led School Management Committees (School Boards), creating accountability structures within the communities that the school serves.[17] Delhi government has successfully conducted several mega PTMs (Parent Teacher Meetings) which provided a space for the teachers and parents to engage in meaningful conversations for the betterment of students.[18]
Under Sisodia's leadership, many interventions have happened inside the classrooms. Advanced teacher training modules that encourage educators to focus on learning outcomes have significantly bridged the learning deficit. Government runs a statewide program, Mission Buniyaad, to improve the foundational learning outcomes of the students.[19] Sisodia has experimented with new age curricula viz Happiness Curriculum and Entrepreneurship Mindset Curriculum and Deshbhakti Curriculum [20] which instill values and skills in the students and prepare them to live a happy, meaningful and productive life.[21] The Curricula is being implemented in all government and some private schools of Delhi to inculcate the right mindset among students by making them emotionally and professionally sound while becoming responsible citizens.[22]
As a result of Sisodia's efforts, Delhi's education system has seen many positive changes. Since 2016, Delhi government schools have performed better than the private schools in 12th board examinations.[23] There was a 20 per cent increase in the number of students between class three and five who can solve arithmetic division problems because of the effective implementation of Mission Buniyaad.[24] Around 8 lakh students attend daily Happiness Classes, while around 7 lakh students are attending Entrepreneurship Classes which are impacting their mindsets and behaviour positively.[25][26]
Further adding to the mindset curricula, Manish Sisodia has also introduced world’s largest student entrepreneurship program “Business Blasters”.[27][28][29] The program empowers students to develop a job provider’s mindset by setting up their own businesses for which each student is provided seed money of Rs 2000. It is a multi-component intervention focused on experiential learning that includes field projects, interviews, classroom activities and live interaction with entrepreneurs. In its first edition of the Business Blasters program 126 students made it to the final round and exhibited their businesses at Business Blasters Expo- 2022 held on March 5, 2022.[30]
In 2018, he delivered the keynote address at the Harvard India Conference at the Harvard Kennedy School on the Government's Education and Healthcare reforms.[31] In 2017, he presented the Delhi Education model at the Global Education conference in Moscow, in front of educationists from 70 countries.[32]
In December 2021, Manish Sisodia presented Mindset Curricula (Happiness, Entrepreneurship and Deshbhakti) at RewirEd Summit in Dubai,[33] to the education fraternity from all across the world. In May 2022, he shared the story of ‘restoring the faith of Delhi people in the government school system’ in the presence of ministers and public representatives from over 100 countries at the Education World Forum-2022 in London, UK.[34]
In 2021,he supported students to cancel CBSE Board Exam 2020-21 of Class 10 amid rising Covid-19 cases.
In August 2022, his education policy received acclaim from The New York Times.[35]
Transformative changes by Manish Sisodia in the field of Education are not just limited to school education. He has taken many initiatives in the field of Higher and Technical Education that includes establishing three innovative new state universities- Delhi Skill and Entrepreneurship University (DSEU) in 2020,[36] Delhi Sports University (DSU) in 2021 [37] and Delhi Teachers University in 2022.[38] In addition to this, the number of seats in state universities [39] have also been increased significantly to accommodate a larger population of students.
During Sisodia’s tenure as the Finance Minister in Delhi, the government's budget has more than doubled in 7 years - from ₹30, 940 crore in 2014-15 to ₹ 75,800 in 2022-23.[40][41] Such an increase was possible due to an increase in the tax base by ending the "Raid Raj" and plugging leaks.[42] Sisodia has also started one of its kind Outcome Budget, which is one of the most comprehensive in India linking public spending to over 2,200 output indicators and 1,549 outcome indicators across 39 departments.[43] This is considered as a revolutionary step in improving the political accountability of public finance. He is the only finance minister of any state to have presented eight consecutive budgets.[44]
On 26 March 2022, a budget of 75 thousand 800 crore rupees was presented in the Delhi Assembly by the Finance minister Manish Sisodia. AAP leaders expected that the budget would create employment for 20 lakh people in Delhi, in the upcoming five years.[45]
In his budget speech for 2016–17, Sisodia said that the aim of the government is not spending the allocated money, but ensuring that every rupee spent makes a difference in the lives of the people.[46] He has said that elections should be fought on the agendas of education and health and not on caste and religion.[47]
At the World Education Conference in Moscow in 2018, Sisodia said that the real contribution to society is the building of a quality education system in the country and the task of education is to equip the students to address present-day challenges, including terrorism, pollution, corruption and gender discrimination.[48] In 2019, he said that students should be enabled to become job providers rather than job seekers.[49] He has also said that India needs an education system which ensures a high minimum quality of education to all its students and not just 5% students who can afford to pay for it.[50]
In June 2022, the opposition party Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) members filed a complaint against Sisodia, about the construction of schools and classrooms with the Delhi Government's Anti-Corruption Branch (ACB). In July 2022, the anti-corruption authority Delhi Lokayukta is also investigating.[51]
In July 2022, Delhi's Lieutenant Governor Vinai Kumar Saxena (appointed by BJP-led Union government) had recommended the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to investigate the Excise Policy 2021-22 of Delhi Government.[52][53] CBI is investigating the case.[54] In response, Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal accused the Central government of misusing the CBI to "derail Delhi’s education and health revolution".[55] On 22 August, Sisodiya said that he had a recording of an offer from the BJP to drop the cases against him in return for Sisodiya splitting AAP.[56]
This section is transcluded from Patparganj Assembly constituency. (edit | history) |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AAP | Manish Sisodia | 50,211 | 41.53 | ||
BJP | Nakul Bhardwaj | 38,735 | 32.04 | -9.60 | |
INC | Anil Kumar | 28,067 | 23.21 | -19.19 | |
BSP | Irshad Ali | 2,127 | 1.76 | -12.03 | |
CPI | Kehar Singh | 362 | 0.30 | -0.40 | |
NOTA | None | 475 | 0.39 | ||
Majority | 11,476 | 9.49 | +8.73 | ||
Turnout | 120,977 | 63.95 | |||
AAP gain from INC | Swing | +25.57 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AAP | Manish Sisodia | 75,477 | 53.58 | +12.05 | |
BJP | Vinod Kumar Binny | 46,716 | 33.16 | +1.12 | |
INC | Anil Kumar | 16,260 | 11.54 | -11.67 | |
BSP | Nem Singh Premi | 1,213 | 0.86 | -0.90 | |
NOTA | None of the above | 533 | 0.38 | -0.01 | |
Majority | 28,761 | 20.42 | +10.93 | ||
Turnout | 1,40,359 | 65.48 | |||
AAP hold | Swing | +5.47 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AAP | Manish Sisodia | 70,163 | 49.33 | -4.25 | |
BJP | Ravinder Singh Negi | 66,956 | 47.07 | +13.91 | |
INC | Laxman Rawat | 2,802 | 1.97 | -9.57 | |
BSP | Rakesh | 676 | 0.48 | -0.38 | |
RRP | Rakesh Suri | 60 | 0.04 | N/A | |
NOTA | None of the above | 529 | 0.37 | -0.01 | |
Majority | 3,207 | 2.25 | -18.17 | ||
Turnout | 1,42,397 | 61.52 | -3.96 | ||
AAP hold | Swing | -4.25 |