السبت، 24 أغسطس 2019

Narendra Modi

Narendra Damodardas Modi (Gujarati pronunciation: [ˈnəɾendrə dɑmodəɾˈdɑs ˈmodiː]; born 17 September 1950) is an Indian politician serving as the 14th and current Prime Minister of India since 2014. He was the Chief Minister of Gujarat from 2001 to 2014, and is the Member of Parliament for Varanasi. Modi is a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a Hindu nationalist volunteer organisation. He is the first prime minister outside of the Indian National Congress to win two consecutive terms with a full majority, and the second one to complete five years in office after Atal Bihari Vajpayee.[2]

Born to a Gujarati family in Vadnagar, Modi helped his father sell tea as a child, and has said he later ran his own stall. He was introduced to the RSS at the age of eight, beginning a long association with the organisation. Modi left home after finishing high-school in part due to an arranged marriage to Jashodaben Chimanlal, which he abandoned, and publicly acknowledged only many decades later. Modi travelled around India for two years and visited a number of religious centres before returning to Gujarat. In 1971 he became a full-time worker for the RSS. During the state of emergency imposed across the country in 1975, Modi was forced to go into hiding. The RSS assigned him to the BJP in 1985, and he held several positions within the party hierarchy until 2001, rising to the rank of general secretary.

Modi was appointed Chief Minister of Gujarat in 2001, due to Keshubhai Patel's failing health and poor public image following the earthquake in Bhuj. Modi was elected to the legislative assembly soon after. His administration has been considered complicit in the 2002 Gujarat riots,[a] or otherwise criticised for its handling of it. A Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team found no evidence to initiate prosecution proceedings against Modi personally.[b] His policies as chief minister, credited with encouraging economic growth, have received praise.[10] His administration has been criticised for failing to significantly improve health, poverty, and education indices in the state.[c]

Modi led the BJP in the 2014 general election, which gave the party a majority in the Indian lower house of parliament, the Lok Sabha, the first time for any single party since 1984. Modi's administration has tried to raise foreign direct investment in the Indian economy, and reduced spending on healthcare and social welfare programmes. Modi has attempted to improve efficiency in the bureaucracy; he has centralised power by abolishing the Planning Commission. He began a high-profile sanitation campaign, and weakened or abolished environmental and labour laws. He initiated a controversial demonetisation of high-denomination banknotes. Described as engineering a political realignment towards right-wing politics, Modi remains a figure of controversy domestically and internationally over his Hindu nationalist beliefs and his role during the 2002 Gujarat riots, cited as evidence of an exclusionary social agenda.[d]


Contents
Early life and education
Narendra Modi was born on 17 September 1950 to a family of grocers in Vadnagar, Mehsana district, Bombay State (present-day Gujarat). He was the third of six children born to Damodardas Mulchand Modi (c. 1915–1989) and Hiraben Modi (born c. 1920).[19] Modi's family belonged to the Modh-Ghanchi-Teli (oil-presser) community,[20][21][22] which is categorised as an Other Backward Class by the Indian government.[23][24]

As a child, Modi helped his father sell tea at the Vadnagar railway station, and said that he later ran a tea stall with his brother near a bus terminus.[25] Modi completed his higher secondary education in Vadnagar in 1967, where a teacher described him as an average student and a keen debater, with interest in theatre.[26] Modi had an early gift for rhetoric in debates, and his teachers and students noted this.[27] Modi preferred playing larger-than-life characters in theatrical productions, which has influenced his political image.[28][29]

When eight years old, Modi discovered the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and began attending its local shakhas (training sessions). There, Modi met Lakshmanrao Inamdar, popularly known as Vakil Saheb, who inducted him as a balswayamsevak (junior cadet) in the RSS and became his political mentor.[30] While Modi was training with the RSS, he also met Vasant Gajendragadkar and Nathalal Jaghda, Bharatiya Jana Sangh leaders who were founding members of the BJP's Gujarat unit in 1980.[31]

Also in Narendra Modi's childhood, in a custom traditional to his caste, his family arranged a betrothal to a girl, Jashodaben Chimanlal, leading to their marriage when they were teenagers.[32][33] Sometime thereafter, he abandoned the further marital obligations implicit in the custom,[34] and left home, the couple going on to lead separate lives, neither marrying again, and the marriage itself remaining unmentioned in Modi's public pronouncements for many decades.[35] In April 2014, shortly before the national elections that swept him to power, Modi publicly affirmed that he was married and his spouse was Ms. Chimanlal; the couple has remained married, but estranged.[36]

Modi spent the ensuing two years travelling across Northern and North-eastern India, though few details of where he went have emerged.[37] In interviews, Modi has described visiting Hindu ashrams founded by Swami Vivekananda: the Belur Math near Kolkata, followed by the Advaita Ashrama in Almora and the Ramakrishna Mission in Rajkot. Modi remained only a short time at each, since he lacked the required college education.[38][39][40] Vivekananda has been described as a large influence in Modi's life.[41]

In the early summer of 1968, Modi reached the Belur Math but was turned away, after which Modi wandered through Calcutta, West Bengal and Assam, stopping in Siliguri and Guwahati.[42] Modi then went to the Ramakrishna Ashram in Almora, where he was again rejected, before travelling back to Gujarat via Delhi and Rajasthan in 1968–69.[43] Sometime in late 1969 or early 1970, Modi returned to Vadnagar for a brief visit before leaving again for Ahmedabad.[44] There, Modi lived with his uncle, working in the latter's canteen at the Gujarat State Road Transport Corporation.[45][46]

In Ahmedabad, Modi renewed his acquaintance with Inamdar, who was based at the Hedgewar Bhavan (RSS headquarters) in the city.[47][48][49] After the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, he stopped working for his uncle and became a full-time pracharak (campaigner) for the RSS,[46] working under Inamdar.[50] Shortly before the war, Modi took part in a non-violent protest against the Indian government in New Delhi, for which he was arrested; this has been cited as a reason for Inamdar electing to mentor him.[50] Many years later Modi would co-author a biography of Inamdar, published in 2001.[51]

In 1978 Modi received a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from School of Open Learning[52] at University of Delhi,[53][54] graduating with a third class.[55] Five years later, in 1983, he received a Master of Arts degree in political science from Gujarat University, graduating with a first class[56][57] as an external distance learning student.[58]

Early political career
In June 1975, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declared a state of emergency in India which lasted until 1977. During this period, known as "The Emergency", many of her political opponents were jailed and opposition groups were banned.[59][60] Modi was appointed general secretary of the "Gujarat Lok Sangharsh Samiti", an RSS committee coordinating opposition to the Emergency in Gujarat. Shortly afterwards, the RSS was banned.[61] Modi was forced to go underground in Gujarat and frequently travelled in disguise to avoid arrest. He became involved in printing pamphlets opposing the government, sending them to Delhi and organising demonstrations.[62][63] Modi was also involved with creating a network of safe houses for individuals wanted by the government, and in raising funds for political refugees and activists.[64] During this period, Modi wrote a book in Gujarati, Sangharsh Ma Gujarat (In The Struggles of Gujarat), describing events during the Emergency.[65][66] Among the people he met in this role was trade unionist and socialist activist George Fernandes, as well as several other national political figures.[67] In his travels during the Emergency, Modi was often forced to move in disguise, once dressing as a monk, and once as a Sikh.[64]

Modi became an RSS sambhag pracharak (regional organiser) in 1978, overseeing RSS activities in the areas of Surat and Vadodara, and in 1979 he went to work for the RSS in Delhi, where he was put to work researching and writing the RSS's version of the history of the Emergency.[68] He returned to Gujarat a short while later, and was assigned by the RSS to the BJP in 1985.[31] In 1987 Modi helped organise the BJP's campaign in the Ahmedabad municipal election, which the BJP won comfortably; Modi's planning has been described as the reason for that result by biographers.[69] After L. K. Advani became president of the BJP in 1986, the RSS decided to place its members in important positions within the BJP; Modi's work during the Ahmedabad election led to his selection for this role, and Modi was elected organising secretary of the BJP's Gujarat unit later in 1987.[70]

Modi rose within the party and was named a member of the BJP's National Election Committee in 1990, helping organise L. K. Advani's 1990 Ram Rath Yatra in 1990 and Murli Manohar Joshi's 1991–92 Ekta Yatra (Journey for Unity).[26][71][72] However, he took a brief break from politics in 1992, instead establishing a school in Ahmedabad; friction with Shankersingh Vaghela, a BJP MP from Gujarat at the time, also played a part in this decision.[72] Modi returned to electoral politics in 1994, partly at the insistence of Advani, and as party secretary, Modi's electoral strategy was considered central to the BJP victory in the 1995 state assembly elections.[72][31][73][74] In November of that year Modi was elected BJP national secretary and transferred to New Delhi, where he assumed responsibility for party activities in Haryana and Himachal Pradesh.[73][75] The following year, Shankersinh Vaghela, a prominent BJP leader from Gujarat, defected to the Indian National Congress (Congress, INC) after losing his parliamentary seat in the Lok Sabha elections.[26] Modi, on the selection committee for the 1998 Assembly elections in Gujarat, favoured supporters of BJP leader Keshubhai Patel over those supporting Vaghela to end factional division in the party. His strategy was credited as key to the BJP winning an overall majority in the 1998 elections,[73][76] and Modi was promoted to BJP general secretary (organisation) in May of that year.[77]

Chief Minister of Gujarat
Taking office
In 2001, Keshubhai Patel's health was failing and the BJP lost a few state assembly seats in by-elections. Allegations of abuse of power, corruption and poor administration were made, and Patel's standing had been damaged by his administration's handling of the earthquake in Bhuj in 2001.[73][78][79] The BJP national leadership sought a new candidate for the chief ministership, and Modi, who had expressed misgivings about Patel's administration, was chosen as a replacement.[26] Although BJP leader L. K. Advani did not want to ostracise Patel and was concerned about Modi's lack of experience in government, Modi declined an offer to be Patel's deputy chief minister, telling Advani and Atal Bihari Vajpayee that he was "going to be fully responsible for Gujarat or not at all". On 3 October 2001 he replaced Patel as Chief Minister of Gujarat, with the responsibility of preparing the BJP for the December 2002 elections.[80] Modi was sworn in as Chief Minister on 7 October 2001,[81] and entered the Gujarat state legislature on 24 February 2002 by winning a by-election to the Rajkot – II constituency, defeating Ashwin Mehta of the INC by 14,728 votes.[82]

2002 Gujarat riots
Main article: 2002 Gujarat riots
On 27 February 2002, a train with several hundred passengers burned near Godhra, killing approximately 60 people.[e] The train carried a large number of Hindu pilgrims returning from Ayodhya after a religious ceremony at the site of the demolished Babri Masjid.[85][86] In making a public statement after the incident, Modi declared it a terrorist attack planned and orchestrated by local Muslims.[5][85][87] The next day, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad called for a bandh across the state.[88][89] Riots began during the bandh, and anti-Muslim violence spread through Gujarat.[85][88][89] The government's decision to move the bodies of the train victims from Godhra to Ahmedabad further inflamed the violence.[85][90] The state government stated later that 790 Muslims and 254 Hindus were killed.[91] Independent sources put the death toll at over 2000.[85][92] Approximately 150,000 people were driven to refugee camps.[93] Numerous women and children were among the victims; the violence included mass rapes and mutilations of women.[4]

The government of Gujarat itself is generally considered by scholars to have been complicit in the riots,[3][4][5] and has otherwise received heavy criticism for its handling of the situation.[94] Several scholars have described the violence as a pogrom, while others have called it an example of state terrorism.[95][96][97] Summarising academic views on the subject, Martha Nussbaum said: "There is by now a broad consensus that the Gujarat violence was a form of ethnic cleansing, that in many ways it was premeditated, and that it was carried out with the complicity of the state government and officers of the law."[4] The Modi government imposed a curfew in 26 major cities, issued shoot-at-sight orders and called for the army to patrol the streets, but was unable to prevent the violence from escalating.[88][89] The president of the state unit of the BJP expressed support for the bandh, despite such actions being illegal at the time.[5] State officials later prevented riot victims from leaving the refugee camps, and the camps were often unable to meet the needs of those living there.[98] Muslim victims of the riots were subject to further discrimination when the state government announced that compensation for Muslim victims would be half of that offered to Hindus, although this decision was later reversed after the issue was taken to court.[99] During the riots, police officers often did not intervene in situations where they were able.[4][87][100] In 2012 Maya Kodnani, a minister in Modi's government from 2007 to 2009, was convicted by a lower court for participation in the Naroda Patiya massacre during the 2002 riots.[101][102] Although Modi's government had announced that it would seek the death penalty for Kodnani on appeal, it reversed its decision in 2013.[103][104] On 21 April 2018, the Gujarat High Court acquitted Kodnani while noting that there were several shortfalls in the investigation.[105]

Modi's personal involvement in the 2002 events has continued to be debated. During the riots, Modi said that "What is happening is a chain of action and reaction."[4] Later in 2002, Modi said the way in which he had handled the media was his only regret regarding the episode.[106] In March 2008, the Supreme Court reopened several cases related to the 2002 riots, including that of the Gulbarg Society massacre, and established a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to look into the issue.[94][107][108] In response to a petition from Zakia Jafri (widow of Ehsan Jafri, who was killed in the Gulbarg Society massacre), in April 2009 the court also asked the SIT to investigate the issue of Modi's complicity in the killings.[107] The SIT questioned Modi in March 2010; in May, it presented to the court a report finding no evidence against him.[107][109] In July 2011, the court-appointed amicus curiae Raju Ramachandran submitted his final report to the court. Contrary to the SIT's position, he said that Modi could be prosecuted based on the available evidence.[110][111] The Supreme Court gave the matter to the magistrate's court. The SIT examined Ramachandran's report, and in March 2012 submitted its final report, asking for the case to be closed. Zakia Jaffri filed a protest petition in response. In December 2013 the magistrate's court rejected the protest petition, accepting the SIT's finding that there was no evidence against the chief minister.[112]

2002 election
In the aftermath of the violence there were widespread calls for Modi to resign as chief minister from within and outside the state, including from leaders of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and the Telugu Desam Party (allies in the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance coalition), and opposition parties stalled Parliament over the issue.[113] Modi submitted his resignation at the April 2002 BJP national executive meeting in Goa, but it was not accepted.[114] His cabinet had an emergency meeting on 19 July 2002, after which it offered its resignation to the Gujarat Governor S. S. Bhandari, and the state assembly was dissolved.[115][116] Despite opposition from the election commissioner, who said that a number of voters were still displaced, Modi succeeded in advancing the election to December 2002.[117] In the elections, the BJP won 127 seats in the 182-member assembly.[118] Although Modi later denied it, he made significant use of anti-Muslim rhetoric during his campaign,[119][120][121][122] and the BJP profited from religious polarisation among the voters.[117] He won the Maninagar constituency, receiving 113,589 of 154,981 votes and defeating INC candidate Yatin Oza by 75,333 votes.[123] On 22 December 2002, Bhandari swore Modi in for a second term.[124] Modi framed the criticism of his government for human rights violations as an attack upon Gujarati pride, a strategy which led to the BJP winning two-thirds of the seats in the state assembly.[3][119]

Second term
During Modi's second term the rhetoric of the government shifted from Hindutva to Gujarat's economic development.[78][3][119] Modi curtailed the influence of Sangh Parivar organisations such as the Bharatiya Kisan Sangh (BKS) and the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP),[125] entrenched in the state after the decline of Ahmedabad's textile industry,[78] and dropped Gordhan Zadafia (an ally of former Sangh co-worker and VHP state chief Praveen Togadia) from his cabinet. When the BKS staged a farmers' demonstration Modi ordered their eviction from state-provided houses, and his decision to demolish 200 illegal temples in Gandhinagar deepened the rift with the VHP.[125][126] Sangh organisations were no longer consulted or informed in advance about Modi's administrative decisions.[125] Nonetheless, Modi retained connections with some Hindu nationalists. Modi wrote a foreword to a textbook by Dinanath Batra released in 2014, which stated that ancient India possessed technologies including test-tube babies.[127][128]

Modi's relationship with Muslims continued to attract criticism. Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee (who asked Modi for tolerance in the aftermath of the 2002 Gujarat violence and supported his resignation as chief minister)[129][130] distanced himself, reaching out to North Indian Muslims before the 2004 Lok Sabha elections. After the elections Vajpayee called the violence in Gujarat a reason for the BJP's electoral defeat and said it had been a mistake to leave Modi in office after the riots.[131][132]

Questions about Modi's relationship with Muslims were also raised by many Western nations during his tenure as chief minister. Modi was barred from entering the United States by the State Department, in accordance with the recommendations of the Commission on International Religious Freedom formed under the aegis of the International Religious Freedom Act,[133][134] the only person denied a US visa under this law.[135] The UK and the European Union refused to admit him because of what they saw as his role in the riots. As Modi rose to prominence in India, the UK[136] and the EU[137] lifted their bans in October 2012 and March 2013, respectively, and after his election as prime minister he was invited to Washington.[138][139]

During the run-up to the 2007 assembly elections and the 2009 general election, the BJP intensified its rhetoric on terrorism.[140] In July 2006, Modi criticised Prime Minister Manmohan Singh " for his reluctance to revive anti-terror legislation" such as the 2002 Prevention of Terrorism Act. He asked the national government to allow states to invoke tougher laws in the wake of the 2006 Mumbai train bombings.[141] In 2007 Modi authored Karmayog, a 101-page booklet discussing manual scavenging. In it, Modi argued that scavenging was a "spiritual experience" for Valmiks, a sub-caste of Dalits.[142][143] However, this book was not circulated that time because of the election code of conduct.[144] After the November 2008 Mumbai attacks, Modi held a meeting to discuss the security of Gujarat's 1,600-kilometre (990 mi)-long coastline, resulting in government authorisation of 30 high-speed surveillance boats.[145] In July 2007 Modi completed 2,063 consecutive days as chief minister of Gujarat, making him the longest-serving holder of that post,[146] and the BJP won 122 of 182 state-assembly seats in that year's election.[147]

Development projects

The Sardar Sarovar Dam during a 2006 height increase.
As Chief Minister, Modi favoured privatisation and small government, which was at odds with the philosophy of the RSS, usually described as anti-privatisation and anti-globalisation. His policies during his second term have been credited with reducing corruption in the state. He established financial and technology parks in Gujarat and during the 2007 Vibrant Gujarat summit, real-estate investment deals worth ₹6.6 trillion were signed.[78]

The governments led by Patel and Modi supported NGOs and communities in the creation of groundwater-conservation projects. By December 2008, 500,000 structures had been built, of which 113,738 were check dams, which helped recharge the aquifers beneath them.[148] Sixty of the 112 tehsils which had depleted the water table in 2004 had regained their normal groundwater levels by 2010.[149] As a result, the state's production of genetically modified cotton increased to become the largest in India.[148] The boom in cotton production and its semi-arid land use[150] led to Gujarat's agricultural sector growing at an average rate of 9.6 percent from 2001 to 2007.[151] Public irrigation measures in central and southern Gujarat, such as the Sardar Sarovar Dam, were less successful. The Sardar Sarovar project only irrigated 4–6% of the area intended.[148] Nonetheless, from 2001 to 2010 Gujarat recorded an agricultural growth rate of 10.97 percent – the highest of any state.[150] However, sociologists have pointed out that the growth rate under the 1992–97 INC government was 12.9 percent.[152] In 2008 Modi offered land in Gujarat to Tata Motors to set up a plant manufacturing the Nano after a popular agitation had forced the company to move out of West Bengal. Several other companies followed the Tata's to Gujarat.[153]

The Modi government finished the process of bringing electricity to every village in Gujarat that its predecessor had almost completed.[152] Modi significantly changed the state's system of power distribution, greatly impacting farmers. Gujarat expanded the Jyotigram Yojana scheme, in which agricultural electricity was separated from other rural electricity; the agricultural electricity was rationed to fit scheduled irrigation demands, reducing its cost. Although early protests by farmers ended when those who benefited found that their electricity supply had stabilised,[148] according to an assessment study corporations and large farmers benefited from the policy at the expense of small farmers and labourers.[154]

Development debate
Modi speaking at flower-decked podium
Modi addressing graduates of the Gujarat National Law University in 2012.
A contentious debate surrounds the assessment of Gujarat's economic development during Modi's tenure as chief minister.[155] The state's GDP growth rate averaged 10% during Modi's tenure, a value similar to other highly industrialised states, and above that of the country as a whole.[153] Gujarat also had a high rate of economic growth in the 1990s, before Modi took office, and scholars have stated that growth did not accelerate during Modi's tenure.[156] Under Modi, Gujarat topped the World Bank's "ease of doing business" rankings among Indian states for two consecutive years.[157] In 2013, Gujarat was ranked first among Indian states for "economic freedom" by a report measuring governance, growth, citizens' rights and labour and business regulation among the country's 20 largest states.[153][158] In the later years of Modi's government, Gujarat's economic growth was frequently used as an argument to counter allegations of communalism.[3] Tax breaks for businesses were easier to obtain in Gujarat than in other states, as was land. Modi's policies to make Gujarat attractive for investment included the creation of Special Economic Zones, where labour laws were greatly weakened.[119]

Despite its growth rate, Gujarat had a relatively poor record on human development, poverty relief, nutrition and education during Modi's tenure. In 2013, Gujarat ranked 13th in the country with respect to rates of poverty and 21st in education. Nearly 45 percent of children under five were underweight and 23 percent were undernourished, putting the state in the "alarming" category on the India State Hunger Index.[159][160] A study by UNICEF and the Indian government found that Gujarat under Modi had a poor record with respect to immunisation in children.[161]

Over the decade from 2001 to 2011, Gujarat did not change its position relative to the rest of the country with respect to poverty and female literacy, remaining near the median of the 29 Indian states.[99] It showed only a marginal improvement in rates of infant mortality, and its position with respect to individual consumption declined.[99] With respect to the quality of education in government schools, the state ranked below most Indian states.[99] The social policies of the government generally did not benefit Muslims, Dalits, and Adivasis, and generally increased social inequalities.[99] Development in Gujarat was generally limited to the urban middle class, and citizens in rural areas or from lower castes were increasingly marginalised. In 2013 the state ranked 10th of 21 Indian states in the Human Development Index.[7] Under Modi, the state government spent far less than the national average on education and healthcare.[99]

Final years
Modi talking to a woman; both are seated.
Modi with Anandiben Patel at a meeting of BJP MLAs after his election as prime minister; Patel succeeded him as Gujarat chief minister.
Further information: 2012 Gujarat Legislative Assembly election
Despite the BJP's shift away from explicit Hindutva, Modi's election campaign in 2007 and 2012 contained elements of Hindu nationalism. Modi only attended Hindu religious ceremonies, and had prominent associations with Hindu religious leaders. During his 2012 campaign he twice refused to wear articles of clothing gifted by Muslim leaders.[119] He did, however, maintain relations with Dawoodi Bohra.[119] His campaign included references to issues known to cause religious polarisation, including to Afzal Guru and the killing of Sohrabuddin Sheikh. The BJP did not nominate any Muslim candidates for the assembly election of 2012.[119] During the 2012 campaign, Modi attempted to identify himself with the state of Gujarat, a strategy similar to that used by Indira Gandhi during the Emergency, and projected himself as protecting Gujarat against persecution by the rest of India.[119]

While campaigning for the 2012 assembly elections, Modi made extensive use of holograms and other technologies allowing him to reach a large number of people,[117] something he would repeat in the 2014 general election. In the 2012 Gujarat Legislative Assembly elections, Modi won the constituency of Maninagar by 86,373 votes over Shweta Bhatt, the INC candidate and wife of Sanjiv Bhatt.[162] The BJP won 115 of the 182 seats, continuing its majority during his tenure[163] and allowing the party to form the government (as it had in Gujarat since 1995).[164] In later by-elections the BJP won four more assembly seats and two Lok Sabha seats held by the INC, although Modi did not campaign for its candidates.[165] In 2013, the Wharton India Economic Forum (WIEF) at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania cancelled a keynote video-conference speech by Modi following protests by Indian-Americans.[166] After his election as prime minister, Modi resigned as the chief minister and as an MLA from Maninagar on 21 May 2014. Anandiben Patel succeeded him as the chief minister.[167]

Indian general elections
Main articles: Bharatiya Janata Party campaign for the 2014 Indian general election and Bharatiya Janata Party campaign for the 2019 Indian general election
In September 2013 Modi was named the BJP's candidate for prime minister in the 2014 Lok Sabha election.[168][169] Several BJP leaders expressed opposition to Modi's candidature,[170] including BJP founding member L. K. Advani, who cited concern with leaders who were "concerned with their personal agendas".[171] Modi played a dominant role in the BJP's election campaign.[172][173] Several people who voted for the BJP stated that if Modi had not been the prime-ministerial candidate, they would have voted for another party.[168][174][175] The focus on Modi as an individual was unusual for a BJP election campaign.[170][176] The election was described as a referendum on Narendra Modi.[155]


Modi meets his mother after winning the 2014 elections
During the campaign, Modi focused on the corruption scandals under the previous INC government, and played on his image as a politician who had created a high rate of GDP growth in Gujarat.[155][170] Modi projected himself as a person who could bring about "development," without focus on any specific policies.[170] His message found support among young Indians and among middle-class citizens.[155] The BJP under Modi was able to downplay concerns about the protection of religious minorities and Modi's commitment to secularism, areas in which he had previously received criticism.[155] Prior to the election Modi's image in the media had centered around his role in the 2002 Gujarat riots, but during the campaign the BJP was able to shift this to a focus on Modi's neoliberal ideology and the Gujarat model of development,[173] although Hindutva remained a significant part of its campaign.[170][174][14] The BJP's campaign was assisted by its wide influence in the media.[160] Modi's campaign blitz cost approximately ₹50 billion (US$720 million),[155] and received extensive financial support from corporate donors.[160] In addition to more conventional campaign methods, Modi made extensive use of social media,[155][170] and addressed more than 1000 rallies via hologram appearances.[14]

The BJP won 31% of the vote,[13] and more than doubled its tally in the Lok Sabha to 282, becoming the first party to win a majority of seats on its own since 1984.[173][174] Voter dissatisfaction with the INC, as well as with regional parties in North India, was another reason for the success of the BJP,[174] as was the support from the RSS.[170] In states such as Uttar Pradesh in which the BJP performed well, it drew exceptionally high support from upper-caste Hindus, although the 10 percent of Muslim votes won was more than it had won before. It performed particularly well in parts of the country that had recently experienced violence between Hindus and Muslims.[174] The magnitude of the BJP's victory led many commentators to say that the election constituted a political realignment away from progressive parties and towards the right-wing.[155][174][177][178] Modi's tweet announcing his victory was described as being emblematic of the political realignment away from a secular, socialist state towards capitalism and Hindu cultural nationalism.[179]

Modi himself was a candidate for the Lok Sabha in two constituencies: Varanasi and Vadodara.[180] He won in both constituencies, defeating Aam Aadmi Party leader Arvind Kejriwal in Varanasi and Madhusudan Mistry of the INC in Vadodara by 570,128 votes.[181] Modi, who was unanimously elected leader of the BJP, was appointed prime minister by India's president.[182][183] To comply with the law that an MP cannot represent more than one constituency, he vacated the Vadodara seat.[184]

Prime Minister
Main article: Premiership of Narendra Modi
For a chronological guide to this subject, see Timeline of the premiership of Narendra Modi.

Modi with the Chief Minister of Nagaland, T. R. Zeliang, and Naga people in Northeast India, December 2014
Governance and other initiatives
Modi was sworn in as the Prime Minister of India on 26 May 2014. He became the first Prime Minister born after India's independence from the British Empire.[185] His first year as prime minister saw significant centralisation of power relative to previous administrations.[128][186] Modi's efforts at centralisation have been linked to an increase in the number of senior administration officials resigning their positions.[128] Initially lacking a majority in the Rajya Sabha, or upper house of Indian Parliament, Modi passed a number of ordinances to enact his policies, leading to further centralisation of power.[187] The government also passed a bill increasing the control that it had over the appointment of judges, and reducing that of the judiciary.[13]

In December 2014 Modi abolished the Planning Commission, replacing it with the National Institution for Transforming India, or NITI Aayog.[188][189] The move had the effect of greatly centralising the power previously with the planning commission in the person of the prime minister.[190][187][188][189][191] The planning commission had received heavy criticism in previous years for creating inefficiency in the government, and of not filling its role of improving social welfare: however, since the economic liberalisation of the 1990s, it had been the major government body responsible for measures related to social justice.[189]

The Modi government launched investigations by the Intelligence Bureau against numerous civil society organizations and foreign non-governmental organizations in the first year of the administration. The investigations, on the grounds that these organizations were slowing economic growth, was criticized as a witchhunt. International humanitarian aid organisation Medecins Sans Frontieres was among the groups that were put under pressure.[128] Other organisations affected included the Sierra Club and Avaaz.[190] Cases of sedition were filed against individuals criticising the government.[128] This led to discontent within the BJP regarding Modi's style of functioning and drew comparisons to the governing style of Indira Gandhi.[128][187]

Modi repealed 1,200 obsolete laws in first three years as prime minister; a total of 1,301 such laws had been repealed by previous governments over a span of 64 years.[192][193][194] He started a monthly radio programme titled "Mann Ki Baat" on 3 October 2014.[195] Modi also launched the Digital India programme, with the goal of ensuring that government services are available electronically, building infrastructure to provide high-speed Internet access to rural areas, boosting manufacturing of electronic goods in the country, and promoting digital literacy.[196][197]

Modi launched Ujjwala scheme to provide free LPG connection to rural households. The scheme led to an increase in LPG consumption by 56% in 2019 as compared to 2014.[198] In 2019, a law was passed to provide 10% reservation to Economically weaker sections.[199]

He was again sworn in as Prime minister on 30 May 2019.

Economic policy

Modi with other BRICS leaders in 2016. Left to right: Temer, Modi, Xi, Putin and Zuma.
The economic policies of Modi's government focused on privatisation and liberalisation of the economy, based on a neoliberal framework.[190][200] Modi liberalised India's foreign direct investment policies, allowing more foreign investment in several industries, including in defence and the railways.[190][201][202] Other proposed reforms included making it harder for workers to form unions and easier for employers to hire and fire them;[200] some of these proposals were dropped after protests.[203] The reforms drew strong opposition from unions: on 2 September 2015, eleven of the country's largest unions went on strike, including one affiliated with the BJP.[200] The Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh, a constituent of the Sangh Parivar, stated that the underlying motivation of labour reforms favored corporations over labourers.[190]

The funds dedicated to poverty reduction programmes and social welfare measures were greatly decreased by the Modi administration.[128] The money spent on social programmes declined from 14.6% of GDP during the Congress government to 12.6% during Modi's first year in office.[190] Spending on health and family welfare declined by 15%, and on primary and secondary education by 16%.[190] The budgetary allocation for the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, or the "education for all" programme, declined by 22%.[190] The government also lowered corporate taxes, abolished the wealth tax, increased sales taxes, and reduced customs duties on gold, and jewelry.[190] In October 2014, the Modi government deregulated diesel prices.[204]


Modi at the launch of the Make in India programme
In September 2014, Modi introduced the Make in India initiative to encourage foreign companies to manufacture products in India, with the goal of turning the country into a global manufacturing hub.[190][205] Supporters of economic liberalisation supported the initiative, while critics argued it would allow foreign corporations to capture a greater share of the Indian market.[190] Modi's administration passed a land-reform bill that allowed it to acquire private agricultural land without conducting a social impact assessment, and without the consent of the farmers who owned it.[206] The bill was passed via an executive order after it faced opposition in parliament, but was eventually allowed to lapse.[187] Modi's government put in place the Goods and Services Tax, the biggest tax reform in the country since independence. It subsumed around 17 different taxes and became effective from 1 July 2017.[207]

In his first cabinet decision, Modi set up a team to investigate black money.[208] On 9 November 2016, the government demonetised ₹500 and ₹1000 banknotes, with the stated intention of curbing corruption, black money, the use of counterfeit currency, and terrorism.[209] The move led to severe cash shortages,[210][211][212] a steep decline in the Indian stock indices BSE SENSEX and NIFTY 50,[213] and sparked widespread protests throughout the country.[214] Several deaths were linked to the rush to exchange cash.[215][216] In the subsequent year, the number of income tax returns filed for individuals rose by 25%, and the number of digital transactions increased steeply.[217][218]

Over the first four years of Modi's premiership, India's GDP grew at an average rate of 7.23%, higher than the rate of 6.39% under the previous government.[219] The level of income inequality increased,[220] while an internal government report said that in 2017, unemployment had increased to its highest level in 45 years. The loss of jobs was attributed to the 2016 demonetization, and to the effects of the Goods and Services Tax.[221][222]

Health and sanitation
See also: Swachh Bharat Abhiyan
In his first year as prime minister, Modi reduced the amount of money spent by the central government on healthcare.[161] The Modi government launched New Health Policy (NHP) in January 2015. The policy did not increase the government's spending on healthcare, instead emphasizing the role of private healthcare organisations. This represented a shift away from the policy of the previous Congress government, which had supported programmes to assist public health goals, including reducing child and maternal mortality rates.[223] The National Health Mission, which included public health programmes targeted at these indices received nearly 20%[224][225] less funds in 2015 than in the previous year. 15 national health programmes, including those aimed at controlling tobacco use and supporting healthcare for the elderly, were merged with the National Health Mission. In its budget for the second year after it took office, the Modi government reduced healthcare spending by 15%.[226] The healthcare budget for the following year rose by 19%. The budget was viewed positively by private insurance providers. Public health experts criticised its emphasis on the role of private healthcare providers, and suggested that it represented a shift away from public health facilities.[227] The healthcare budget rose by 11.5% in 2018; the change included an allocation of 2000 crore for a government-funded health insurance program, and a decrease in the budget of the National Health Mission.[228] The government introduced stricter packaging laws for tobacco which requires 85% of the packet size to be covered by pictorial warnings.[229] An article in the medical journal Lancet stated that the country "might have taken a few steps back in public health" under Modi.[223] In 2018 Modi launched the Ayushman Bharat Yojana, a government health insurance scheme intended to insure 500 million people. 100,000 people had signed up by October 2018.[230]

Modi emphasised his government's efforts at sanitation as a means of ensuring good health.[223] On 2 October 2014, Modi launched the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan ("Clean India") campaign. The stated goals of the campaign included eliminating open defecation and manual scavenging within five years.[231][232] As part of the programme, the Indian government began constructing millions of toilets in rural areas and encouraging people to use them.[233][234][235] The government also announced plans to build new sewage treatment plants.[236] The administration plans to construct 60 million toilets by 2019. The construction projects have faced allegations of corruption, and have faced severe difficulty in getting people to use the toilets constructed for them.[232][233][234] Sanitation cover in the country increased from 38.7% in October 2014 to 84.1% in May 2018; however, usage of the new sanitary facilities lagged behind the government's targets.[237] In 2018, the World Health Organization stated that at least 180,000 diarrhoeal deaths were averted in rural India after the launch of the sanitation effort.[238][239]

Hindutva
Further information: Hindutva

Modi pays obeisance at Tirumala Temple in Andhra Pradesh
During the 2014 election campaign, the BJP sought to identify itself with political leaders known to have opposed Hindu nationalism, including B. R. Ambedkar, Subhas Chandra Bose, and Ram Manohar Lohia.[128] The campaign also saw the use of rhetoric based on Hindutva by BJP leaders in certain states.[240] Communal tensions were played upon especially in Uttar Pradesh and the states of Northeast India.[240] A proposal for the controversial Uniform Civil Code was a part of the BJP's election manifesto.[14]

The activities of a number of Hindu nationalist organisations increased in scope after Modi's election as Prime Minister, sometimes with the support of the government.[128][240] These activities included a Hindu religious conversion programme, a campaign against the alleged Islamic practice of "Love Jihad", and attempts to celebrate Nathuram Godse, the assassin of Mahatma Gandhi, by members of the right wing Hindu Mahasabha.[128] Officials in the government, including the Home Minister, defended the conversion programmes.[240] Modi refused to remove a government minister from her position after a popular outcry resulted from her referring to religious minorities as "bastards."[128] Commentators have suggested, however, that the violence was perpetrated by radical Hindu nationalists to undercut the authority of Modi.[128] Between 2015 and 2018, Human Rights Watch estimated that 44 people, most of them Muslim, were killed by vigilantes; the killings were described by commentators as related to attempts by BJP state governments to ban the slaughter of cows.[241]


Modi at the Banaras Hindu University in Varanasi
Links between the BJP and the RSS grew stronger under Modi. The RSS provided organizational support to the BJP's electoral campaigns, while the Modi administration appointed a number of individuals affiliated with the RSS to prominent government positions.[241] In 2014, Yellapragada Sudershan Rao, who had previously been associated with the RSS, chairperson of the Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR).[14] Historians and former members of the ICHR, including those sympathetic to the BJP, questioned his credentials as a historian, and stated that the appointment was part of an agenda of cultural nationalism.[14][242][243]

Foreign policy
Further information: Foreign policy of Narendra Modi and List of prime ministerial trips made by Narendra Modi
File:President Trump Gives Joint Statements with Prime Minister Modi in the Rose Garden.webm
Modi and US President Donald Trump giving a joint statement.
Foreign policy played a relatively small role in Modi's election campaign, and did not feature prominently in the BJP's election manifesto.[244] Modi invited all the other leaders of SAARC countries to his swearing in ceremony as prime minister.[245][246] He was the first Indian prime minister to do so.[247]


Modi meeting Myanmar's leader Aung San Suu Kyi in New Delhi in January 2018
Modi's foreign policy, similarly to that of the preceding INC government, focused on improving economic ties, security, and regional relations.[244] Modi continued Manmohan Singh's policy of "multi-alignment."[248] The Modi administration tried to attract foreign investment in the Indian economy from several sources, especially in East Asia, with the use of slogans such as "Make in India" and "Digital India".[248] The government also tried to improve relations with Islamic nations in the Middle East, such as Bahrain, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, as well as with Israel.[248]

During the first few months after the election, Modi made trips to a number of different countries to further the goals of his policy, and attended the BRICS, ASEAN, and G20 summits.[244] One of Modi's first visits as prime minister was to Nepal, during which he promised a billion USD in aid.[249] Modi also made several overtures to the United States, including multiple visits to that country.[246] While this was described as an unexpected development, due to the US having previously denied Modi a travel visa over his role during the 2002 Gujarat riots, it was also expected to strengthen diplomatic and trade relations between the two countries.[246]

In 2015, the Indian parliament ratified a land exchange deal with Bangladesh about the India–Bangladesh enclaves, which had been initiated by the government of Manmohan Singh.[187] Modi's administration gave renewed attention to India's "Look East Policy", instituted in 1991. The policy was renamed the "Act East Policy", and involved directing Indian foreign policy towards East Asia and Southeast Asia.[248][250] The government signed agreements to improve land connectivity with Myanmar, through the state of Manipur. This represented a break with India's historic engagement with Myanmar, which prioritised border security over trade.[250]

Defence policy

The President of Israel Reuven Rivlin and Chief of General Staff of the Israel Defense Forces Gadi Eizenkot with Modi.
India's nominal military spending increased steadily under Modi.[251] The military budget declined over Modi's tenure both as a fraction of GDP and when adjusted for inflation.[252][253] A substantial portion of the military budget was devoted to personnel costs, leading commentators to write that the budget was constraining Indian military modernization.[252][254][253]

The BJP election manifesto had also promised to deal with illegal immigration into India in the Northeast, as well as to be more firm in its handling of insurgent groups. The Modi government issued a notification allowing Hindu, Sikh, and Buddhist illegal immigrants from Pakistan and Bangladesh to legalise their residency in India. The government described the measure as being taken for humanitarian reasons but it drew criticism from several Assamese organisations.[255]

The Modi administration negotiated a peace agreement with the largest faction of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCM), which was announced in August 2015. The Naga insurgency in northeast India had begun in the 1950s.[255][256] The NSCM and the government had agreed to a ceasefire in 1997, but a peace accord had not previously been signed.[256] In 2015 the government abrogated a 15-year ceasefire with the Khaplang faction of the NSCM (NSCM-K). The NSCM-K responded with a series of attacks, which killed 18 people.[255] The Modi government carried out a raid across the border with Myanmar as a result, and labelled the NSCM-K a terrorist organisation.[255]

Modi promised to be "tough on Pakistan" during his election campaign, and repeatedly stated that Pakistan was an exporter of terrorism.[257][258][259] On 29 September 2016, the Indian Army stated that it had conducted a surgical strike on terror launchpads in Azad Kashmir. The Indian media claimed that up to 50 terrorists and Pakistani soldiers had been killed in the strike.[260][261][262] Pakistan initially denied that any strikes had taken place.[263] Subsequent reports suggested that Indian claim about the scope of the strike and the number of casualties had been exaggerated, although cross-border strikes had been carried out.[257][264][265] In February 2019 India carried out airstrikes in Pakistan against a supposed terrorist camp. Further military skirmishes followed, including cross-border shelling and the loss of an Indian aircraft.[266][267][268]

Environmental policy

Modi (right) at CoP21 Climate Conference, in Paris, announcing the founding of an International Solar Alliance (ISA). November 2015.
In naming his cabinet, Modi renamed the "Ministry of Environment and Forests" the "Ministry of Environment, Forests, and Climate Change."[269] In the first budget of the government, the money allotted to this ministry was reduced by more than 50%.[269] The new ministry also removed or diluted a number of laws related to environmental protection. These included no longer requiring clearance from the National Board for Wildlife for projects close to protected areas, and allowing certain projects to proceed before environmental clearance was received.[190][269] The government also tried to reconstitute the Wildlife board such that it no longer had representatives from non-governmental organisations: however, this move was prevented by the Supreme Court.[269]

Modi also relaxed or abolished a number of other environmental regulations, particularly those related to industrial activity. A government committee stated that the existing system only served to create corruption, and that the government should instead rely on the owners of industries to voluntarily inform the government about the pollution they were creating.[190][270] Other changes included reducing ministry oversight on small mining projects, and no longer requiring approval from tribal councils for projects inside forested areas.[270] In addition, Modi lifted a moratorium on new industrial activity in the most polluted areas in the countries.[269] The changes were welcomed by businesspeople, but criticised by environmentalists.[270]

Under the UPA government that preceded Modi's administration, field trials of Genetically Modified (GM) crops had essentially been put on hold, after protests from farmers fearing for their livelihoods.[271] Under the Modi government these restrictions were gradually lifted.[271] The government received some criticism for freezing the bank accounts of environmental group Greenpeace, citing financial irregularities, although a leaked government report said that the freeze had to do with Greenpeace's opposition to GM crops.[271]

Personal life and image
Further information: Public image of Narendra Modi
Personal life
In accordance with Ghanchi tradition, Modi's marriage was arranged by his parents when he was a child. He was engaged at age 13 to Jashodaben, marrying her when he was 18. They spent little time together and grew apart when Modi began two years of travel, including visits to Hindu ashrams.[26][272] Reportedly, their marriage was never consummated, and he kept it a secret because otherwise he could not have become a 'pracharak' in the puritan Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.[273][53] Modi kept his marriage secret for most of his career. He acknowledged his wife for the first time when he filed his nomination for the 2014 general elections.[274][275] Modi maintains a close relationship with his mother, Hiraben.[276]

A vegetarian and teetotaler,[277][278] Modi has a frugal lifestyle and is a workaholic and introvert.[279] Modi's 31 August 2012 post on Google Hangouts made him the first Indian politician to interact with citizens on a live chat.[280][281] Modi has also been called a fashion-icon for his signature crisply ironed, half-sleeved kurta, as well as for a suit with his name embroidered repeatedly in the pinstripes that he wore during a state visit by US President Barack Obama, which drew public and media attention and criticism.[282][283][284] Modi's personality has been variously described by scholars and biographers as energetic, arrogant, and charismatic.[13][285]

He had published a Gujarati book titled Jyotipunj in 2008, containing profiles of various RSS leaders. The longest was of M. S. Golwalkar, under whose leadership the RSS expanded and whom Modi refers to as Pujniya Shri Guruji ("Guru worthy of worship").[286] According to The Economic Times, his intention was to explain the workings of the RSS to his readers and to reassure RSS members that he remained ideologically aligned with them. Modi authored eight other books, mostly containing short stories for children.[287]

The nomination of Modi for the prime ministership drew attention to his reputation as "one of contemporary India's most controversial and divisive politicians."[155][288][289][290] During the 2014 election campaign the BJP projected an image of Modi as a strong, masculine leader, who would be able to take difficult decisions.[155][170][168][174][175] Campaigns in which he has participated have focused on Modi as an individual, in a manner unusual for the BJP and RSS.[170] Modi has relied upon his reputation as a politician able to bring about economic growth and "development".[291] Nonetheless, his role in the 2002 Gujarat riots continues to attract criticism and controversy.[6] Modi's hardline Hindutva philosophy and the policies adopted by his government continue to draw criticism, and have been seen as evidence of a majoritarian and exclusionary social agenda.[6][170][13][128]

Approval ratings
Main article: Opinion polling on the Narendra Modi premiership

Modi interacting with the school children after delivering his address on Independence Day in New Delhi, 15 August 2017
As a Prime Minister, Modi has received consistently high approval ratings; at the end of his first year in office, he received an overall approval rating of 87% in a Pew Research poll, with 68% of people rating him "very favorably" and 93% approving of his government.[292] His approval rating remained largely consistent at around 74% through his second year in office, according to a nationwide poll conducted by instaVaani.[293] At the end of his second year in office, an updated Pew Research poll showed Modi continued to receive high overall approval ratings of 81%, with 57% of those polled rating him "very favorably."[294][295] At the end of his third year in office, a further Pew Research poll showed Modi with an overall approval rating of 88%, his highest yet, with 69% of people polled rating him "very favorably."[296] A poll conducted by The Times of India in May 2017 showed 77% of the respondents rated Modi as "very good" and "good".[297] In early 2017, a survey from Pew Research Center showed Modi to be the most popular figure in Indian politics.[298]

Awards and recognition
Modi was named the Best Chief Minister in a 2007 nationwide survey by India Today.[299] In March 2012, he appeared on the cover of the Asian edition of Time Magazine, one of the few Indian politicians to have done so.[300] He was awarded Indian of the Year by CNN-IBN news network in 2014.[301] In 2014, 2015 and 2017, he was named one of Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People in the World.[302][303][304] He was also declared winner of the Time magazine reader's poll for Person of the Year in 2014 and 2016.[305][306] Forbes Magazine ranked him the 15th-Most-Powerful Person in the World in 2014 and the 9th-Most-Powerful Person in the World in 2015, 2016 and 2018.[307][308][309][310] In 2015, Modi was ranked the 13th-Most-Influential Person in the World by Bloomberg Markets Magazine.[311] Modi was ranked fifth on Fortune Magazine's first annual list of the "World's Greatest Leaders" in 2015.[312][313] In 2017, Gallup International Association (GIA) conducted a poll and ranked Modi as third top leader of the world.[314][315][316] In 2016, a wax statue of Modi was unveiled at Madame Tussaud Wax Museum in London.[317][318]

In 2015 he was named one of Time's "30 Most Influential People on the Internet" as the second-most-followed politician on Twitter and Facebook.[319] In 2018 he was the third most followed head of the state on Twitter,[320] and the most followed world leader on Facebook and Instagram.[321][322] In October 2018, Modi received UN's highest environmental award, the 'Champions of the Earth', for policy leadership by "pioneering work in championing" the International Solar Alliance and "new areas of levels of cooperation on environmental action".[323][324][325] He was conferred the 2018 Seoul Peace Prize in recognition of his dedication to improving international cooperation, raising global economic growth, accelerating the Human Development of the people of India by fostering economic growth and furthering the development of democracy through anti-corruption and social integration efforts. He is the first Indian to win the award.[326] In January 2019, PM Narendra Modi, a biographic film starring Vivek Oberoi as Modi, was announced.[327] Following his second swearing-in ceremony as Prime Minister of India, a picture of Modi was displayed on the facade of the ADNOC building in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.[328] Premiered on 12 August 2019, Modi appeared in a special episode of Discovery Channel's show Man vs Wild with the host Bear Grylls[329], becoming the second world leader after Barack Obama to appear in the adventure/survival show.[330] In the show he trekked the jungles and talked about nature and wildlife conservation with Grylls.[331] The episode was shot in Jim Corbett National Park, Uttarakhand and was broadcast in 180 countries along India.[332]

State honours
Decoration Country Date Note Ref.
Spange des König-Abdulaziz-Ordens.png
Order of Abdulaziz Al Saud Saudi Arabia 3 April 2016 Member Special Class, The highest honour of Saudi Arabia awarded to non-Muslim dignitaries [333]
Ghazi Amanullah Khan Medal (Afghanistan) - ribbon bar.png
State Order of Ghazi Amir Amanullah Khan Afghanistan 4 June 2016 The highest civilian honour of Afghanistan [334]
Grand Collar of the Order of the State of Palestine ribbon.svg Grand Collar of the State of Palestine Palestine 10 February 2018 The highest honour of Palestine awarded to foreign dignitaries [335]
Order Zayed rib.png Order of Zayed United Arab Emirates 4 April 2019 The highest civilian honour of the United Arab Emirates [336]
OOSA.jpg Order of St. Andrew Russia 12 April 2019 The highest civilian honour of Russia [337]
  ■  ■  Order of the Distinguished Rule of Nishan Izzuddin Maldives 8 June 2019 The highest honour of the Maldives awarded to foreign dignitaries [338]

अरुण जेटली

अरुण जेटली (28 दिसम्बर 1952 जन्म -- 24 अगस्त 2019 मृत्यु ) भारत के प्रसिद्ध अधिवक्ता एवं राजनेता थे।[1] वे भारतीय जनता पार्टी के प्रमुख नेता एवं वे पूर्व वित्त मन्त्री थे। वे राजग(राष्ट्रीय जनतांत्रिक गठबंधन) के शासन में केन्द्रीय न्याय मन्त्री के साथ-साथ कई बड़े पदों पर आसीन थे।[2]


अनुक्रम
व्यक्तिगत जीवन

गुजरात राष्ट्रीय विधि विश्वविद्यालय में सर्वोच्च न्यायालय के पूर्व न्यायाधीश के.एस. पणिक्कर राधाकृष्णन के साथ
अरुण जेटली का जन्म दिल्ली में महाराज किशन जेटली और रतन प्रभा जेटली के घर में हुआ।[3] उनके पिता एक वकील हैं,[4] उन्होंने अपनी विद्यालयी शिक्षा सेंट जेवियर्स स्कूल, नई दिल्ली से 1957-69 में पूर्ण की।[5] उन्होंने अपनी 1973 में श्री राम कॉलेज ऑफ कॉमर्स, नई दिल्ली से कॉमर्स में स्नातक की। उन्होंने 1977 में दिल्ली विश्‍वविद्यालय के विधि संकाय से विधि की डिग्री प्राप्त की।[6] छात्र के रूप में अपने कैरियर के दौरान, उन्होंने अकादमिक और पाठ्यक्रम के अतिरिक्त गतिविधियों दोनों में उत्कृष्ट प्रदर्शन के विभिन्न सम्मानों को प्राप्त किया हैं। वो 1974 में दिल्ली विश्वविद्यालय के छात्र संगठन के अध्यक्ष भी रहे।[7]

अरुण जेटली ने 24 मई 1982 को संगीता जेटली से विवाह किया। उनके दो बच्चे, पुत्र रोहन[8] और पुत्री सोनाली हैं।[3]

अरूण जेटली का 24 अगस्त 2019 को दोपहर 12:07 बजे निधन हो गया। [9]

राजनीतिक करीयर
जेटली 1991 से भारतीय जनता पार्टी की राष्ट्रीय कार्यकारिणी के सदस्य थे।[10] वह 1999 के आम चुनाव से पहले की अवधि के दौरान भाजपा के प्रवक्ता बन गए।

वाजपेयी सरकार
1999 में, भाजपा की वाजपेयी सरकार के नेतृत्व में राष्ट्रीय जनतांत्रिक गठबंधन के सत्ता में आने के बाद, उन्हें 13 अक्टूबर 1999 को सूचना और प्रसारण राज्य मंत्री (स्वतंत्र प्रभार) नियुक्त किया गया। उन्हें विनिवेश राज्य मंत्री (स्वतंत्र प्रभार) भी नियुक्त किया गया। विश्व व्यापार संगठन के शासन के तहत विनिवेश की नीति को प्रभावी करने के लिए पहली बार एक नया मंत्रालय बनाया गया। उन्होंने 23 जुलाई 2000 को कानून, न्याय और कंपनी मामलों के केंद्रीय कैबिनेट मंत्री के रूप में राम जेठमलानी के इस्तीफे के बाद कानून, न्याय और कंपनी मामलों के मंत्रालय का अतिरिक्त प्रभार संभाला।

उन्हें नवम्बर 2000 में एक कैबिनेट मंत्री के रूप में पदोन्नत किया गया था और एक साथ कानून, न्याय और कंपनी मामलों और जहाजरानी मंत्री बनाया गया था। भूतल परिवहन मंत्रालय के विभाजन के बाद वह नौवहन मंत्री थे। उन्होंने 1 जुलाई 2001 से केंद्रीय मंत्री, न्याय और कंपनी मामलों के मंत्री के रूप में 1 जुलाई 2002 को नौवहन के कार्यालय को भाजपा और उसके राष्ट्रीय प्रवक्ता के रूप में शामिल किया। [1] उन्होंने जनवरी 2003 तक इस क्षमता में काम किया। उन्होंने 29 जनवरी 2003 को केंद्रीय मंत्रिमंडल को वाणिज्य और उद्योग और कानून और न्याय मंत्री के रूप में फिर से नियुक्त किया। [13] मई 2004 में राष्ट्रीय जनतांत्रिक गठबंधन की हार के साथ, जेटली एक महासचिव के रूप में भाजपा की सेवा करने के लिए वापस आ गए, और अपने कानूनी कैरियर में वापस आ गए।

2004-2014
उन्हें 3 जून 2009 को एल.के.आडवाणी द्वारा राज्यसभा में विपक्ष के नेता के रूप में चुना गया था। 16 जून 2009 को उन्होंने अपनी पार्टी के वन मैन वन पोस्ट सिद्धांत के अनुसार भाजपा के महासचिव के पद से इस्तीफा दे दिया। वह पार्टी की केंद्रीय चुनाव समिति के सदस्य भी हैं। [२१] राज्यसभा में विपक्ष के नेता के रूप में, उन्होंने राज्यसभा में महिला आरक्षण विधेयक की बातचीत के दौरान महत्वपूर्ण भूमिका निभाई और जन लोकपाल विधेयक के लिए अन्ना हजारे का समर्थन किया। [१३] उन्होंने 2002 में 2026 तक संसदीय सीटों को मुक्त करने के लिए भारत के संविधान में अस्सी-चौथा संशोधन सफलतापूर्वक प्रस्तुत किया [22] और 2004 में भारत के संविधान में नब्बेवें संशोधन ने दोषों को दंडित किया। [23] हालाँकि, 1980 से पार्टी में होने के कारण उन्होंने 2014 तक कभी कोई सीधा चुनाव नहीं लड़ा। 2014 के आम चुनाव में वह लोकसभा सीट पर अमृतसर सीट के लिए भाजपा के उम्मीदवार थे (नवजोत सिंह सिद्धू की जगह), लेकिन भारतीय राष्ट्रीय कांग्रेस के उम्मीदवार से हार गए अमरिंदर सिंह। वह गुजरात से राज्यसभा सदस्य थे। उन्हें मार्च 2018 में उत्तर प्रदेश से राज्यसभा के लिए फिर से चुना गया। [२४]

26 अगस्त, 2012 को उन्होंने कहा (संसद के बाहर) "ऐसे अवसर होते हैं जब संसद में बाधा देश को अधिक लाभ पहुंचाती है।" इस कथन को भारत में समकालीन राजनीति में संसद की बाधा को वैधता प्रदान करने वाला माना जाता है। 2014 में सरकार बनाने के बाद भाजपा सरकार को कई बार संसद में व्यवधानों और अवरोधों का सामना करना पड़ा है और विपक्ष उनके पूर्वोक्त बयान का हवाला देता रहता है। जबकि संसदीय चर्चा में उनका योगदान अनुकरणीय है, लेकिन एक वैध मंजिल की रणनीति के रूप में बाधा का उनका समर्थन भारतीय संसदीय लोकतंत्र में उनके सकारात्मक योगदान को उजागर करता है। [२५] [२६]

मोदी सरकार
26 मई 2014 को, जेटली को नवनिर्वाचित प्रधान मंत्री नरेंद्र मोदी द्वारा वित्त मंत्री के रूप में चुना गया (जिसमें उनके मंत्रिमंडल में कॉर्पोरेट मामलों के मंत्रालय और रक्षा मंत्री शामिल हैं। [27] [28] विश्लेषकों ने जेटली के "अंशकालिक" का हवाला दिया। "पिछली सरकार की नीतियों की एक साधारण निरंतरता के रूप में रक्षा पर ध्यान केंद्रित करें। [२ ९] रॉबर्ट ब्लेक द्वारा विकीलीक्स केबल के अनुसार, अमेरिकी दूतावास पर उनकी सरकार के लिए चार्ज, जब हिंदुत्व के सवाल पर दबाया गया, जेटली ने तर्क दिया था। उस हिंदू राष्ट्रवाद को भाजपा के लिए "हमेशा एक टॉकिंग पॉइंट" कहा जाएगा और इसे एक अवसरवादी मुद्दे के रूप में प्रस्तुत किया जाएगा। [30] जेटली ने बाद में स्पष्ट किया कि "राष्ट्रवाद या हिंदू राष्ट्रवाद के संदर्भ में अवसरवादी शब्द का उपयोग न तो मेरा विचार है और न ही उनकी भाषा यह राजनयिक का अपना उपयोग हो सकता है। "[31]

बिहार विधान सभा चुनाव, 2015 के दौरान, अरुण जेटली ने प्रधानमंत्री नरेंद्र मोदी की इस बात पर सहमति व्यक्त की कि धर्म के आधार पर आरक्षण का विचार खतरे से भरा है और मुस्लिम दलितों और ईसाई दलितों को आरक्षण देने के खिलाफ है क्योंकि यह जनसांख्यिकी को प्रभावित कर सकता है। [32] ] [33] वह एशियाई विकास बैंक के बोर्ड ऑफ गवर्नर्स के सदस्य के रूप में भी कार्य करता है। [३४]

नवंबर 2015 में, जेटली ने कहा कि विवाह और तलाक को नियंत्रित करने वाले व्यक्तिगत कानून मौलिक अधिकारों के अधीन होने चाहिए, क्योंकि संवैधानिक रूप से गारंटीकृत अधिकार सर्वोच्च हैं। [35] उन्होंने सितंबर 2016 में आय घोषणा योजना की घोषणा की। [36]

भारत के वित्त मंत्री के रूप में उनके कार्यकाल के दौरान, सरकार ने 9 नवंबर, 2016 से भ्रष्टाचार, काले धन, नकली मुद्रा और आतंकवाद पर अंकुश लगाने के इरादे से महात्मा गांधी श्रृंखला के the 500 और bank 1000 के नोटों का विमुद्रीकरण किया। [37]

20 जून, 2017 को उन्होंने पुष्टि की कि जीएसटी रोलआउट अच्छी तरह से और सही मायने में ट्रैक पर है। [38]

लीडरशिप ने अरुण जेटली को एक विशेषज्ञ के रूप में सिफारिश की और एलजीबीटी + मुद्दों पर नेताओं की वकालत की। [39]

मृत्यु
9 अगस्त 2019 को, उन्हें "सांस फूलने" की शिकायत के बाद गंभीर हालत में अखिल भारतीय आयुर्विज्ञान संस्थान, नई दिल्ली में भर्ती कराया गया था।[11][12] 17 अगस्त को, यह बताया गया कि जेटली जीवन आधार (लाइफ सपोर्ट) पर थे।[13] 23 अगस्त तक उनकी तबीयत खराब हो गई थी।[14]

24 अगस्त 2019 को 66 साल की उम्र में 12:07 अपराह्न (भामास) पर जेटली का निधन हो गया।[15][16]

Arun Jaitley

Arun Jaitley
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Arun Jaitley
Arun Jaitley
Minister of Finance
In office
26 May 2014 – 30 May 2019
Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Preceded by P. Chidambaram
Succeeded by Nirmala Sitharaman
Minister of Corporate Affairs
In office
26 May 2014 – 30 May 2019
Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Preceded by Sachin Pilot
Succeeded by Nirmala Sitharaman
Minister of Defence
In office
13 March 2017 – 3 September 2017
Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Preceded by Manohar Parrikar
Succeeded by Nirmala Sitharaman
In office
26 May 2014 – 9 November 2014
Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Preceded by A. K. Antony
Succeeded by Manohar Parrikar
Minister of Information and Broadcasting
In office
9 November 2014 – 5 July 2016
Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Preceded by Prakash Javadekar
Succeeded by Venkaiah Naidu
Leader of the Opposition, Rajya Sabha
In office
3 June 2009 – 26 May 2014
Preceded by Jaswant Singh
Succeeded by Ghulam Nabi Azad
Minister of Law and Justice
In office
29 July 2003 – 22 May 2004
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee
Preceded by Jana Krishnamurthi
Succeeded by H. R. Bhardwaj
In office
7 November 2000 – 1 July 2002
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee
Preceded by Ram Jethmalani
Succeeded by Jana Krishnamurthi
Leader of the House, Rajya Sabha
In office
26 May 2014 – 11 June 2019
Preceded by Manmohan Singh
Succeeded by Thawar Chand Gehlot
Minister of State for Information and Broadcasting
In office
13 October 1999 – 30 September 2000
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee
Preceded by Jaipal Reddy
Succeeded by Sushma Swaraj
MP of Rajya Sabha for Uttar Pradesh
In office
3 April 2018 – 24 August 2019
Preceded by Naresh Agrawal
MP of Rajya Sabha for Gujarat
In office
3 April 2000 – 2 April 2018
Succeeded by Naranbhai Rathwa
Personal details
Born Arun Maharaj Kishen Jaitley
28 December 1952
Delhi, India
Died 24 August 2019 (aged 66)
AIIMS, New Delhi, Delhi, India
Nationality Indian
Political party Bharatiya Janata Party
Spouse(s) Sangeeta Jaitley
(m. 1982; his death 2019)
Children Sonali Jaitley Bakhshi
Rohan Jaitley
Residence New Delhi, Delhi, India
Alma mater Delhi University
Occupation
AdvocatePolitician
Website Official website
Arun Jaitley (28 December 1952 – 24 August 2019)[1] was an Indian politician and attorney. A member of the Bharatiya Janata Party, Jaitley served as the Minister of Finance and Corporate Affairs of the Government of India from 2014 to 2019.

Jaitley previously held the cabinet portfolios of Finance, Defence, Corporate Affairs, Commerce and Industry and Law and Justice in the Vajpayee government and Narendra Modi government. From 2009 to 2014, he served as the Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha.[2][3] He was a Senior Advocate of the Supreme Court of India.[4][5][6] He oversaw the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax which brought the country under one GST regime, demonetization, merger of Railway budget with general budget and introduction of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code.[7][8][9] Arun Jaitley decided not to join the Modi Cabinet in 2019 due to health issues.[10][11]


Contents
Early life
Arun Jaitley was born on 28 December 1952 in Delhi. His father Maharaj Kishen Jaitley was a lawyer and mother Ratan Prabha Jaitley a housewife.[12] He studied at St. Xavier's School, Delhi from 1957–69.[13] He graduated with the honours degree in commerce, BCom. from Shri Ram College of Commerce, New Delhi in 1973. He passed his LLB degree from the Faculty of Law, University of Delhi, in 1977.[14][15][16]

Jaitley was the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) student leader at the Delhi University Campus in the seventies and rose to be the President of the Students Union of Delhi University in 1974. During the period of proclamation of Internal Emergency (1975–77) when fundamental rights were suspended, he was under preventive detention for a period of 19 months.[17] He was a prominent leader of a movement against corruption launched in the year 1973 by Raj Narain and Jayaprakash Narayan. He was the convener of the National Committee for Students and Youth organization appointed by Jai Prakash Narayan.[18] He was also active in civil rights movement and helped found PUCL Bulletin along with Satish Jha and Smitu Kothari.[15][19] After being released from jail, he joined the Jan Sangh.

In 1977, being the convener of the Loktantrik Yuva Morcha at a time when the Congress suffered defeat, Jaitley was appointed the president of the Delhi ABVP and All India Secretary of the ABVP. He was then made the president of the youth wing of the BJP and the secretary of the Delhi Unit in 1980, a short time after joining the party.[20]

Legal career

Jaitley with Former Supreme Court Judge K.S. Panicker Radhakrishnan at the Gujarat National Law University.
Since 1987, Jaitley had been practising law in the Supreme Court of India and several High Courts in India.[2] In January 1990, he was designated as a Senior Advocate by the Delhi High Court.[3][21] He was appointed Additional Solicitor General by the V. P. Singh government in 1989 and did the paperwork for the investigations into the Bofors scandal.[19][20] His clients cover the political spectrum from Sharad Yadav of the Janata Dal to Madhavrao Scindia of the Indian National Congress to L. K. Advani of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Several publications on legal and current affairs were written by him.[2] A paper on law about corruption and crime in India was presented by him, before the Indo-British Legal Forum.[2] He was appointed as the Government of India's delegate to the United Nations General Assembly Session in June 1998 which approved the Declaration on Laws Relating to Drugs and Money Laundering.[3][2]

Jaitley had also appeared on behalf of giant multinational corporations such as PepsiCo against Coca-Cola and in various other cases in India.[22][23] After having been the Minister of Law, Justice and Company Affairs, Jaitley represented Pepsi in 2002 in a case where the Supreme Court of India admonished and imposed stiff fines on 8 companies for painting advertisements on ecologically fragile rocks along the Manali-Rohtang road in the Himalayas. "The companies were also issued show-cause notices as to why exemplary damages should not be imposed on them for indulging in environmental vandalism."[24] In 2004, Jaitley appeared on behalf of Coca-Cola in a Rajasthan High Court case.[25]

Given his political duties as Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, Jaitley stopped practising law in June 2009.[26]

Political career
Jaitley had been a member of the national executive of Bharatiya Janata Party since 1991.[27] He became the spokesperson of the BJP during the period preceding the 1999 general election.

Vajpayee Government
On 13 October 1999, after the Vajpayee Government of the BJP led National Democratic Alliance came to power, he was appointed Minister of State for Information and Broadcasting (Independent Charge).[2] In addition he was appointed Minister of State for Disinvestment (Independent Charge). The disinvestment ministry was created for the first time in accordance with the policy of disinvestment under the World Trade Organization regime.[2] On 23 July 2000 following the resignation of Ram Jethmalani as the Union Cabinet Minister of Law, Justice and Company Affairs, he took over his ministry as an additional charge.[2]

In November 2000 and was made a Cabinet Minister for the Ministery of Law, Justice and Company Affairs and Shipping. The Ministry of Surface Transport was bifurcated and he was appointed as the first Minister of Shipping. He demitted the office of the Minister for Shipping with effect from 1 September 2001 and as Union Minister of Law, Justice and Company Affairs on 1 July 2002.[2] He then served as the General Secretary of the BJP and its national spokesman.[2] He worked in this capacity till January 2003. He rejoined the Union Cabinet as the Minister of Commerce & Industry and Law & Justice on 29 January 2003.[20] With the defeat of the National Democratic Alliance in May 2004, Jaitley returned back to his legal career and worked in the Supreme Court.[28]

2004-2014
He was chosen as the Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha on 3 June 2009 by L.K. Advani. On 16 June 2009, he resigned from the post of General Secretary of BJP as per his party's One Man One Post principle. He was also a member of the Central Election Committee of the party.[29] As the leader of opposition in Rajya Sabha, he participated in the debates on the Women's Reservation Bill in the Rajya Sabha and also supported Anna Hazare in his 2011 Indian anti-corruption movement for the Jan Lokpal Bill.[20] He successfully introduced the eighty-fourth amendment to the Constitution of India in 2002 freezing parliamentary seats until 2026[30] and the ninety-first amendment to the Constitution of India in 2004 penalising defections.[31] However, being in the party since 1980 he never contested any direct election until 2014. He was the BJP candidate for the Amritsar seat in the Lok Sabha (replacing Navjot Singh Sidhu) for the 2014 general election, but lost to the Indian National Congress candidate Amarinder Singh. He was nominated as a Rajya Sabha member from Gujarat. He was re-nominated to the Rajya Sabha from Uttar Pradesh in March 2018.[32]

On 26 August 2012, he said (outside Parliament) "There are occasions when an obstruction in Parliament brings greater benefits to the country." This statement was considered to have given legitimacy to obstruction of the parliament in the contemporary politics in India. After forming a government in 2014, the BJP government has faced disruption and obstruction in parliament multiple times, and the opposition have referred to this statement as a legitimate floor strategy.[33][34]

NDA led Government of India
On 26 May 2014, Jaitley was selected by newly elected Prime Minister Narendra Modi to be the Minister of Finance, the Minister for Corporate Affairs and the Minister of Defence, in his cabinet.[35][36] Analysts cited Jaitley's "part-time" focus on defence as a simple continuation of the policies of the previous government.[37] According to a WikiLeaks cable by Robert Blake, the Charge at the US Embassy, to his government, when pressed on the question of Hindutva, Jaitley had argued that Hindu nationalism "will always be a talking point" for the BJP and characterised this as an opportunistic issue.[38] Jaitley later clarified that "the use of the word opportunistic in reference to nationalism or Hindu nationalism is neither my view nor my language. It could be the diplomat's own usage."[39]

During the 2015 Bihar Legislative Assembly election, Arun Jaitley agreed with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's assertions that the idea of reservations on the basis of religion is fraught with danger and was against giving reservations to Muslim Dalits and Christian Dalits as it might impact demography.[40][41] He also serves as a member to the Board of Governors of Asian Development Bank.[42] In November 2015, Jaitley said that personal laws governing marriages and divorces should be subject to fundamental rights, as constitutionally-guaranteed rights are supreme.[43] He announced the Income declaration scheme, 2016 in September 2016.[44]

During his tenure as the Finance Minister of India, the government demonetized the ₹500 and ₹1000 banknotes of the Mahatma Gandhi Series, with the stated intention of curbing corruption, black money, fake currency, and terrorism from 9 November 2016.[45] He oversaw the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) which brought the country under one GST regime. On 20 June 2017, he reaffirmed that the roll-out of GST overseen by him as the finance minister was on track.[46]

Out Leadership recommended Arun Jaitley as one of the experts and leaders who openly speak on LGBT+ issues.[47]

On 29 May 2019, in a letter to Prime Minister Modi, Arun Jaitley cited his health as a reason for not taking an active role in the formation of the new government, effectively declining a role as a minister in the second term of Prime Minister Modi.[48]

Personal life
Arun Jaitley married Sangeeta, daughter of former Jammu and Kashmir finance minister Girdhari Lal Dogra, on 24 May 1982. They have two children, Rohan and Sonali; the latter married Jaiyesh Bakhshi.[49][2][50][51] Both his children are lawyers. He had two siblings.[52]

In January 2019, Jaitley was diagnosed with a rare form of soft-tissue sarcoma and sought treatment in New York.[53]

Death
On 9 August 2019, he was hospitalized at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi under critical condition after he complained of "breathlessness".[54][55] On 17 August, it was reported that Jaitley was on life-support.[56] By 23 August, his health had deteriorated.[57]

Jaitley died at 12:07 PM (IST) on 24 August 2019 at the age of 66.[58][59]

Controversies
In January 2019 Jaitley created controversy when he accused the Central Bureau of Investigation of investigative adventurism in the ICICI Bank - Videocon fraud case.[60] The Central Bureau of Investigation had n

Derby County

Derby County Football Club (/ˈdɑːrbi/) is a professional association football club based in Derby, Derbyshire, England. The club competes in the EFL Championship, the second tier of English football, and has played its home matches at Pride Park Stadium since 1997.

Notable for being one of the 12 founder members of the Football League in 1888, Derby County is one of only 10 clubs to have competed in every season of the English football league system and, in 2009, was ranked 137th in the top 200 European football teams of the 20th century by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics.[2]

The club was founded in 1884 by William Morley, as an offshoot of Derbyshire County Cricket Club; it has spent all but four seasons in the top two divisions of English football. Its competitive peak came in the 1970s when it twice won the First Division and competed in major European competitions on four separate occasions, reaching the European Cup semi-finals as well as winning several minor trophies. Additionally, the club was a strong force in the interwar years, winning the 1945–46 FA Cup.

The club's home colours have been black and white since the 1890s. The team gets its nickname, The Rams, to show tribute to its links with the First Regiment of Derby Militia, which took a ram as its mascot. Additionally adopting the song "The Derby Ram" as its regimental song.[3]


Contents
History
Main article: History of Derby County F.C.
See also: List of Derby County F.C. seasons

Chart of table positions of Derby County in the Football League
Beginning and early success
Derby County F.C. was formed in 1884 as an offshoot of Derbyshire County Cricket Club in an attempt to give players and supporters a winter interest as well as secure the cricket club extra revenue. The original intention was to name the club "Derbyshire County F.C." to highlight the link, though the Derbyshire FA, formed in 1883, objected on the grounds it was too long and therefore would not have been understood by the fans who may mistake it for a Derbyshire FA team. Playing their home matches at the cricket club's Racecourse Ground, 1884–85 saw the club undertake an extensive programme of friendly matches, the first of which was a 6–0 defeat to Great Lever on 13 September 1884. The club's first competitive match came in the 1885 FA Cup, where they lost 7–0 at home to Walsall Town.

Arguably the most important match in the club's history came in the following season's FA Cup, when a 2–0 victory over Aston Villa, already an emerging force in English football, helped establish Derby County on the English football map, helping the club to attract better opposition for friendlies and, in 1888, an invitation into the inaugural Football League. The opening day of the first ever league season was 8 September 1888, when Derby came from 3–0 down away to Bolton Wanderers to win 6–3, though the club ultimately finished 10th out of 12 teams. In 1891, they absorbed another Derby club, Derby Midland, which had been a member of the Midland League, leaving them as Derby's sole professional football club. Steve Bloomer, generally considered to be Derby County's best-ever player, joined the club in 1892. In 1895, the club moved to a new stadium, the Baseball Ground (so called because it was previously used for baseball), which became their home for the next 102 years. It was then that the club adopted their now traditional home colours of black and white.

Although Derby were inconsistent in the league, they finished as runners-up to Aston Villa in 1896, as well as achieved a number of third-place finishes. They were a strong force in the FA Cup, appearing in three finals in six years around the turn of the 20th century, though lost all three, in 1898 (3–1 to Nottingham Forest),[4] 1899 (4–1 to Sheffield United)[5] and 1903 (6–0 to Bury).[6]

Edwardian and interwar era
In 1906, Steve Bloomer was sold to Middlesbrough due to financial constraints, and Derby subsequently suffered its first ever relegation the following season,[7] but under Jimmy Methven's management, they re-signed Bloomer and regained their First Division place in 1911.[7] In 1914, they were again relegated, but instantly won the Second Division to earn promotion,[7] though World War I meant they had to wait until 1919 to play First Division football again. After two seasons, they were relegated yet again in 1921. However, the appointment of George Jobey in 1925 kick-started a successful period for the Rams and, after promotion in 1926,[7] the club became a formidable force, with high finishes from the late 1920s and all through the 1930s,[7] including finishing as runners-up twice.


The Brian Clough and Peter Taylor statue
Derby were one of several clubs to close down after the outbreak of World War II but restarted in the early 1940s, in part due to the persistence of Jack Nicholas and Jack Webb. Aided by the recruitment of Raich Carter and Peter Doherty, who had both been stationed in Loughborough during the war, Derby were one step ahead of the opposition when competitive football resumed with the 1946 FA Cup and won their first major trophy with a 4–1 victory over Charlton Athletic.[8]

Post-war success and decline
The league restarted the following season after a break due to World War II and, under the management of Stuart McMillan, as well as twice breaking the British transfer record to sign Billy Steel and Johnny Morris to replace Carter and Doherty, finished fourth and third in the 1948 and 1949 seasons respectively, before a steady decline set in and the club was relegated in 1953, after nearly 30 years in the top flight, and again in 1955 to drop to the third tier of English football for the first time in their history.[7] Harry Storer led Derby back into the second tier at the second attempt in 1957, though the club progressed no further over the next decade under either Storer or his successor, former Derby player Tim Ward.

Brian Clough era
In 1967, Brian Clough and Peter Taylor took over and led them to their greatest glory. Having clinched the influential signing of Dave Mackay, Derby were promoted to the First Division in 1969, finished fourth in 1970,[7] were banned from competing in Europe due to financial irregularities in 1971 and won their first ever Football League Championship in 1972.[7] Though Derby did not retain their title the following season, they did reach the semi-finals of the European Cup, where they lost to Juventus. Clough's frequent outspoken comments against football's establishment eventually led to him falling out with the board of directors at the club, and Clough and Taylor left in October 1973. Such was their impact on the club that, 37 years later, a 9 ft (2.75 metres) bronze statue of the pair was erected outside Pride Park in commemoration of their legacy.[9]

Success and decline after Clough
Despite the departure of Clough and Taylor, Derby's League success was repeated in the 1974–75 season when they won the title under successor Dave Mackay, who had been a player under Clough when they had returned to the top flight in 1969. However, Derby's form declined towards the end of the 1970s and they went down to the Second Division in 1980 after a string of managers, including former Manchester United boss Tommy Docherty, unsettled the club trying desperately to maintain its place at the top of the First Division. Though they challenged well in their first season, Derby were soon hit hard by rising debts, falling attendances and dismal performances. Peter Taylor returned to the Baseball Ground as manager in early 1983 and kept Derby up that season, but he retired a year later just before Derby's relegation to the Third Division for only the second time in their history. However, Derby did manage to avoid going out of business, and they were soon under the ownership of wealthy businessman Robert Maxwell.


Derby County's former Baseball Ground commemoration by Denis O'Connor
1980s revival and promotion to Premier League
After relegation to the Third Division in May 1984, the club appointed Arthur Cox as manager. Although they missed out on promotion in Cox's first season as manager, they then won back-to-back promotions and were back in the First Division for the 1987–88 season, with attendances also rising as the club's on-the-field fortunes and financial position improved. The financial backing of new chairman Robert Maxwell saw stars such as Peter Shilton, Mark Wright, Dean Saunders, Trevor Hebberd and Ted McMinn brought to the club and they finished fifth in the 1988–89 season.

A lack of any further investment from Maxwell quickly led to a decline, culminating in relegation back to the Second Division in 1991. At this time, local newspaper businessman Lionel Pickering became the majority shareholder of the club, taking control just before Maxwell's death in November 1991. In 1992, Derby County paid £2.5 million for Notts County central defender Craig Short, at the time – and for five years afterwards – the most expensive player to be signed by a club outside the top flight, and indeed one of the highest fees paid by any English club for a player at the time. Other expensive signings included strikers Tommy Johnson and Marco Gabbiadini. Cox's resignation as manager in October 1993 saw the appointment of legendary former player Roy McFarland as manager. Derby reached the final of the Division One playoffs that season, but were beaten by local rivals Leicester City. McFarland was sacked a year later after Derby missed out on the playoffs, and his replacement was Jim Smith – a manager whose track record at his previous clubs included four promotions and an FA Cup semi-final appearance.

Although the 1995–96 season started slowly, the signing of sweeper Igor Štimac in the early autumn proved pivotal. Smith guided the Rams to a second-place finish and the Premier League, now the top flight of English football. During that season, it was announced Derby would be leaving the Baseball Ground after more than 100 years to move into a new all-seater stadium, following earlier plans to develop the Baseball Ground as a 26,000-seat stadium.[10]

After finishing in 12th place in their first season back into the top flight, the club left the Baseball Ground, its home of 102 years, to move into the new 33,597-seat Pride Park Stadium for the 1997–98 season. The Baseball Ground was demolished six years later and a memorial was eventually erected in memory of its role in Derby city history.[11]

Relegation from top flight and financial crisis
The club settled well into its new home as it recorded back-to-back top 10 finishes for the first time since their 1970s peak, before a sudden decline at the turn of the millennium saw three years of struggle. Smith resigned to be replaced by former players Colin Todd, who lasted just three months, and John Gregory before the Rams were relegated after a six-year stay in the top flight, in 2002.

Derby County's relegation saw the club enter a serious financial crisis, which forced them to sell many key players. Gregory was later suspended from his managerial duties over alleged misconduct and former Ipswich Town boss George Burley was brought in. The club was put into receivership then sold in October 2003 for £3 to a group led by Jeremy Keith. After finishing 20th in the 2003–04 season, a dramatic improvement in the 2004–05 season saw Derby finish fourth in the Championship, qualifying for a promotion play-off spot, though they lost in the semi-finals to Preston North End. Soon afterwards, Burley resigned citing differences between himself and the board. He was replaced by Bolton Wanderers first team coach Phil Brown. In January 2006, Brown was sacked after a poor run of results. Terry Westley, the academy coach at the time, took over first-team duties until the end of the season and saved Derby from relegation.

Return to the Premier League and straight back to the Championship
In April 2006, a consortium of local businessmen led by former vice-chairman Peter Gadsby purchased the club, reducing its debt and returning Pride Park Stadium to the club's ownership in the process. In June 2006, former Preston North End boss Billy Davies was appointed Derby County's new permanent manager. In his first season, Davies took Derby to the Championship play-offs, where they beat Southampton on penalties in the semi-finals before defeating West Bromwich Albion 1–0 with a second-half Stephen Pearson goal at the new Wembley Stadium to secure a return to the Premier League and the associated £60 million windfall.[12]

After failing to win any of their opening five matches of the season (one draw and four consecutive defeats), Derby scored their first victory with a 1-0 win over Newcastle, where Kenny Miller scored the only goal of the game.[13] In October 2007, Peter Gadsby stepped down as chairman to be replaced by former Hull City owner Adam Pearson, who immediately began searching for investment from overseas.[14] After a poor start to the season, manager Billy Davies left by mutual consent in November.[15] He was succeeded by Paul Jewell,[16] who failed to save the club as Derby suffered the Premier League's earliest ever relegation, in March,[17] recorded the Premier League's lowest-ever points total,[18] and equalled Loughborough's 108-year Football League record of going through an entire season with only one win, which occurred during the 1899–1900 season when Loughborough finished bottom of the Second Division. In January 2008, Derby was taken over by an international investment group led by General Sports and Entertainment, with Pearson remaining as de facto chairman.[19]

Derby's match at home to Sheffield United on 13 September 2008 generated much media coverage as it was approaching a year since Derby's last league win, a run which saw the club break the English league record for most matches without a win. Just four days short of the anniversary of the 1–0 victory over Newcastle United, Rob Hulse scored against his former club as Derby ran out 2–1 winners, earning Paul Jewell his first league win as Derby boss at his 27th attempt. Despite taking the club to the League Cup semi-final, the club's first major cup semi-final since 1976, where Derby lost 4–3 to Manchester United over two legs, Jewell resigned as manager in December 2008 after a run of just two wins in 11 matches.[20] He was replaced by Nigel Clough,[21] son of former manager Brian Clough. Nigel Clough led the club to 18th place and safety. After two seasons that saw the club finish in the bottom half of the table, Derby finished the two subsequent seasons in 12th and 10th place. Clough was replaced by Steve McClaren in September 2013; McClaren led the club to a 3rd-place finish in the 2013–14 Championship season, but lost the play-off final to Queens Park Rangers. Derby failed to finish in the play-offs the following season, which saw McClaren sacked as local-businessman Mel Morris assumed control. Morris oversaw a level of spending unprecedented in Derby's history over the following three years, breaking the club's transfer record four times, but also saw an unprecedented managerial turnover as went through six managers between June 2015 and May 2017. In this three-season period, Derby qualified for the play-offs twice, but failed to get past the semi-finals on both occasions.

On 31 May 2018, following the departure of manager Gary Rowett to Stoke, Frank Lampard was appointed as Derby manager on a three-year contract.[22] In his first season in charge, he guided the club to a 6th place finish and reached the playoff final at Wembley, but ultimately lost to the hands of Aston Villa.[23] On 4 July 2019, Lampard left Derby to manage former club Chelsea, with his successor, Phillip Cocu, being announced the following day.[24]

Club crest and colours
Crest

Derby County's badge from 1946
Like most old football clubs, Derby County did not initially have any badge displayed on their shirts. Their first badge was introduced in 1924. The badge consisted of a circular shield split into three equally sized sections, representing the club, its fans and the area, all containing items traditionally associated with the city of Derby: a Tudor rose and a crown in one section, a buck in a park in the second and a ram's head in the final section. The badge was worn on the players' shirts for just two seasons before they reverted to plain shirts.

By 1934, another badge had been introduced. This time it was a traditionally shaped shield, again with three sections. The buck in the park had been removed and the rose and the crown had been split up and now occupied a section each. The ram's head also remained and was now given the largest section of the shield. The badge never appeared on the players' shirts. The shield was modified in 1946 when the rose and crown were removed and replaced with the letters "DC" (Derby County) and "FC" (Football Club) respectively. The badge, right, was featured on to the player's shirts from its introduction onwards, though the ram's head on its own was used from the late 1960s (the full shield, however, remained the club's official logo).


Derby County's badge from 1997 to 2007
A new club badge was introduced in 1971, featuring a more modern design that, with modifications, is still in use. The badge was initially consisted of a stylised white ram facing left. The badge was first modified slightly in 1979 to include the text "Derby County FC" under the ram (though the ram remained on its own on away kits). In 1982, the ram turned to face to the right and the text under it was removed. The ram was surrounded by a wreath of laurel and the text "Centenary 1984–1985" was printed underneath for the club's centenary season. The laurel was removed and the text reading "Derby County FC" returned from the next season. In 1993, the ram faced left again and the text was removed once more. From 1995, the ram faced right and was enclosed in a diamond, with a gold banner reading "Derby County FC" underneath and the text "1884" (the year of the club's foundation) underneath that. The design was changed again in 1997 (see left): the ram faced now left and the golden banner now simply read "Derby County"; the diamond and year of formation were removed.


Derby County's badge from 2009 to 2013, a version of this badge with gold trim was used from 2007 to 2009.
A decade later, in 2007, the badge was modified again with the ram still facing left and the text "Est. 1884" now in the middle of a circular frame featuring "Derby County Football Club" in gold lettering, with the colours being modified to the club colours of black and white in 2009 (see top of page). In July 2012, the club announced its intention to show only the iconic ram on future shirts, rather than the full club logo. In July 2013, this traditional ram became the club's full logo again.

Colours
Derby County's original colours (right) were amber, chocolate and blue, though by the 1890s the club had adopted its now traditional colours of black and white, which are still in use today. In the 1970s and 1980s, colours for home matches were white shirts with small blue or red touches (on the club badge or shirt makers insignia), blue shorts and socks that were blue, red, white or a combination of the three.[25] The colours of away kits have varied widely, and although they are usually yellow/gold or blue, the colour for the away kit for the 2008–09 season was fluorescent green.[26] The club also introduced a surprise third kit in August 2008. Similar in design to the club's away kit of the 1970s, with blue and white stripes and reminiscent of the Argentina national team strip, the style was re-introduced following feedback from fans who said it was one of their favourite kits from the club's past.[27]


1884–94 kit
Period Kit Sponsor Shirt Sponsor
1973–1979 Umbro None
1979–1980 Le Coq Sportif
1980–1981 British Midland
1981–1982 Patrick
1982–1984 Patrick
1984–1985 Admiral Bass Brewery
1985–1986 OSCA
1986–1987 Sportsweek
1987–1992 Umbro Maxwell Communications
1992–1993 Auto Windscreens
1993–1994 Bukta
1994–1995 Rams Pro Wear
1995–1998 Puma Puma
1998–2001 EDS
2001–2005 Erreà Marston's Pedigree
2005–2007 Joma Derbyshire Building Society
2007–2008 Adidas
2008–2010 Bombardier
2010–2012 buymobiles.net
2012–2014 Kappa
2014–2017 Umbro Just-Eat
2017–2018 Avon Tyres
2018–present 32Red
Club mascot

Derby County's mascot, Rammie
Derby's mascot is a ram named Rammie, who also works to maintain the club's links with fans and the East Midlands in general, such as school visits to promote literacy and charity events.[28][29] Rammie originally emerged as a more friendly option to the club's traditional links with the British Army and the Mercian Regiment in particular.

Rammie was the first full-time mascot in British football.[30][31] Rammie's traditional activities include penalty shoot-outs with members of the crowd at half-time, with Rammie as goalkeeper, and warming the crowd up before the match and encouraging the Derby fans during matches. Rammie is a very popular figure amongst Rams fans[32][33] and, in 2005, released his first DVD, which features the character reading from Aesop's Fables in the Derbyshire countryside.[30]

Shortly thereafter, Rammie was joined by a female equivalent, named Eweie. However, Eweie did not last very long at Pride Park, and took a reported "vacation" to the United States. She returned from a 10-year exile on 3 October 2015 at a home match against Brentford.[34]

Stadium

Pride Park Stadium has been Derby's home since 1997
As an offshoot of the cricket club, Derby County's first home stadium was the County Cricket Ground, also known as the Racecourse Ground, where the club played between 1884 and 1895. Although the ground itself was good enough to hold the first FA Cup final match outside London, when Blackburn Rovers beat West Bromwich Albion 2–0 in the 1886 FA Cup final replay[35] and a full England international, disputes over fixture clashed between the football and cricket clubs meant that when the opportunity to play at Sir Francis Ley's Baseball Ground arose, the club accepted.[36]

Commonly referred to amongst supporters as "the BBG", the club moved to the Baseball Ground in 1895 and remained there for the next 102 years, despite opportunities to move in the 1920s and 1940s.[36][37] Derby had already played there, a 1–0 win over Sunderland during the 1891–92 season, as an alternative venue after a fixture clash at the County Ground. At its peak during the late 1960s, the ground could hold around 42,000 – the club's record attendance achieved following the opening of the Ley Stand with a 41,826 crowd watching a 5–0 defeat of Tottenham Hotspur on 20 September 1969.[36] From this peak, the continued addition of seating saw the capacity drop over the next 15 years to 26,500 in 1985.

Following the Taylor Report in 1989, and the legal requirement for all seater stadia, the ground's capacity dwindled to just 18,500 by the mid-1990s, not enough for the then ambitious second tier club. Despite initially hoping to rebuild the Baseball Ground to hold 26,000 spectators, and rejecting the offer of two sites elsewhere in Derby, then-chairman Lionel Pickering announced in February 1996 the intention to move to a new, purpose built stadium at the newly regenerated Pride Park, with the last ever first team game at the Baseball Ground being in May 1997, a 1–3 home defeat to Arsenal, though it continued to host reserve matches until 2003. Derby's new ground, named Pride Park Stadium, was officially opened by the Queen on 18 July with a friendly against Italian club Sampdoria following on 4 August.

Derby hold the unique distinction of being the only club to have had three home grounds host full England internationals. England beat Ireland 9–0 at the Racecourse Ground in 1895, beat Ireland again, 2–1, at the Baseball Ground in 1911 and, most recently, Pride Park hosted England's 4–0 win over Mexico in May 2001.[38]

Pride Park was renamed the iPro Stadium on 7 December 2013, as part of a 10-year, £7 million sponsorship deal with global sports drink company iPro. At the beginning of 2017, it reverted to its original name of Pride Park Stadium.

Supporters and rivalry
Support
Derby is often acknowledged as a "passionate football town" by rival supporters[39] and the press alike. Tony Francis of The Daily Telegraph noted, "Derby is a passionate football town... Even in Division Two, it's a reasonable bet that crowds at Pride Park would not fall far below 20,000. It's historical, it's geographical, it's in the blood. Some places have it, some don't."[40] During the 2007–08 Premier League season, Derby County fans were repeatedly referred to as the best in the country due to their loyalty despite the club's disastrous campaign.[41] Almost every home match at Pride Park Stadium was sold out by the Derby fans and the club also had a large following away from home. The recognition included them being named fans of the season in much national coverage of the season, winning an award from Nuts magazine,[42] and being named the most loyal supporters in the country in a 2008 survey by Sky Sports Magazine.[43] In 2013, Derby supporter Nick Webster was voted Championship Fan of the Year.[44]

Statistically, the club had the 12th-highest average attendance in the country in the 2007–08 season,[45] 2008–09,[46] and 2009–10 seasons,[47] despite only having the 15th-largest club ground and finishing 18th or lower in their respective division. In 2008–09, they were the best supported club in the Championship, with a larger average attendance than nine Premier League clubs, and had the Football Leagues' single largest league match attendance, with 33,079 against Wolverhampton Wanderers on 13 April 2009.

Derby's celebrity supporters include actor Robert Lindsay, One Direction singer Niall Horan,[48] Blur guitarist Graham Coxon[49] The Gaslight Anthem guitarist Alex Rosamilia[50] adult film star Keiran Lee[51] and actor Jack O'Connell.[52] It has been reported that O'Connell has persuaded other celebrities to support the club, including actors George Clooney[53] and Angelina Jolie,[54] and model Cara Delevingne.[55]

Rivals
Derby's primary rival clubs are Nottingham Forest, Leicester City and Leeds United,[56] with Forest, based in Nottingham, 14 miles east of Derby, being by far the fiercest rivals; a 2008 survey named the rivalry the 11th-largest in English football, revealing that nine out of 10 fans from both clubs point to the other as their fiercest rival.[57] Meetings between the side are known as East Midlands derbies and the winning team is awarded the Brian Clough Trophy. The rivalry as a whole largely developed from the 1970s, due to former Derby manager Brian Clough taking over at Forest, much to the anger of the Derby fans. In fact, some commentators have described the rivalry to be as much about which club owns Clough's heart as much as the proximity of the clubs geographically.[58]

The rivalry with Leicester City stems largely from geographical location rather than any shared history.[59]

Leeds United are disliked due to ongoing friction from the early 1970s when Derby and Leeds were two of the top English teams and the scarcely concealed hostility between their respective managers, Brian Clough and Don Revie.[59] The rivalry is documented in the novel and film The Damned United. This rivalry is stronger on Derby's side: while Derby consider Leeds their second-biggest rivals, Leeds fans focus more on their dislike of Manchester United and Chelsea.[56]

Players
Current squad
As of 9 August 2019[60][61]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
2 England DF Andre Wisdom
3 Scotland DF Craig Forsyth
4 Scotland MF Graeme Shinnie
5 Poland DF Krystian Bielik
6 Republic of Ireland DF Richard Keogh (captain)
7 England MF Jamie Paterson (on loan from Bristol City)
8 England MF Kieran Dowell (on loan from Everton)
9 England FW Martyn Waghorn
10 Wales MF Tom Lawrence
11 Netherlands MF Florian Jozefzoon
12 England GK Ben Hamer (on loan from Huddersfield Town)
14 England FW Jack Marriott
16 England DF Matthew Clarke (on loan from Brighton and Hove Albion)
17 England MF George Evans
19 Scotland FW Chris Martin
20 England FW Mason Bennett
No. Position Player
21 Netherlands GK Kelle Roos
23 United States MF Duane Holmes
25 England DF Max Lowe
30 Scotland MF Ikechi Anya
33 England DF Curtis Davies
35 England GK Jonathan Mitchell
37 England DF Jayden Bogle
38 Republic of Ireland MF Jason Knight
40 England MF Louie Sibley
41 England MF Max Bird
44 England MF Tom Huddlestone
46 England DF Scott Malone
47 Slovakia GK Henrich Ravas
48 England DF Lee Buchanan
49 England FW Morgan Whittaker
Out on loan
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 England GK Scott Carson (at Manchester City until 30 June 2020)
No. Position Player
34 England MF George Thorne (at Oxford United until 1 January 2020)

Reserves and Academy
Main article: Derby County F.C. Reserves and Academy
Notable former players
Main article: List of Derby County F.C. players
English Football Hall of Fame members
Several ex-players/managers associated with Derby County are represented in the English Football Hall of Fame, which was created in 2002 as a celebration of those who have achieved at the very peak of the English game. To be considered for induction players/managers must be 30 years of age or older and have played/managed for at least five years in England.[62]

2002 – England Brian Clough  Northern Ireland Peter Doherty England Peter Shilton Scotland Dave Mackay
2008 – England Steve Bloomer
2010 – England Francis Lee
2013 – England Raich Carter
2017 – England Frank Lampard
Football League 100 Legends
The Football League 100 Legends is a list of "100 legendary football players" produced by The Football League in 1998, to celebrate the 100th season of League football. Eight former Derby players made the list.

England John Goodall
England Steve Bloomer
Scotland Hughie Gallacher
England Raich Carter
Northern Ireland Peter Doherty
Scotland Dave Mackay
England Peter Shilton
Republic of Ireland Paul McGrath
The Jack Stamps Trophy (Player of the Year)
Main article: Derby County F.C. Player of the Year
Derby County's Player of the Season award is voted for by the club's supporters and named in honour of Jackie Stamps, who scored two goals in Derby's sole FA Cup final victory in 1946. It was first introduced in the 1968–69 season.[63]

2018–19 England Fikayo Tomori
2017–18 Czech Republic Matěj Vydra
2016–17 England Scott Carson
2015–16 Republic of Ireland Richard Keogh
2014–15 England Will Hughes
2013–14 Scotland Craig Bryson
2012–13 Republic of Ireland Richard Keogh[64]
2011–12 Scotland Craig Bryson
2010–11 England John Brayford
2009–10 England Shaun Barker
2008–09 England Rob Hulse
2007–08 Derby County Fans
2006–07 Scotland Steve Howard
2005–06 England Tommy Smith
2004–05 Spain Iñigo Idiakez
2003–04 France Youl Mawéné
2002–03 Georgia (country) Georgi Kinkladze
2001–02 England Danny Higginbotham
2000–01 England Chris Riggott
1999–2000 Estonia Mart Poom
1998–99 Denmark Jacob Laursen
1997–98 Italy Francesco Baiano
1996–97 England Chris Powell
1995–96 England Dean Yates
1994–95 England Craig Short
1993–94 England Martin Taylor
1992–93 England Marco Gabbiadini
1991–92 Scotland Ted McMinn
1990–91 Wales Dean Saunders
1989–90 England Mark Wright
1988–89 England Mark Wright
1987–88 England Michael Forsyth
1986–87 Wales Geraint Williams
1985–86 Scotland Ross MacLaren
1984–85 England Bobby Davison
1983–84 Scotland Archie Gemmill
1982–83 England Steve Cherry
1981–82 England Steve Buckley
1980–81 England Roger Jones
1979–80 England Steve Buckley
1978–79 England Steve Powell
1977–78 Republic of Ireland Dave Langan
1976–77 Wales Leighton James
1975–76 England Charlie George
1974–75 England Peter Daniel
1973–74 England Ron Webster
1972–73 England Kevin Hector
1971–72 England Colin Todd
1970–71 Scotland Dave Mackay
1969–70 Scotland John O'Hare
1968–69 England Roy McFarland
Managers
Main article: List of Derby County F.C. managers
Below is a list of all the permanent managers that Derby County have had since the appointment of Harry Newbould in 1900.[65] In the 16 years prior to Newbould's appointment, the team was selected by club committee, a standard practice by football clubs at the time.

2019–: Netherlands Phillip Cocu
2018–2019: England Frank Lampard
2017–2018: England Gary Rowett
2016–2017: England Steve McClaren
2016: England Nigel Pearson
2016: England Darren Wassall
2015–2016: England Paul Clement
2013–2015: England Steve McClaren
2009–2013: England Nigel Clough
2007–2008: England Paul Jewell
2006–2007: Scotland Billy Davies
2005–2006: England Phil Brown
2006: England Terry Westley
2003–2005: Scotland George Burley
2002–2003: England John Gregory
2001–2002: England Colin Todd
1995–2001: England Jim Smith
1993–1995: England Roy McFarland
1984–1993: England Arthur Cox
1984: England Roy McFarland
1982–1984: England Peter Taylor
1982: England John Newman
1979–1982: England Colin Addison
1977–1979: Scotland Tommy Docherty
1976–1977: England Colin Murphy
1973–1976: Scotland Dave Mackay
1967–1973: England Brian Clough
1962–1967: England Tim Ward
1955–1962: England Harry Storer
1953–1955: England Jack Barker
1946–1953: England Stuart McMillan
1944–1946: England Ted Magner
1942–1944: England Jack Nicholas
1925–1941: England George Jobey
1922–1925: England Cecil Potter
1906–1922: Scotland Jimmy Methven
1900–1906: England Harry Newbould
Current first team management
Manager: Phillip Cocu

Assistant Manager: Chris van der Weerden

First Team Coaches: Twan Scheepers, Liam Rosenior

Goalkeeping Coach: Shay Given

Head of Performance Analysis: Stephen Rands

Fitness Coach: Steve Haines

Head Physio: Robin Sadler

Board of directors and ownership
See also: List of English football club owners
Owner and Chairman: Mel Morris
CEO: Stephen Pearce
Operations Director: John Vicars
Chief Financial Officer: Stephen Pearce
Commercial Director: Lisa Biesty
Human Resources Director: Sarah Edwards
Chief Technical Officer: Stuart Fisher
Honorary Vice Chairman: Don Amott
Club Ambassadors: Roy McFarland, Roger Davies, Michael Johnson
Club academy
Moor Farm
Derby County's academy, called Moor Farm, is a purpose-built complex situated near the city suburb of Oakwood. It was built in 2003, at a cost of £5 million,[66] to replace the club's previous academy, The Ram-Arena, which was based at Raynesway. It covers 50 acres (200,000 m2) and features six full-sized training pitches plus an indoor pitch and includes a gym, restaurant, ProZone room and a laundry.[66] When opening the academy, then-Chairman Lionel Pickering said that the intent was to have "at least eight players from the Academy... in the first-team within three years."[66] Although this was not achieved, the academy produced a number of notable players, including England international midfielder Tom Huddlestone, Wales international defender Lewin Nyatanga, Northern Ireland international goalkeeper Lee Camp, England under-21s players Miles Addison and Lee Grant, as well as England under-19 player Giles Barnes.

In April 2009, new manager Nigel Clough announced his intention to restructure the academy, appointing former Derby players Darren Wassall and Michael Forsyth[67] and Wolverhampton Wanderers Academy director John Perkins to the backroom staff, replacing the departed Phil Cannon, David Lowe and Brian Burrows.[68] Following this, and an increased investment of £1 million per year from the club,[69] a number of players broke through to the first team squad; ahead of the 2010–11 season, almost a third of the Derby squad were academy graduates, with Mason Bennett setting the club record for youngest first team appearance when he made his full debut with a start in a defeat at Middlesbrough on 22 October 2011 at the age of 15 years and 99 days old.[70] This helped strengthen the academy's reputation[71] and reinforced CEO Tom Glick's stated desire to make Moor Farm "the academy of choice in the Midlands."[71] In August 2012, Derby's academy became a tier 2 academy under the new controversial Elite Player Performance Plan.[72] It was awarded Tier 1 status two years later in July 2014.[73]

Honours
Note: the leagues and divisions of English football have changed somewhat over time, so here they are grouped into their relative levels on the English football league system at the time they were won to allow easy comparison of the achievement

Domestic honours
Premier League and predecessors (level 1 of the English football league system):
Champions: 1971–72, 1974–75
Runners-up: 1895–96, 1929–30, 1935–36
Football League Championship and predecessors (level 2 of the English football league system):
Champions: 1911–12, 1914–15, 1968–69, 1986–87
Runners-up: 1995–96
Play-off winners: 2006–07
Football League One and predecessors (level 3 of the English football league system):
Champions: 1956–57 (North)
Third place: 1985–86
FA Cup
Winners: 1946
FA Charity Shield
Winners: 1975
Minor honours
[74]

Texaco Cup
Winners: 1972
Watney Cup
Winners: 1971
Anglo-Italian Cup
Runners-up 1992–93
Reserve team honours
Premier Reserve League South
Winners: 2000, 2001
The Central League
Winners: 1936, 1972, 1986, 2010, 2011
United Counties League
Winners: 1894
125th anniversary
As part of the club's 125th Anniversary in 2009, the Derby board took a number of initiatives to celebrate the club's history.

All-time XI
Soccer Field Transparant.svg

England
Boulton
England
McFarland
Croatia
Štimac
England
Webster
England
Nish
Scotland
Gemmill
Wales
Durban
Italy
Eranio
England
Hinton
England
Bloomer
England
Hector
Derby County F.C. All Time First XI
As part of the club's 125th Anniversary celebrations,[75] it was announced that during 2009 each month a vote would be carried out to decide on the club's official All Time XI, starting in February 2009 with the goalkeeper, with the following eight months offering opportunities for Derby's support to select a team based within a 4–4–2 formation, with December's vote being reserved for the manager.[76] Voting closed on the 25th of each month, with the winner being announced in the following few days.[77]

Player Position Years at Club
Colin Boulton[78] Goalkeeper 1964–78
Ron Webster[79] Right back 1960–78
David Nish[80] Left back 1972–79
Roy McFarland[81] Centre Back 1967–81; 83–84
Igor Štimac[81] Centre Back 1995–99
Stefano Eranio[82] Right Wing 1997–2001
Alan Hinton[83] Left Wing 1967–75
Archie Gemmill[84] Centre midfielder 1970–77; 82–84
Alan Durban[84] Centre midfielder 1963–73
Steve Bloomer[85] Centre forward 1892–1906; 10–14
Kevin Hector[85] Centre forward 1966–78; 80–82
Brian Clough[86] Manager 1967–73
Top 10 Derby goals
On 2 June 2009, the Club announced the supporters choice of the Top 10 Goals in the club's history, with the fans then asked again to choose their favourite from the 10 nominated. The list was obviously biased in favour of more recent goals, largely thanks to the increased coverage modern football enjoys. Three goals featured from the club's 2008/09 campaign.[87] The winners were announced on 22 June 2009.[88]

No. Player Opponent Year Competition % of vote
1 Costa Rica Paulo Wanchope Manchester United 1997 FA Premier League 39.3%
2 England Charlie George Real Madrid 1975 European Champions Clubs' Cup 25.4%
3 Netherlands Robin Van Der Laan Crystal Palace 1996 Football League Division One 10%
4 Scotland Stephen Pearson West Brom 2007 Football League Championship Playoff Final 6%
5 Scotland John McGovern Liverpool 1972 Football League Division One 4.4%
6 Scotland Kris Commons Manchester United 2009 Football League Cup 4.4%
7 Scotland Kris Commons Nottingham Forest 2009 FA Cup 4.2%
8 England Trevor Christie Rotherham United 1986 Football League Division Three 3.1%
9 Scotland Dave Mackay Chelsea 1968 Football League Cup 2.2%
10 Wales Robbie Savage Doncaster Rovers 2009 Football League Championship 1%
Derby County in Europe
Main article: Derby County F.C. in Europe
Derby first competed in Europe when they entered the 1972–73 European Cup after winning the 1971–72 First Division Title,[89] reaching the semi-final stages, where they lost 3–1 on aggregate to Juventus in controversial circumstances. They had qualified for the 1970–71 Fairs Cup after finishing the 1969–70 First Division in 4th, but were banned from entering the competition for financial irregularities. The 70s was the Derby County's peak in English football and they qualified for Europe in three of the next four seasons, competing in the UEFA Cup or the European Cup in each of the three seasons between 1974–75 and 1976–77.

The club then declined rapidly and has not appeared in the top European competitions since, though it finished in 5th in the 1989 First Division which would have guaranteed entry into the 1989–90 UEFA Cup had English Clubs not been banned from Europe following the Heysel Stadium Disaster.

Outside of major competition, the club competed in the Anglo-Italian Cup between 1992–93 and 1994–95, reaching the final in 1993, losing 3–1 to Cremonese at Wembley.

Records and statistics
Further information: List of Derby County F.C. records and statistics
Further information: Derby County F.C. league record by opponent
Kevin Hector holds the record for Derby County appearances in all competitions, appearing 589 times in two separate spells with the club between 1966 and 1982. He sits ahead of Ron Webster, who played 535 times for the club, often in the same team as Hector. Just counting league appearances, Hector is again in the lead with 486 appearances, ahead of Jack Parry, who played 483 times for the club between 1948 and 1967.

The club's all-time top goalscorer is Steve Bloomer, often referred to as "Football's First Superstar", who netted 332 goals for the club in two spells between 1892 and 1914. He is over 100 goals ahead of second in the list Kevin Hector, who netted 201 goals for the club. Jack Bowers holds the club record for most goals in a single season, when he scored 43 goals (35 in the league and a further 8 in the FA Cup), during the 1932–33 season.

The club's record attendance is 41,826, for a First Division match against Tottenham Hotspur at the Baseball Ground on 20 September 1969, which Derby won 5–0. The record is unlikely to be broken in the near future as Derby's current stadium, Pride Park Stadium, has a limit of 33,597 spectators. The record attendance at Pride Park for a competitive Derby County match is 33,378 for a Premier League match against Liverpool on 18 March 2000. The largest crowd to ever watch a Derby County game is 120,000 when Derby County played Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium in the 1975–76 European Cup.

Derby's historically poor 2007–08 Premier League campaign saw the club set and equal several unwanted records in English football. The club equaled Loughborough's all-time league record of just one win in an entire league season. They also equaled or set several Premier League records (1992–present), including fewest home wins in a season (1, joint with Sunderland), fewest away wins in a season (0, joint with five other clubs), and most defeats in a season (29). Records set included fewest points in a season (three points for a win) with 11; fewest goals scored (20), and worst goal difference (−69).[90] The club also holds the joint record (with Macclesfield Town) for most consecutive league games without a win, with 36 matches over two seasons between 22 September 2007 and 13 September 2008.

Derby also own (alongside Watford), the joint record for most lopsided defeat in an FA Cup final, a 6–0 loss to Bury in 1903.[91]

شيفيلد يونايتد

نادي شيفيلد يونايتد (بالإنجليزية: Sheffield United FC) هو نادي كرة قدم إنجليزي محترف يقع في مدينة شيفيلد بجنوب يوركشير. يلعب الفريق حالياً في دوري البطولة الإنجليزية، وقد استطاع التأهل ليشارك في منافسات الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز في موسم 2019–20. تم تشكيل نادي كرة القدم في عام 1889 باعتباره فرعًا لنادي شيفيلد يونايتد للكريكيت ، يلقب الفريق بـ "النِصال" (بالإنجليزية: The Blades) و ذلك لإشتهار مدينة شيفيلد عالمياً بصناعة الحديد والصلب. يلعب الفريق مبارياته التي يستضيفها على ملعب برامول لين، والذي تم بناءه مع تأسيس النادي، وتبلغ سعته الإجمالية ما يقارب 32,702 متفرج.

فاز شيفيلد يونايتد بدوري الدرجة الأولى والذي يعرف حاليا باسم الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز في موسم 1897–98. كذلك فاز بلقب كأس الاتحاد الإنجليزي أربعة مرات في أعوام 1899 و 1902 و 1915 و 1925. بينما تعرضوا لهزيمة في نهائي كأس الاتحاد الإنجليزي في عامي 1901 و 1936. وقد استطاع الفريق الوصل إلى الدور نصف النهائي في أعوام 1961 و 1993 و 1998 و 2003 و 2014. بينما وصلوا إلى الدور نصف النهائي منكأس رابطة الأندية الإنجليزية المحترفة في عامي 2003 و 2015.

خلال معظم تاريخ النادي ، لعب الفريق بالقمصان مخططة باللونين الأحمر والأبيض مع الشورت الأسود. أقرب وأشرس منافسيهم هم نادي شيفيلد وينزداي، في ديربي يعرف بعدة أسماء، ديربي ستيل سيتي (بالإنجليزية: Steel City derby) أو ديربي شيفيلد (بالإنجليزية: derby Sheffield).


محتويات
تاريخ النادي
تأسس نادي شيفيلد يونايتد لكرة القدم في 22 مارس 1889، في فندق أديلفي بمدينة شيفيلد (يوجد مكانه الآن مسرح كرسبل) على يد جون تشارلز كليق، رئيس نادي الكريكيت الذي كان يتخذ من البرامول لين ملعباً له. و قد جاءت هذة الخطوة لإيجاد دخل بديل لمستأجري البرامول لين بعد أن قرر نادي شيفيلد وينزداي الانتقال إلى ملعبة الخاص و ترك ملعب البرامول لين. كما تجدر الإشارةإلى أن شيفيلد يونايتد هو أول نادي في التاريخ يطلق عليه مسمى يونايتد.

و بلا شك، فأن أفضل فترات النادي كانت الثلاثون عاماً بين 1895 و 1925، عندما كان الفريق بطل إنجلترا عام 1897/98، و وصيف البطل عام 1896/97 و 1899/1900، و بطل كأس الاتحاد أعوام 1899، 1902، 1915 و 1925. و وصيف نفس البطولة عامي 1901 و 1936. و لكنه لم يحقق أي إنجاز بعد إنجاز عام 1925 بخلاف نجاحاته في الصعود من درجة لأخرى أعلى منها. يضاف إلى ذلك وصول الفريق إلى نصف نهائي كأس الدوري عام 2002/03 و خسارته من ليفربول بمجموع المبارتين 2-3.

تعد الفترة بين 1897 و 1902 أكثر الفترات نجاحاً بالنسبه لـ شيفيلد يونايتد، حيث حقق النادي بطولة الدوري عام 1898 و بطولة كأس الاتحاد في 1899 و 1902. ثم تلى هذه الإنجازات تحقيق النادي لبطولة الاتحاد مرة ثالثة في عام 1915 و رابعة في عام 1925. كما وصل النادي مباراة النهائي في بطولة كأس الاتحاد عام 1901 و عام 1936، و وصل دور نصف النهائي في ذات البطولة عام 1961، 1993، 1998، و 2003. في حين أن أفضل مستويات النادي في بطولة كأس الدوري كانت في عام 2003 عندما وصل النادي نصف النهائي.

و قد شهدت الآونة الأخيرة أخر صعود لـ شيفيلد يونايتد للدوري الممتاز، حيث كان ذلك في عام 2006، لكن هذا لم يدم أكثر من موسم واحد! و على الرغم من وصول النادي لمرحلة خروج المغلوب في دوري الدرجة الأولى عام 2009، إلا أن النادي تقهقر أكثر فيما بعد حتى هُبط النادي إلى دوري الدرجة الثانية لأول مرة من 23 سنة. تلى تلك الفترة فترة من تذبذب بالنتائج حيث هبط الفريق ليشارك في دوري البطولة الإنجليزية في موسم 2006–07 . ثم هبط ليشارك في الدوري الإنجليزي الدرجة الأولى في موسم 2011–12، قبل إن يفوز بالمركز الأول في موسم 2017–18، ويتأهل ليلعب في دوري البطولة الإنجليزية في موسم 2018–19 ويحصل ثانياً في الترتيب مما أهله للاعب في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز 2019–20.

الملعب
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ديربي ستيل سيتي
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تشكيلة اللاعبين
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البطولات
دوري الدرجة الأولى/الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز
البطل (1): 1897–98
الوصيف (2): 1896–97, 1899–00
دوري الشمال لكرة القدم
البطل (1):1945–46
كأس إنجلترا
البطل (4): 1899, 1902, 1915, 1925
الوصيف (2): 1901, 1936
الدوري المستوى الأول/دوري البطولة الإنجليزية
البطل (1): 1952–53
الوصيف (6): 1892–93, 1938–39, 1960–61, 1970–71, 1989–90, 2005–06
الدوري المستوى الثالث/الدوري الإنجليزي الدرجة الأولى
البطل (1): 2016–17
الوصيف (1): 1988–89
دوري المستوى الثاني/الدوري الإنجليزي الدرجة الرابعة
البطل (1): 1981–82
المدربين
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زياد علي

زياد علي محمد