Ballari Sreeramulu (born 8 August 1971) is an Indian politician who served as Minister of Transport Department and Tribal Welfare of Karnataka from 4 August 2021 till 13 May 2023. He was the Minister of Social Welfare Department of Karnataka from 12 October 2020 to 26 July 2021. He was member of Karnataka Legislative Assembly from Bellary Rural Molakalmuru Constituency in Chitradurga district. He is the Social Welfare minister in the Government of Karnataka. He served as a Health and Family welfare minister previously from (2008-2011 and August 2019 to October 2020) also as a Minister of Backward class welfare from September 2019 to October 2020. He serves in the Bharatiya Janata Party government led by B. S. Yediyurappa. He served as a member of Lok Sabha from 2014-2018 from Ballari. In March 2024, he was announced as the BJP candidate from the same constituency in the 2024 General Elections.[1]

Quick Facts Minister of Transport Government of Karnataka, Chief Minister ...
B. Sriramulu
Minister of Transport
Government of Karnataka
In office
4 August 2021  13 May 2023
Chief MinisterBasavaraj Bommai
Preceded byLaxman Savadi
Succeeded byRamalinga Reddy
Minister of Tribal Welfare
Government of Karnataka
In office
4 August 2021  13 May 2023
Chief MinisterBasavaraj Bommai
Preceded byministry created
Succeeded byB Nagendra
Minister of Social Welfare
Government of Karnataka
In office
12 October 2020  28 July 2021
Chief MinisterB. S. Yediyurappa
Preceded byGovind Karjol
Succeeded byKota Srinivas Poojary
Minister of Backward Classes Welfare
Government of Karnataka
In office
27 September 2019  12 October 2020
Chief MinisterB. S. Yediyurappa
Preceded byC. Puttarangashetty
Succeeded byKota Srinivas Poojary
Minister of Health & Family Welfare
Government of Karnataka
In office
20 August 2019  12 October 2020
Chief MinisterB. S. Yediyurappa
Preceded byShivanand Patil
Succeeded byK. Sudhakar
In office
30 May 2008  4 August 2011
Chief MinisterB. S. Yediyurappa
Preceded byR. Ashoka
Succeeded byArvind Limbavali
Minister of Tourism
Government of Karnataka
In office
18 February 2006  8 October 2007
Chief MinisterH. D. Kumaraswamy
Preceded byD. T. Jayakumar
Succeeded byG. Janardhana Reddy
Minister of Textiles
Government of Karnataka
In office
18 February 2006  25 January 2007
Chief MinisterH. D. Kumaraswamy
Preceded byAmaregouda P. Bayyapur
Succeeded byAppu Pattanshetty
Member of the Karnataka Legislative Assembly
In office
13 May 2018  13 May 2023
Preceded byTippaswamy.S
ConstituencyMolakalmuru
In office
2004–2014
Preceded byDiwakar Babu
Succeeded byGopalkrishna K
ConstituencyBellary Rural
Member of Parliament
Lok Sabha
In office
2014–2018
Preceded byJ. Shantha, BJP
Succeeded byV. S. Ugrappa, INC
ConstituencyBellary(LS)
Personal details
Born (1971-08-08) 8 August 1971 (age 53)
Ballari, Mysore State, India
Political partyBJP
Other political
affiliations
Badavara Shramikara Raitara Congress
(2011–2014)
SpouseLakshmi
Children4
RelativesJ. Shantha (Sister)
Close

Early life

B. Sreeramulu was born in Ballari, Karnataka on 8 August 1971 to B. Thimmappa, a railway employee and B. Honnuramma, a housewife. He is the seventh child among four brothers and four sisters.[citation needed]

Career

In the 1999 Lok Sabha elections Sreeramulu worked as a local aide for Sushma Swaraj, who contested from Bellary Lok Sabha constituency, when she contested against the Congress giant Sonia Gandhi, to give a fierce fight and lose at a close margin.[2] With the support of Sreeramulu and Janardhan Reddy, she later won the election from the same constituency in the next general elections.

In the 2008 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election he was elected from the Bellary constituency, where BJP had their first chance to form the government independently under the leadership of B. S. Yediyurappa. He later served as the Minister for health and family welfare for around 3 years in the Karnataka government. In September 2011, he resigned his post as the cabinet minister and also from the post of the MLA and he later quit the BJP, accusing and owing to alleged humiliation shouted out at his friend and mentor and jailed the former tourism minister Gali Janardhan Reddy for acquiring illegal wealth from various sources without documentation.[3]

Subsequently, with much competition and considering it to be a prestige, he contested as an Independent candidate again from the Bellary Rural constituency and also won.[4] He then floated a regional party, Badavara Shramikara Raithara Congress or BSR Congress.[5] He also announced that his party is going to contest from all the constituencies in the 2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election. Though his party did not manage to win many of the seats, it gave a major setback to BJP, by dividing the vote share mainly in the Hyderabad-Karnataka region, and shut the seat share to only 40 seats for the BJP.[6]

After his party faced the election defeat in 2013, he decided to merge his party with the BJP, saying that he and his party are keen to work, to bring Narendra Modi to power in the 2014 Indian general elections. In March 2014 he again joined BJP and contested Lok Sabha election from Bellary where he slidingly won the seat.[7][needs update]

He is BJP Karnataka, state vice-president. B. Sreeramulu was health, tourism Ballari district minister in the Yeddyurappa government.

In 2018, Karnataka assembly elections, Sreeramulu contested from Molkalmuru and Badami. He won Molkalmuru, by a margin of 40,000 odd votes, but lost the Badami seat by 1500 votes to the former chief minister Siddaramaiah.[8]

On 27 July 2018, Sreeramulu called for a separate state for North Karnataka due to alleged "injustice" in that part of the state.[9] After the coalition government led by H. D. Kumaraswamy lost its majority, paving the way to BJP to form the government he was inducted as a minister into the cabinet. He serves as Minister of Health and Family Welfare in the government.

In the 2023 General election to Karnataka Legislative assembly, Sreeramulu contested in Bellary seat and lost to INC candidate B Nagendra by a margin of 29300 votes.[10]

References

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