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Guwahati: Tripura and Arunachal Pradesh had to contend with the runners' up slot as Punjab grabbed the winner's trophy.
Had it been an issue of development or other related field, the two Northeast states would have basked in the glory, but not this time. They gave a chase to Punjab in making it to the Election Commission's (EC) notification on the office of profit controversy.
Of the total 230 MLAs who made it to the EC's now infamous list of those occupying office of profit, 75 names were from Northeast, a staggering 32.60 per cent in comparision to small number of MLAs in the seven states.
Asom's exclusion from the list as it was poll-bound saved the figure from going up.
Of the 75 Northeast legislators, 25 each are from Tripura and Arunachal Pradesh. Sikkim accounts for 17 MLAs, Manipur for six and Nagaland for two.
Of these states, Sikkim has a total of 32 legislative Assembly members while the other states have 60 members each.
Of the three states that have given the EC list a miss, Meghalaya has 60 members, Mizoram 40 members and Asom, which was excluded as the state is electing its new representatives, 126 members.
Sikkim has more than 50 per cent of its MLAs in the list, which is by far the highest ratio in the country.
While Uttar Pradesh, with the highest 404 MLAs in the country, does not figure in the EC list, Punjab has 37 of its 117 MLAs holding offices of profit, the highest among all states.
Nagaland may have two names on the EC list, but both are of much prominence. Not only has Chief Minister Neiphiu Rio made the dubious list, the Leader of Opposition has also followed suit, with both the
leaders referring each other's case to the Governor.
Of the Lok Sabha members across the country whose names appear on a separate EC list, Arunachal Pradesh MP Kiren Rijiju also figures in it.
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