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The Earth News
Date
City
New Delhi

A bombshell report by the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) reveals that 32% of sitting Rajya Sabha MPs have declared criminal cases against themselves, with 14% classified as billionaires. Analyzing affidavits from 229 of 233 MPs – including 37 recently elected ones – the study flags one murder case, four attempt-to-murder charges, and three crimes against women, painting a stark picture of India’s Upper House composition. Of the 229 MPs scrutinized (with Jharkhand’s seat vacant and three affidavits missing), 73 (32%) admitted criminal cases, including 36 (16%) facing serious IPC offenses. BJP leads with 27 of 99 MPs (27%) affected, followed by Congress (12/28), TMC (4/13), AAP (4/10), CPI(M) (3), and BRS (3). These figures underscore persistent concerns over criminalization in indirect elections, mirroring trends in prior ADR analyses. The gravity amplifies with heinous crimes: one MP linked to murder, four to attempted murder, and three to women-related offenses. Party-wise distribution highlights no monopoly, as cases span ideological lines, fueling demands for stricter nomination vetting. Wealth gaps dazzle equally: 31 MPs (14%) boast billionaire status (assets over Rs 100 crore). BJP has six such members, Congress five, YSRCP four, AAP and BRS two each, and NCP three. Average MP assets hit Rs 120.69 crore – BJP at Rs 28.29 crore, Congress Rs 128.61 crore, AAP a whopping Rs 574.09 crore, YSRCP Rs 522.63 crore, SP Rs 399.71 crore, BJD Rs 105.63 crore, and DMK Rs 11.90 crore.​ Standouts include BRS MP Bandi Partha Saradhi (Rs 5,300+ crore), AAP’s Rajinder Gupta (Rs 5,053+ crore), and YSRCP’s Alla Ayodhya Rami Reddy (Rs 2,577+ crore). At the bottom: AAP’s Sant Balbir Singh (Rs 3 lakh), Manipur’s Maharaja Sanajaoba Leishemba (Rs 5 lakh), and TMC’s Prakash Chik Baraik (Rs 9 lakh). This 2026 snapshot, building on ADR’s decade-long monitoring, reignites debates on transparency and accountability in Rajya Sabha, where party-nominated members wield veto power on bills. Critics, including ADR, decry the nexus of crime and cash influencing legislation, especially amid economic inequality. Regional angles hit home: Jammu & Kashmir’s representation (historically scrutinized) factors into national tallies, aligning with user interests in J&K governance. With Lok Sabha trends worsening (46% criminal cases in 2024), calls grow for judicial interventions like lifetime bans or asset disclosures.


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