Kodikunnil Suresh
Constituency: Mavelikara
Born/Date of Birthday: 4 June 1962
Place of Birth: Kodikunnil, Thiruvananthapuram District
Political party: Indian National Congress
Educational Qualifications: Higher Secondary, LL.B.
Educated at: Govt-Law College, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala
Profession: Political and Social Worker
Marital Status: Married
Date of Marriage: 30 Jun 1994
Spouse's Name: Smt. Bindhu Suresh
No. of Sons: 1
No.of Daughters: 1
Parents: Shri Kunjan, Smt. Thankamma P.
Permanent Address: School View, Kizhakekara, P.O. Kottarakara, Distt. Kollam, Kerala-691506
Kodikunnil Suresh is an Indian politician and working president of Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee (KPCC). He was a Minister of State in the Ministry of Labour. He is a member of the seventeenth Lok Sabha representing Mavelikara in Kerala. He has been a member of Lok Sabha seven times. He is also the Secretary of the All India Congress Committee (AICC).
Early life and education
He was born in Kodikkunil, Thiruvananthapuram District to a poor family, as the youngest son of Kunjan and Thankamma. He did his graduation and passed his LL.B from Law College, Thiruvananthapuram.
Political career
He was elected to the Lok Sabha for the first time in 1989 and thereafter in the 1991,1996, 1999 General Elections to the Lok Sabha from Adoor Constituency. He was defeated in the 1998, 2004 elections. He served as the member of the Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee and member of AICC. He won the general election to the Lok Sabha in 2009 defeating R. S. Anil of Communist Party of India with a margin of 48,048 votes. In 2014 he won the Lok Sabha elections defeating Chengara Surendran of Communist Party of India and is the present Member of Parliament from Mavelikkara constituency. He has been selected as working president of Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee (KPCC) on 19 September 2018.
Controversies
His victory in the 2009 election was declared void by the Kerala High Court over the allegation that his caste certificate was fake, and that he was a Christian. This verdict was later reversed by the Supreme Court.
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