Quick Facts
Born:
October 27, 1920, Uzhavoor, India
Died:
November 9, 2005, New Delhi (aged 85)

Kocheril Raman Narayanan (born October 27, 1920, Uzhavoor, India—died November 9, 2005, New Delhi) was an Indian politician and diplomat, who was the president of India from 1997 to 2002. He was the first Dalit, a member of the country’s lowest social castes, to occupy the office.

Despite his family’s poverty and social status, Narayanan’s intellect won him a government-sponsored scholarship. After graduating from the University of Travancore (now the University of Kerala), he worked as a journalist for the Hindu (1944–45) and the Times of India (1945). He soon won another scholarship and left India to attend the London School of Economics, where he received top academic honours. While in England Narayanan also served as a foreign correspondent for Social Welfare Weekly.

Narayanan returned to India in 1948 and soon after entered the foreign service, despite opposition from upper-caste officials. During a long and distinguished career as a diplomat (1949–83), he held posts in numerous countries but was especially effective while serving in China (1976–78), where he helped mend relations following a 15-year rift. He was also ambassador to the United States (1980–83) at a time of strained relations between the two countries. In 1979 Narayanan was named vice-chancellor of Jawaharlal Nehru University. An intellectual and a scholar, Narayanan was the author or coauthor of several works on Indian politics and international relations, notably India and America: Essays in Understanding (1984) and Non-Alignment in Contemporary International Relations (1981).

In 1984 Narayanan became active in politics. He served in parliament as a cabinet minister and in 1992 was named vice president, a post he held for five years. In 1997 he was elected president of India, winning 95 percent of the votes of mainly upper-caste lawmakers. Once in office, Narayanan expanded the role of the presidency, which had been largely ceremonial. He also sought to end violence and corruption and improve international relations. He left office in 2002, succeeded by A.P.J. Abdul Kalam.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.

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president

president of India, the head of state of the Republic of India. The president, or rashtrapati, is indirectly elected every five years by an electoral college comprising the elected members of both houses of India’s parliament—the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha—as well as the elected representatives of all legislative assemblies of the states of India and the union territories of Delhi and Puducherry. The president is called the first citizen of India and serves as the de facto commander in chief of the Indian Armed Forces. The president serves a five-year term, and there is no limit on the number of times the president can be reelected to office.

The selection process for the president of India, the qualifications required, and the procedure for impeachment are detailed in Articles 52–62 of the Constitution of India. The vice president serves as the deputy to the president and is elected by only the elected and nominated members of the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha; the state legislative assemblies play no part in the vice presidential election. The first president of India was Rajendra Prasad, who was elected to the role the day India became a republic, on January 26, 1950. The official residence of the president is Rashtrapati Bhavan, the former residence of the British viceroys to India.

Powers and duties of office

The executive powers of the union of India are vested in the president, who exercises his functions with the advice of the prime minister and the Council of Ministers. The vice president of India is the ex officio chairman of the Rajya Sabha and discharges the duties of the president when the president is absent.

Some of the president’s powers and duties are listed here. All executive actions by the Indian government are taken in the president’s name.

Executive powers
    • appoint the prime minister and, on the advice of the prime minister, the Council of Ministers
    • appoint the attorney general, the comptroller and auditor-general, election commissioners (including the chief election commissioner), the chair and members of the Union Public Service Commission, state governors, and administrators of union territories
Legislative powers
    • summon and prorogue sessions of parliament, and address parliament during the first session after every Lok Sabha election
    • call for a confidence vote in the Lok Sabha and dissolve the same in the event of the prime minister’s inability to prove a majority
    • has the right to be informed about all affairs of parliament
    • summon joint sessions of the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha in case of legislative deadlocks
    • appoint the speaker and deputy speaker of the Lok Sabha, as well as the chair and deputy chair of the Rajya Sabha
    • nominate 12 members to the Rajya Sabha; and, until 2020, nominated two members from the Anglo-Indian community to the Lok Sabha
    • veto or return bills passed by both houses of parliament (Similarly, state governors can send bills passed by legislatures in their states to the president for consideration, and the president has a veto power in this case as well.)
    • pass ordinances, which carry the same power as acts of parliament, if the houses of parliament are not in session (When parliament convenes again, such ordinances can be passed by both houses to make them law.)
Financial powers
    • appoint the chair and members of the Finance Commission of India
    • control the Contingency Fund of India (a fund set aside for dealing with national emergencies)
    • need to give prior recommendation for financial bills to be introduced in Parliament
Judicial powers
    • appoint all judges of the Supreme Court and high courts, including the chief justice of the Supreme Court
    • grant pardons, reprieves, respites, suspensions, remissions, or commutations of death sentences; sentences by court-martial; and sentences given for offenses against laws made on subjects which fall under the purview of the executive power of the union
Diplomatic powers
    • sign international treaties and agreements, which are negotiated in the name of the president
    • represent India in international forums
Military powers
    • serve as the commander in chief of the Indian Armed Forces
    • appoint the chiefs of the Indian Army, Indian Air Force, and Indian Navy
    • can declare war or peace on the advice of parliament
Emergency powers
    • In the event of internal or external aggression, the president can declare a national emergency on the advice of the prime minister and Council of Ministers. Such an emergency remains in force indefinitely as long as it is ratified by both houses of parliament through a two-thirds majority. The president can also suspend fundamental rights (basic rights that are granted to all citizens of India) during this period. A national emergency was declared by Pres. Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed in June 1975 on the advice of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and continued until March 1977.
    • The president can declare a state emergency in any Indian state in the event of the failure of constitutional machinery in the state. This needs to be ratified by parliament within two months and can be in place for up to three years. Several instances of state emergency have been seen over the years, the first instance being in the state of Punjab in 1951.
    • The president can proclaim a financial emergency in the event of a threat to the country’s financial stability. This lasts for two months but can continue indefinitely with the approval of parliament. In this scenario, all financial bills passed by the federal as well as state governments require presidential approval. The president can also order a reduction in salary and allowance for all people working for federal or state governments.

The president is given immunity from any criminal proceedings but can be impeached by parliament for offenses violating the Indian constitution. Impeachment proceedings can be initiated by either house of parliament and are then investigated by the other house. The motion must then be passed with a two-thirds majority in the house that initiated the impeachment to remove the president from office.

Selection process

A candidate for president must be an Indian citizen at least 35 years of age and should conform to all conditions necessary to be a member of the Lok Sabha. The president may not hold any position that may bring him or her financial gain under the central government, state governments, or any public authority or any other office of profit. A president who is a member of the Lok Sabha or Rajya Sabha at the time of election must vacate that post before taking the oath as president.

The president is elected through an electoral college, which includes elected members of the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha as well as members of the legislative assemblies of all states of India and the union territories of Delhi and Puducherry. Members of the Legislative Councils of the states, nominated members in legislative assemblies, and nominated members of the Rajya Sabha are not allowed to vote in the presidential election.

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List of presidents of India

The table provides a list of all the presidents of India.

no. name home state assumed office left office
Source: https://presidentofindia.gov.in/former-presidents
1 Rajendra Prasad Bihar January 26, 1950 May 13, 1962
2 Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan Andhra Pradesh May 13, 1962 May 13, 1967
3 Zakir Husain Telangana (formerly undivided Andhra Pradesh) May 13, 1967 May 3, 1969 (died in office)
Acting Varahagiri Venkata Giri (in his capacity as vice president) Odisha May 3, 1969 July 20, 1969
Acting M. Hidayatullah (chief justice of India’s Supreme Court; acted as president during presidential elections) Madhya Pradesh July 20, 1969 August 24, 1969
4 Varahagiri Venkata Giri Odisha August 24, 1969 August 24, 1974
5 Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Delhi August 24, 1974 February 11, 1977 (died in office)
Acting B.D. Jatti (in his capacity as vice-president) Karnataka February 12, 1977 July 24, 1977
6 Neelam Sanjiva Reddy Andhra Pradesh July 25, 1977 July 25, 1982
7 Giani Zail Singh Punjab July 25, 1982 July 25, 1987
8 R. Venkataraman Tamil Nadu July 25, 1987 July 25, 1992
9 Shankar Dayal Sharma Madhya Pradesh July 25, 1992 July 25, 1997
10 K.R. Narayanan Kerala July 25, 1997 July 25, 2002
11 A.P.J. Abdul Kalam Tamil Nadu July 25, 2002 July 25, 2007
12 Pratibha Patil Maharashtra July 25, 2007 July 25, 2012
13 Pranab Mukherjee West Bengal July 25, 2012 July 25, 2017
14 Ram Nath Kovind Uttar Pradesh July 25, 2017 July 25, 2022
15 Droupadi Murmu Odisha July 25, 2022 still in office
Sanat Pai Raikar