Anurag Sharma
Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha
Performance
Official recordNot enough official data yet to score performance.
How well they do their official job — attendance, questions, funds. From government records.
How is this worked out?About
Anurag Sharma is a Member of Parliament in the Rajya Sabha (the upper house of India's Parliament), representing Himachal Pradesh. Current party affiliation: Indian National Congress. Current term: 10-Apr-2026 to 09-Apr-2032.
Source: Rajya Sabha Secretariat (rajyasabha.nic.in) — current members list· Updated Jul 14, 2026
What they are accountable for
As your representative, here is the full list of what a citizen can hold them to account for.
Member of Parliament — Rajya Sabha (Council of States)
A Member of Parliament in the Rajya Sabha helps make national laws for the whole country and speaks up for their state, but is chosen by the state's elected MLAs (or nominated by the President) rather than by voters directly.
You can hold them accountable for
- Attending sittings of the Rajya Sabha regularly and taking active part in debates, discussions, and voting on Bills and motions (attendance and participation are publicly recorded).
- Using their law-making powers responsibly — proposing, examining, debating, and voting on national legislation and constitutional amendments in the interest of the country and their State.
- Representing the concerns and interests of the State they were elected from (or, for nominated members, contributing their special expertise) in national law-making.
- Scrutinising the government by asking questions, moving motions, and working through parliamentary committees to hold ministers and departments to account.
- Examining and debating the Union Budget and public spending, and questioning how public money is used.
- Using their MPLADS entitlement (Rs 5 crore/year) honestly — recommending only eligible public-good works within their State (or anywhere in the country, for nominated members), including the mandated share for Scheduled Caste (15%) and Scheduled Tribe (7.5%) areas, and making sure the money is properly used and audited.
- Transparency about money and interests — disclosing assets and liabilities and registering personal, pecuniary, or business interests in the Rajya Sabha Register of Members' Interests, and declaring conflicts of interest before speaking or voting.
- Following the Constitution, the law, and the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business of the Council of States, and respecting the authority of the Chair.
- Ethical conduct and integrity — behaving honestly, avoiding corruption, and abiding by the code/rules overseen by the Rajya Sabha Ethics Committee (India's first parliamentary Ethics Committee, set up by the Rajya Sabha in 1997).
- Not misusing the anti-defection rules — abiding by the Tenth Schedule without taking any corrupt inducement to switch sides or votes.
- Being reachable and responsive to citizens, institutions, and civil society in their State, and communicating their parliamentary work.
- Delivering on the mandate of any Ministry or department they head IF they are also a Union Minister — answering to Parliament for that portfolio's performance and decisions.
- Not misusing parliamentary privileges (Article 105) — free speech in the House is protected, but the privilege is meant for genuine legislative work, not to evade accountability.
- Justifying claims on salary, allowances, and facilities provided under the Salary, Allowances and Pension of Members of Parliament Act, 1954, and using them properly.
What this role covers — and what it does not
What they do
- Making, amending, and repealing national (Union and Concurrent List) laws, and passing constitutional amendment Bills.
- Special Rajya Sabha powers: authorising Parliament to legislate on a State List subject in the national interest (Article 249) and to create new All-India Services (Article 312), each by a resolution passed with at least two-thirds of the members present and voting.
- Scrutiny of the executive through Question Hour, Zero Hour, Special Mentions, motions, and resolutions.
- Membership and work of parliamentary committees that include Rajya Sabha members — the Department-Related Standing Committees, the Public Accounts Committee, and the Committee on Public Undertakings (note: the Estimates Committee is made up only of Lok Sabha members).
- Reviewing the Union Budget and financial proposals, and recommending changes to money bills within 14 days (though the Rajya Sabha cannot reject or amend them — Article 109).
- Recommending local development works under MPLADS (Rs 5 crore/year) to the District Authority — within their State, or anywhere in India for nominated members.
- Taking part in electing the President of India (only elected members vote; nominated members do not) and the Vice-President of India, and in the impeachment or removal processes for the President, judges, and other constitutional authorities.
- Approving Presidential Proclamations (such as Emergency), international-treaty-related legislation, and other matters requiring parliamentary approval.
- Raising issues of national and State importance on the floor of the House and putting them on the public record.
Not their job — ask instead
- Local civic works and services — roads, drains, water supply, streetlights, garbage: these are executed and run by municipal corporations/councils, panchayats, and State line departments, not by an MP. MPLADS only lets an MP recommend and fund some works; ask your local body and the District Authority.
- Law and order, policing, and crime — handled by the State government and State police (police is a State subject). Escalate to local police, the Superintendent of Police/Commissioner, and the State Home Department.
- Day-to-day administration and most public services in the State — schools, hospitals, land records, ration cards — run by the State government, its Ministers, and district administration, not by a Rajya Sabha MP.
- Removing or forming the Union government — a no-confidence motion can only be moved and voted in the Lok Sabha; the Rajya Sabha does not decide who governs. Look to Lok Sabha MPs on that.
- Constituency-level grievances of the kind handled by MLAs and Lok Sabha MPs — a Rajya Sabha MP represents the State as a whole and has no single geographic constituency of voters.
- Running a Ministry — a Rajya Sabha MP does NOT head any department unless separately appointed a Union Minister; for a specific portfolio, ask the Minister in charge of that department.
- Conducting elections or deciding disputes about them — that is the Election Commission of India and the courts, not the MP.
Sources: Constitution of India — Articles 54, 61, 66, 80, 83, 84, 105, 109, 249, 312 (Council of States composition, term, qualifications, privileges, money bills, special powers, and election/removal of the President and Vice-President): https://legislative.gov.in/constitution-of-india/ · Rajya Sabha official portal (Digital Sansad) — role, composition, and functioning of the Council of States: https://sansad.in/rs · Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in the Council of States, and 'Rajya Sabha at Work' (Chapter 2, Composition): https://cms.rajyasabha.nic.in/ · MPLADS Guidelines and scheme details, Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (Rs 5 crore/year; suspension during 2020 and restoration from November 2021, continuation to 2025-26; district recommendation rules; 15% SC / 7.5% ST): https://mplads.gov.in/ · Salary, Allowances and Pension of Members of Parliament Act, 1954 (pay, allowances, facilities): https://legislative.gov.in/
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