Baljit Kaur
Member of the Legislative Assembly, Punjab
Malout
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
Baljit Kaur is the Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) for the Malout constituency in Punjab. Current party affiliation: Indian National Congress.
Source: Wikipedia — 16th Punjab Assembly (ECI results)· 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 Legislative Assembly (MLA)
An MLA is the person your area elects to your state's law-making house (the Vidhan Sabha) to help make state laws, approve the state budget, and raise your local problems with the government.
You can hold them accountable for
- Attending Assembly sessions regularly and taking an active part — speaking in debates, asking questions, and voting on bills and motions (poor attendance and silence are legitimate things to question).
- Making and improving laws: reading bills carefully, debating them, proposing amendments, and voting on them in the Vidhan Sabha — on State List and Concurrent List subjects, from health, land and water to school education.
- Guarding public money — scrutinising and voting on the state budget, taxes, and money bills (Articles 202-207), and checking that spending gives value.
- Holding the state government to account: using Question Hour, calling-attention and adjournment motions, resolutions, and committee work (e.g. Public Accounts, Estimates committees).
- Representing everyone in the constituency — including people who did not vote for them — being reachable, holding constituency office hours, and raising local grievances with ministers and officials.
- Using the MLA Local Area Development (MLA-LAD) fund honestly and only recommending genuinely needed public works (where the scheme exists; amounts and rules vary by state, and in a few states it is not run).
- Disclosing assets, liabilities, and educational/criminal details in the election affidavit to the Election Commission, and declaring conflicts of interest as required by House rules.
- Following the law and the rules and conduct of the House — respecting the Speaker's authority, maintaining decorum, and not disrupting proceedings.
- Not defecting: obeying the Tenth Schedule (anti-defection law) rules on party loyalty, and accepting disqualification consequences if breached.
- Ethical conduct — no bribery, no cash-for-questions or cash-for-votes, no misuse of office, no intimidation, and declaring interests before speaking or voting on matters they benefit from.
- Helping constituents access their rights and government schemes (pensions, ration cards, housing, scholarships, etc.) and following up their grievances with the administration.
- Being transparent and answerable about their own record — attendance, questions asked, fund utilisation, and work done for the area.
- If serving as a Minister or Chief Minister: running that department or the government well, delivering on its mandate, and answering to the House for it (this is an extra duty, not one every MLA has).
What this role covers — and what it does not
What they do
- Debating and voting on state bills and laws in the Legislative Assembly, and proposing amendments.
- The subjects a state can legislate on — the State List and the shared Concurrent List — e.g. police and public order, prisons, public health and hospitals, school education, agriculture and land, water, local government, and roads and buildings, plus state taxes (on Concurrent subjects like education, a central law wins if the two clash).
- Passing the state budget and approving how the state taxes and spends public money (money bills start in the Assembly).
- Deciding who governs the state — the Assembly's majority decides who becomes Chief Minister (the Governor formally appoints whoever can hold the Assembly's confidence), and MLAs can move, or must face, confidence and no-confidence motions.
- Recommending local development works through the MLA-LAD constituency fund, where the state runs one (the MLA recommends; district officials execute).
- Parliamentary tools to question the executive: Question Hour, calling-attention motions, adjournment/short-duration debates, resolutions, and private member's bills.
- Membership and scrutiny work on Assembly committees such as Public Accounts, Estimates, and subject committees.
- Raising constituency grievances and demands directly with ministers, the district administration, and departments.
- Acting as part of electoral colleges: elected MLAs help elect the President of India (Article 54) and elect the state's Rajya Sabha members (Article 80); in states with a second house they also elect some Legislative Council members.
- Helping decide some changes to the Constitution — for certain amendments that affect the states' powers, the state Assembly must approve (ratify) them (Article 368).
- In states that have two houses, taking part in how the Assembly and the Legislative Council work together on laws — though the Assembly has the final say (Article 197).
- If appointed a Minister/CM: exercising executive powers over the assigned department(s) and the state administration.
Not their job — ask instead
- National / Union subjects — defence, foreign affairs, railways, national highways, income tax, currency, telecom, and citizenship. Ask your Member of Parliament (MP) and the Union government; these are decided in Parliament, not the state Assembly.
- Everyday city/village civic services — garbage collection, street lights, local drains, ward roads, and property tax within a municipal or panchayat area. These belong to your Municipal Corporator/Councillor or Panchayat member and the Mayor/Sarpanch and the local body, not the MLA.
- Actually executing works and running government offices — an ordinary MLA only recommends and demands. Delivery is done by the bureaucracy: the District Collector/Magistrate (called Deputy Commissioner in some states) and department officers, answerable through the government, not directly to the MLA.
- Court cases, verdicts, bail, and interpreting the law — that is the judiciary (courts), which is independent of legislators.
- Petrol/diesel pump prices, GST rates, and bank interest rates are not set by one MLA. Fuel prices mostly follow global crude-oil costs plus central excise duty and state VAT; GST rates are fixed jointly by the Union and all the states together in the GST Council; interest rates are set by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Your state government does set its own VAT on fuel, but that is a government and budget decision, not something a single MLA controls.
- Giving someone a government job or transferring an official — recruitment is done by public service commissions and recruitment boards on merit; postings are administrative decisions, and pressuring for them can itself be misconduct.
- Ground-level policing and law-and-order enforcement decisions — handled by the police and the state Home department (an MLA can raise concerns but does not command the police unless serving as the relevant minister).
Sources: Constitution of India, Part VI, Articles 168-212 (State Legislatures), especially Art. 170 (composition of Assemblies), Art. 172 (five-year term), Art. 173 (qualifications), Art. 188 (oath), Arts. 190-191 (vacation of seats and disqualifications), Art. 194 (powers and privileges), Art. 197 (Assembly's final say over the Legislative Council), and Arts. 202-207 (state budget and money bills); plus the Seventh Schedule (division of subjects into Union, State and Concurrent Lists) and Article 368 (state ratification of some constitutional amendments) — https://legislative.gov.in/constitution-of-india/ · Tenth Schedule of the Constitution (Anti-Defection Law) — https://legislative.gov.in/constitution-of-india/ · PRS Legislative Research — explainers on state legislatures and the anti-defection law — https://prsindia.org/ · MLA Local Area Development (MLA-LAD) scheme overview (state-run constituency development funds; rules and amounts vary by state) — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Member_of_Legislative_Assembly_Local_Area_Development_Fund and respective state planning department portals · Election Commission of India — candidate affidavits (assets, liabilities, criminal and educational details) — https://www.eci.gov.in/ and https://affidavit.eci.gov.in/
Their record
Every fact links to its official source and shows when we checked it.
Declared to the Election Commission
These figures are declared by the leader in their official election form. A declared case means a trial is pending — it is not a conviction.
Education
Post Graduate
Work
politician
Age
Not available yet
See all sources
- Education
- Post Graduate MyNeta / ADR — 2022 assembly affidavit· Updated Jul 14, 2026· as of 2022 assembly election affidavit
- Work
- politician Wikidata· Updated Jul 14, 2026
- Declared wealth
- ₹1,17,23,783 (~1 Crore) MyNeta / ADR — 2022 assembly affidavit· Updated Jul 14, 2026· as of 2022 assembly election affidavit
- Declared loans
- ₹60,96,914 (~60 Lacs) MyNeta / ADR — 2022 assembly affidavit· Updated Jul 14, 2026· as of 2022 assembly election affidavit
- Declared court cases
- 0 MyNeta / ADR — 2022 assembly affidavit· Updated Jul 14, 2026· as of 2022 assembly election affidavit
- Times elected
- 1 Wikidata· Updated Jul 14, 2026
- Past roles
- Member of the 16th Punjab Legislative Assembly (2022–present) Wikidata· Updated Jul 14, 2026
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