
Tirupattur constituency, at Serial no 191 in Part no 285
TIRUPATTUR ConstituencyIndependent
Age
49
Education
8th Pass
Profession
Electrician
Affidavit declares profession as 'Electrician' and lists candidate as 'Independent', but web search confirms Nallathambi is actually a sitting DMK MLA who has represented Tirupattur since 2016 and was re-elected in 2021. There's no record of him running as an Independent candidate. His actual profession appears to be full-time politics, not electrical work.
AI-generated content based on web sources. Verify independently before making decisions.
Guardian
Ramalingam
Spouse Profession
House Wife
Current Representative — TIRUPATTUR
A. Nallathambi
DMK · Won in 2021
Declared assets of Rs. 19.13 lakh appear unusually low for a sitting MLA who has held office since 2016. As an elected representative for 8+ years with MLA salary, allowances, and constituency development benefits, the asset level seems modest. Without previous affidavit data for comparison, it's unclear if assets are understated or genuinely this limited.
Total Assets
₹19.14 L
Movable Assets
₹11.14 L
Immovable Assets
₹8.00 L
Liabilities
₹0
Political History
2016 - First elected as DMK MLA from Tirupattur with 80,791 votes (45.43%), defeating AIADMK's T.T. Kumar
2021 - Re-elected as DMK MLA from Tirupattur with 96,522 votes (52.37%), defeating PMK's T.K. Raja by 28,240 votes
May 2021 - Appointed Member of Committee on Privileges of the 16th Tamil Nadu Assembly
Achievements
• Successfully retained Tirupattur seat in 2021 with increased vote share from 45.43% (2016) to 52.37% (2021), demonstrating growing voter confidence
• Appointed to the Committee on Privileges of the 16th Tamil Nadu Assembly, indicating party trust in legislative responsibilities
• Maintained clean record with no criminal cases or corruption allegations during tenure as MLA since 2016
Nallathambi maintains a stable electoral presence with consecutive wins in 2016 and 2021, demonstrating voter support in Tirupattur. However, his constituency has faced criticism regarding basic amenities, with tribal communities threatening election boycotts due to lack of infrastructure. No major scandals or corruption allegations have surfaced, but limited public visibility and social media presence suggest modest grassroots engagement.