Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

2019 Indian general election in Madhya Pradesh

The 2019 Indian general election were held in Madhya Pradesh in 4 phases- between 29 April and 19 May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.[1] Results declared on 23 May 2019.

2019 Indian general election in Madhya Pradesh

← 2014 29 April 2019
6,12,19 May 2019
2024 →

29 seats
Turnout71.20% (Increase9.59%)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Party BJP INC BSP
Last election 27 2 0
Seats won 28 1 0
Seat change 1Increase 1Decrease 0
Percentage 58% 34.5% 2.5%

Candidates

edit
No Constituency Poll Date Candidates
BJP INC BSP+SP
1 Morena 12 May 2019 Narendra Singh Tomar Ramnivas Rawat Kartar Singh Bhadana
2 Bhind (SC) 12 May 2019 Sandhya Rai Devasish Jararia Babu Ram Jamor
3 Gwalior 12 May 2019 Vivek Shejwalkar Ashok Singh Mamta Balveer Singh Kushwaha
4 Guna 12 May 2019 Dr. K.P. Yadav Jyotiraditya Madhavrao Scindia Lokendra Singh Rajpoot
5 Sagar 12 May 2019 Raj Bahadur Singh Prabhu Singh Thakur Rajkumar Yadav
6 Tikamgarh 6 May 2019 Virendra Kumar Khatik Kiran Ahirwar R. D. Prajapati (SP)
7 Damoh (ST) 6 May 2019 Prahlad Patel Pratap Singh Lodhi Jittu Khare "Badal"
8 Khajuraho 6 May 2019 Vishnu Datt Sharma Kavita Singh Veer Singh Patel (SP)
9 Satna 6 May 2019 Ganesh Singh Raja Ram Tripathi Acche Lal Kushawaha
10 Rewa 6 May 2019 Janardan Mishra Siddharth Tiwari Vikash Singh Patel
11 Sidhi 29 April 2019 Riti Pathak Ajay Singh Rahul Ram Lal Panika
12 Shahdol (ST) 29 April 2019 Himadri Singh Pramila Singh Mohadal Singh Pav
13 Jabalpur 29 April 2019 Rakesh Singh Vivek Tankha Ramraj Ram
14 Mandla (ST) 29 April 2019 Faggan Singh Kulaste Kamal Maravi DNF
15 Balaghat 29 April 2019 Dhal Singh Bisen Madhu Bhagat Kankar Munjare
16 Chhindwara 29 April 2019 Natthan Shah Nakul Nath Gyaneshwar Gajbhiye
17 Narmadapuram 6 May 2019 Rao Udai Pratap Singh Shailendra Diwan M. P. Choudhary
18 Vidisha 12 May 2019 Ramakant Bhargav Shailendra Patel Geetawali P. S. Ahirwar
19 Bhopal 12 May 2019 Pragya Singh Thakur Digvijaya Singh Madho Singh Ahirwar
20 Rajgarh 12 May 2019 Rodmal Nagar Mona Sustani DNF
21 Dewas (SC) 19 May 2019 Mahendra Solanki Prahlad Tipaniya Badrilal "Akela"
22 Ujjain (SC) 19 May 2019 Anil Firojiya Babulal Malviya Satish Parmar
23 Mandsour 19 May 2019 Sudhir Gupta Meenakshi Natarajan Prabhulal Meghwal
24 Ratlam (ST) 19 May 2019 Guman Singh Damor Kantilal Bhuria Madhu Singh Patel
25 Dhar (ST) 19 May 2019 Chhatar Singh Darbar Dinesh Girwal Gulsingh Ramsingh Kawache
26 Indore 19 May 2019 Shankar Lalwani Pankaj Sanghvi Deepchand Ahirwal
27 Khargone 19 May 2019 Gajendra Patel Govind Muzaalda Amit Kumar Balke
28 Khandwa 19 May 2019 Nand Kumar Singh Chouhan Arun Yadav Dayaram Korku
29 Betul (ST) 6 May 2019 Durgadas Uike Ramu Tekam Ashok Bhalavi

Results

edit

Bharatiya Janata Party swept the state winning 28 out of 29 Seats and the Indian National Congress only won one seat.

Party wise

edit
Party Seats Votes[2]
Contested Won # %
Bharatiya Janata Party 29 28 2,14,06,911 58
Indian National Congress 29 1 1,27,33,074 34.5
Bahujan Samaj Party 25 - 8,78,013 2.4
Samajwadi Party 3 - 82,662 0.23
Gondwana Ganatantra Party 4 - 1,11,512 0.3
Independents - 6,99,148 1.91
NOTA 29 - 3,40,984 0.93
Total 29 3,65,69,626 100.0

Constituency-wise results

edit

Keys:    BJP (28)   INC (1)

Constituency Turnout[3] Winner Runner-up Margin
No. Name Candidate Party Votes % Candidate Party Votes %
1 Morena 61.96 Increase  Narendra Singh Tomar BJP 5,41,689 47.57 Ramniwas Rawat INC 4,28,348 37.62 1,13,341
2 Bhind (SC) 54.53 Increase  Sandhya Rai BJP 5,27,694 54.81 Devashish INC 3,27,809 34.05 1,99,885
3 Gwalior 59.82 Increase  Vivek Shejwalkar BJP 6,27,250 52.41 Ashok Singh INC 4,80,408 40.14 1,46,842
4 Guna 70.34 Increase  Dr. K.P. Yadav BJP 6,14,049 52.1 Jyotiraditya Scindia INC 4,88,500 41.44 1,25,549
5 Sagar 65.54 Increase  Raj Bahadur Singh BJP 6,46,231 62.29 Prabhu Singh Thakur INC 3,40,689 32.84 3,05,542
6 Tikamgarh (SC) 66.62 Increase  Virendra Kumar BJP 6,72,248 61.26 Kiran Ahirwar INC 3,24,189 29.54 3,48,059
7 Damoh 65.83 Increase  Prahlad Singh Patel BJP 7,04,524 60.51 Pratap Singh Lodhi INC 3,51,113 30.15 3,53,411
8 Khajuraho 68.31 Increase  Vishnu Datt Sharma BJP 8,11,135 64.46 Kavita Singh INC 3,18,753 25.33 4,92,382
9 Satna 70.71 Increase  Ganesh Singh BJP 5,88,753 52.86 Rajaram Tripathi INC 3,57,280 32.08 2,31,473
10 Rewa 60.41 Increase  Janardan Mishra BJP 5,83,769 57.54 Siddharth Tiwari INC 2,70,961 26.71 3,12,807
11 Sidhi 69.50 Increase  Riti Pathak BJP 6,98,342 54.44 Ajay Singh INC 4,11,818 32.11 2,86,524
12 Shahdol (ST) 74.77 Increase  Himadri Singh BJP 7,47,977 60.39 Pramila Singh INC 3,44,644 27.83 4,03,333
13 Jabalpur 69.46 Increase  Rakesh Singh BJP 8,26,454 65.38 Vivek Tankha INC 3,71,710 29.41 4,54,744
14 Mandla (ST) 77.79 Increase  Faggan Singh Kulaste BJP 7,37,266 48.57 Kamal Singh Maravi INC 6,39,592 42.14 97,674
15 Balaghat 77.66 Increase  Dhal Singh Bisen BJP 6,96,102 50.71 Madhu Bhagat INC 4,54,036 33.08 2,42,066
16 Chhindwara 82.42 Increase  Nakul Nath INC 5,87,305 47.04 Nathan Saha Kawreti BJP 5,49,769 44.04 37,536
17 Hoshangabad 74.22 Increase  Uday Pratap Singh BJP 8,77,927 69.33 Chandarbhan Singh INC 3,24,245 25.61 5,53,682
18 Vidisha 71.83 Increase  Ramakant Bhargav BJP 8,53,022 68.19 Shailendra Patel INC 3,49,338 27.97 5,03,084
19 Bhopal 65.74 Increase  Pragya Singh Thakur BJP 8,66,482 61.51 Digvijaya Singh INC 5,01,660 35.61 3,64,822
20 Rajgarh 74.42 Increase  Rodmal Nagar BJP 8,23,824 65.33 Mona Sustani INC 3,92,805 31.15 4,31,019
21 Dewas (SC) 79.51 Increase  Mahendra Solanki BJP 8,62,429 61.62 Prahlad Tipanya INC 4,90,180 35.02 3,72,249
22 Ujjain (SC) 75.43 Increase  Anil Firojiya BJP 7,91,663 63.18 Babulal Malviya INC 4,26,026 34 3,65,637
23 Mandsour 77.89 Increase  Sudhir Gupta BJP 8,47,786 61.81 Meenakshi Natarajan INC 4,71,052 34.34 3,76,734
24 Ratlam (ST) 75.70 Increase  Guman Singh Damor BJP 6,96,103 49.67 Kantilal Bhuria INC 6,05,467 43.21 90,636
25 Dhar 75.26 Increase  Chhatar Singh Darbar BJP 7,22,147 53.72 Dinesh Girwal INC 5,66,118 42.12 1,56,029
26 Indore 69.33 Increase  Shankar Lalwani BJP 10,68,569 65.57 Pankaj Sanghvi INC 5,20,815 31.96 5,47,754
27 Khargone (ST) 77.85 Increase  Gajendra Patel BJP 7,73,550 54.17 Govind Mujalde INC 5,71,040 39.99 2,02,510
28 Khandwa 76.90 Increase  Nandkumar Singh Chauhan BJP 8,38,909 57.14 Arun Yadav INC 5,65,566 38.52 2,73,343
29 Betul (ST) 78.18 Increase  Durgadas Uike BJP 8,11,248 59.72 Ramu Tekam INC 4,51,007 33.2 3,60,241

Assembly segments wise lead of parties

edit
Party Assembly segments Position in Assembly (as of 2023 election)
Bharatiya Janata Party 208 163
Indian National Congress 22 66
Others  – 1
Total 230

Post-election Union Council of Ministers from Madhya Pradesh

edit

Cabinet Ministers

edit
S No. Minister Party Lok Sabha Seat/Rajya Sabha Portfolios Term Start Term End
1. Narendra Singh Tomar Bharatiya Janata Party Morena Minister of Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare 31 May 2019 7 Dec 2023
Minister of Rural Development 31 May 2019 7 July 2021
Minister of Panchayati Raj 31 May 2019 7 July 2021
Minister of Food Processing Industries 18 Sept 2020 7 July 2021
2. Prahlad Singh Patel Damoh Minister of Culture 31 May 2019 7 July 2021
Minister of Tourism 31 May 2019 7 July 2021
3. Thawar Chand Gehlot Rajya Sabha Minister of Social Justice and Empowerment 31 May 2019 6 July 2021
4. Virendra Kumar Khatik Tikamgarh 7 July 2021 Incumbent
5. Jyotiraditya Scindia Rajya Sabha Minister of Civil Aviation 7 July 2021 Incumbent
Minister of Steel 7 July 2021 Incumbent

Minister of State

edit
S No. Minister Party Lok Sabha Seat/Rajya Sabha Portfolios Term Start Term End
1. Faggan Singh Kulaste Bharatiya Janata Party Mandla Minister of State in the Ministry of Steel 31 May 2019 Incumbent
Minister of State in the Ministry of Rural Development 7 July 2021 Incumbent
2. Prahlad Singh Patel Damoh Minister of State in the Ministry of Jal Shakti 7 July 2021 7 Dec 2023
Minister of State in the Ministry of Food Processing Industries
3. L. Murugan Rajya Sabha Minister of State in the Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying 7 July 2021 Incumbent
Minister of State in the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting

References

edit
  1. ^ Singh, Vijaita (1 September 2018). "General election will be held in 2019 as per schedule, says Rajnath Singh". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  2. ^ [17- State wise seats won and valid votes polled by political parties (PDF)] Election Commission of India, Elections, 2019 (17 LOK SABHA)
  3. ^ Final voter turnout of Phase 1 and Phase 2 of the Lok Sabha Elections 2019, The Election Commission of India (20 April 2019, updated 4 May 2019)