Madhya Pradesh Congress Committee

Madhya Pradesh Congress
मध्य प्रदेश कांग्रेस
President Kamal Nath
Headquarters Indira Bhawan, Link Road No.1, Shivaji Nagar, Bhopal - 462016
Student wing NSUI Madhya Pradesh
Youth wing Madhya Pradesh Youth Congress
Women's wing Madhya Pradesh Mahila Congress
Ideology
Alliance United Progressive Alliance
Seats in Lok Sabha
3 / 545
[1](currently 530 members + 1 Speaker)
Seats in Rajya Sabha
3 / 11
Seats in 
58 / 230
(Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly)
Election symbol
Website
http://mpcongress.in/

Madhya Pradesh Congress Committee or (MP Congress) is the Pradesh Congress Committee (state wing) of the Indian National Congress (INC) serving in the state of Madhya Pradesh.[2]

Current President of the MPCC is Kamal Nath.[3][4][5][6]

Structure and Composition

#Name of the OrganisationName of the PresidentName of the Vice President
01MP Youth CongressKunal ChoudharyNIL
03MP Mahila CongressNIL
04NSUI MP[[]]NIL
05SevadalNIL
06INTUCNIL

List of Presidents

S. No. Photo Name Took Office Left Office
1 Radhakishan Malviya 1998 2003
2 Subhash Yadav 2008
3 Suresh Pachouri 2008 2011
4 Kantilal Bhuria 2011 2014
5 Arun Yadav 2014 2018
6 Kamal Nath 01/05/2018 Incumbent

List of Chief Ministers

Ravishankar Shukla
Arjun Singh
Digvijaya Singh


No Name Term of office Party[lower-alpha 1] Days in office
1 Ravishankar Shukla
MLA for Saraipali
1 November 1956 31 December 1956 Indian National Congress 61 days
2 Bhagwantrao Mandloi
MLA for Khandwa
1 January 1957 30 January 1957 30 days
3 Kailash Nath Katju
MLA for Jaora
31 January 1957 14 March 1957 43 days
14 March 1957 11 March 1962 1823 days [Total 1866 days]
4 Bhagwantrao Mandloi
MLA for Khandwa
12 March 1962 29 September 1963 567 days
5 Dwarka Prasad Mishra
MLA for katangi
30 September 1963 8 March 1967 1256 days
9 March 1967 29 July 1967 143 days [Total 1399 days]
6 Nareshchandra Singh
MLA for Pussore
13 March 1969 25 March 1969 Indian National Congress 13 days
7 Shyama Charan Shukla
MLA for Rajim
26 March 1969 28 January 1972 1038 days
8 Prakash Chandra Sethi
MLA for Ujjain Uttar
29 January 1972 22 March 1972 54 days
23 March 1972 22 December 1975 1004 days [Total 1058 days]
9 Shyama Charan Shukla [2]
MLA for Rajim
23 December 1975 29 April 1977 494 days
10 Arjun Singh
MLA for Churhat
8 June 1980 10 March 1985 Indian National Congress 1736 days
11 March 1985 12 March 1985 2 days
11 Motilal Vora
MLA for Durg
13 March 1985 13 February 1988 1068 days
12 Arjun Singh [2]
MLA for Churhat
14 February 1988 24 January 1989 345 days [Total 2083 days]
13 Motilal Vora
MLA for Durg
25 January 1989 8 December 1989 318 days [Total 1386 days]
14 Shyama Charan Shukla [3] 9 December 1989 4 March 1990 86 days [Total 1618 days]
15 Digvijaya Singh
MLA for Raghogarh
7 December 1993 1 December 1998 Indian National Congress 1820 days
1 December 1998 8 December 2003 1834 days [Total 3654 days]

Electoral Performance

YearGeneral ElectionVotes PolledSeats Won
19511st Assembly3,434,058194
19511st Lok Sabha3,713,53727
19572nd Assembly3,691,999232
19572nd Lok Sabha3,967,19935
19623rd Assembly2,527,257142
19623rd Lok Sabha2,651,88224
19674th Assembly3,700,686167
19674th Lok Sabha3,774,36424
19715th Lok Sabha4,027,65821
19725th Assembly5,219,823220
19776th Assembly4,200,71784
19776th Lok Sabha3,835,8071
19807th Assembly5,741,077246
19807th Lok Sabha5,949,85935
19848th Lok Sabha8,898,83540
19858th Assembly6,937,747250
19899th Lok Sabha7,420,9358
19909th Assembly6,634,51856
199110th Lok Sabha7,425,64427
199310th Assembly9,628,464174
199611th Lok Sabha7,111,7538
199811th Assembly10,778,985172
199812th Lok Sabha10,611,31710
199913th Lok Sabha11,135,16111
200312th Assembly8,059,41438
200414th Lok Sabha6,289,0134
200813th Assembly817031871
200915th Lok Sabha 29
201314th Assembly 58
201416 Lok Sabha 2

District Congress Committees DCC

#Name of districtName of the President
01Agarmalwa
02Alirajpur
03Anuppur
04AshoknagarKanhaiya Ram Lodhi
05BalaghatVisheshwar Bhagat
06BarwaniVirendra Singh Rathore
07BetulSunil Sharma
08Bhind
09BhopalKailash Mishra (City)
Arun Shrivastav (Rural)
10Burhanpur
11Chhatarpur
12Chhindwara
13DamohAjay Tandon
14Datia
15DewasManoj Rajani (City)
16Dhar
17DindoriVirendra Bihari Shukla
18GunaVithal Das Meena
19GwaliorDevendra Sharma
20Harda
21HoshangabadKapil Fauzdar
22IndorePramod Tandon
23Jabalpur
24Jhabua
25KatniMithilesh Jain (City)
Guman Singh Thakur (Rural)
26Khandwa
27Khargone
28Mandla
29Mandsaur
30Morena
31Narsinghpur
32Neemuch
33Panna
34Raisen
35RajgarhNarayan Singh Amlave
36Ratlam
37RewaGurmeet Singh Mangu
38Sagar
39Satna
40SehoreRatan Singh Thakur
41SeoniRajkumar Khurana
42SingrauliTilak Raj Singh
43ShahdolSubhash Gupta
44Shajapur
45Sheopur
46ShivpuriBaijnath Yadav
47SidhiRudrapratap Singh
48Tikamgarh
49Ujjain
50Umaria
51Vidisha

Factions

Madhya Pradesh Vikas Congress was a faction in the Congress Party from 1996 to 1998. MPVC was founded by former aviation minister Madhavrao Scindia, after he was refused an INC ticket for the 1996 Lok Sabha elections.

Scindia won a seat [7] as an MPVC candidate as a result of hard work & strong campaign led by his workers & followers who had also resigned from INC.[8] In 1998 MPVC merged into Indian National Congress.

See also

Notes

  1. This column only names the chief minister's party. The state government he heads may be a complex coalition of several parties and independents; these are not listed here.

References

  1. "Members: Lok Sabha". loksabha.nic.in. Lok Sabha Secretariat. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  2. Congress in States Archived 3 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine. All India Congress Committee website.
  3. Sharma, Hemender. "Congress leader Kamal Nath starts Madhya Pradesh campaign with three temple visits". INDIA TODAY. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  4. "Not in race for any post, says Kamal Nath as he takes charge". Business Standard. Press Trust of India. May 1, 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  5. "Kamal Nath, Now the Unanimous Face of Congress, Rejuvenates Party Workers in MP". news18. News18. May 1, 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  6. Rai, DS. "What Kamal Nath as president means for Congress in Madhya Pradesh". dailyo. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  7. "Scindia". Rediff. March 6, 1998. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  8. Desai, Bharat (May 15, 1996). "Elections 1996: Madhavrao Scindia quits Congress(I), takes on party high command". INDIA TODAY. Retrieved 4 May 2018.


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