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 Organisation | Name of the President | Name of the Vice President |
---|---|---|---|
01 | MP Youth Congress | Kunal Choudhary | NIL |
03 | MP Mahila Congress | NIL | |
04 | NSUI MP | [[]] | NIL |
05 | Sevadal | NIL | |
06 | INTUC | NIL |
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
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
Year | General Election | Votes Polled | Seats Won |
---|---|---|---|
1951 | 1st Assembly | 3,434,058 | 194 |
1951 | 1st Lok Sabha | 3,713,537 | 27 |
1957 | 2nd Assembly | 3,691,999 | 232 |
1957 | 2nd Lok Sabha | 3,967,199 | 35 |
1962 | 3rd Assembly | 2,527,257 | 142 |
1962 | 3rd Lok Sabha | 2,651,882 | 24 |
1967 | 4th Assembly | 3,700,686 | 167 |
1967 | 4th Lok Sabha | 3,774,364 | 24 |
1971 | 5th Lok Sabha | 4,027,658 | 21 |
1972 | 5th Assembly | 5,219,823 | 220 |
1977 | 6th Assembly | 4,200,717 | 84 |
1977 | 6th Lok Sabha | 3,835,807 | 1 |
1980 | 7th Assembly | 5,741,077 | 246 |
1980 | 7th Lok Sabha | 5,949,859 | 35 |
1984 | 8th Lok Sabha | 8,898,835 | 40 |
1985 | 8th Assembly | 6,937,747 | 250 |
1989 | 9th Lok Sabha | 7,420,935 | 8 |
1990 | 9th Assembly | 6,634,518 | 56 |
1991 | 10th Lok Sabha | 7,425,644 | 27 |
1993 | 10th Assembly | 9,628,464 | 174 |
1996 | 11th Lok Sabha | 7,111,753 | 8 |
1998 | 11th Assembly | 10,778,985 | 172 |
1998 | 12th Lok Sabha | 10,611,317 | 10 |
1999 | 13th Lok Sabha | 11,135,161 | 11 |
2003 | 12th Assembly | 8,059,414 | 38 |
2004 | 14th Lok Sabha | 6,289,013 | 4 |
2008 | 13th Assembly | 8170318 | 71 |
2009 | 15th Lok Sabha | 29 | |
2013 | 14th Assembly | 58 | |
2014 | 16 Lok Sabha | 2 | |
District Congress Committees DCC
# | Name of district | Name of the President |
---|---|---|
01 | Agarmalwa | |
02 | Alirajpur | |
03 | Anuppur | |
04 | Ashoknagar | Kanhaiya Ram Lodhi |
05 | Balaghat | Visheshwar Bhagat |
06 | Barwani | Virendra Singh Rathore |
07 | Betul | Sunil Sharma |
08 | Bhind | |
09 | Bhopal | Kailash Mishra (City) Arun Shrivastav (Rural) |
10 | Burhanpur | |
11 | Chhatarpur | |
12 | Chhindwara | |
13 | Damoh | Ajay Tandon |
14 | Datia | |
15 | Dewas | Manoj Rajani (City) |
16 | Dhar | |
17 | Dindori | Virendra Bihari Shukla |
18 | Guna | Vithal Das Meena |
19 | Gwalior | Devendra Sharma |
20 | Harda | |
21 | Hoshangabad | Kapil Fauzdar |
22 | Indore | Pramod Tandon |
23 | Jabalpur | |
24 | Jhabua | |
25 | Katni | Mithilesh Jain (City) Guman Singh Thakur (Rural) |
26 | Khandwa | |
27 | Khargone | |
28 | Mandla | |
29 | Mandsaur | |
30 | Morena | |
31 | Narsinghpur | |
32 | Neemuch | |
33 | Panna | |
34 | Raisen | |
35 | Rajgarh | Narayan Singh Amlave |
36 | Ratlam | |
37 | Rewa | Gurmeet Singh Mangu |
38 | Sagar | |
39 | Satna | |
40 | Sehore | Ratan Singh Thakur |
41 | Seoni | Rajkumar Khurana |
42 | Singrauli | Tilak Raj Singh |
43 | Shahdol | Subhash Gupta |
44 | Shajapur | |
45 | Sheopur | |
46 | Shivpuri | Baijnath Yadav |
47 | Sidhi | Rudrapratap Singh |
48 | Tikamgarh | |
49 | Ujjain | |
50 | Umaria | |
51 | Vidisha | |
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
- ↑ 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
- ↑ "Members: Lok Sabha". loksabha.nic.in. Lok Sabha Secretariat. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
- ↑ Congress in States Archived 3 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine. All India Congress Committee website.
- ↑ Sharma, Hemender. "Congress leader Kamal Nath starts Madhya Pradesh campaign with three temple visits". INDIA TODAY. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ "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.
- ↑ "Kamal Nath, Now the Unanimous Face of Congress, Rejuvenates Party Workers in MP". news18. News18. May 1, 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ Rai, DS. "What Kamal Nath as president means for Congress in Madhya Pradesh". dailyo. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ "Scindia". Rediff. March 6, 1998. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ Desai, Bharat (May 15, 1996). "Elections 1996: Madhavrao Scindia quits Congress(I), takes on party high command". INDIA TODAY. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
External links
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