2019 Indian general election in Rajasthan

The 2019 Indian general election are due to be held in Rajasthan in Two phases- 29 April and 6 May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.[1]

2019 Indian general election in Rajasthan

11 April 2019 and 6 May 2019

25 seats
Turnout66.34% (3.23%)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Party BJP RLP INC
Alliance NDA NDA UPA
Last election 25 Didn't exist 0
Seats won 24 1 0
Seat change 1 1
Percentage 58.5% 2.04% 34.24%
Swing 4.0%

2.04%

1.6%

Results

Name of Party Vote Share Alliance vote share Change Seats won Changes
Bharatiya Janata Party (NDA) 58.47% 60.54% +3.57 24 1
Rashtriya Loktantrik Party (NDA) 2.04% New 1 1
Indian National Congress 34.24% 34.24% +1.6 0
No Constituency Turnout[2] Winner Party Margin
1 Ganganagar 74.77 Nihalchand   BJP 4,06,978
2 Bikaner 59.43 Arjun Ram Meghwal   BJP 2,64,081
3 Churu 65.90 Rahul Kaswan   BJP 3,34,402
4 Jhunjhunu 62.11 Narendra Kumar   BJP 3,02,547
5 Sikar 65.18 Sumedhanand Saraswati   BJP 2,97,156
6 Jaipur Rural 65.54 Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore   BJP 3,93,171
7 Jaipur 68.48 Ramcharan Bohara   BJP 4,30,626
8 Alwar 67.17 Balak Nath   BJP 3,29,971
9 Bharatpur 59.11 Ranjeeta Koli   BJP 3,18,399
10 Karauli–Dholpur 55.18 Manoj Rajoria   BJP 97,682
11 Dausa 61.50 Jaskaur Meena   BJP 78,444
12 Tonk–Sawai Madhopur 63.44 Sukhbir Singh Jaunapuria   BJP 1,11,291
13 Ajmer 67.32 Bhagirath Choudhary   BJP 4,16,424
14 Nagaur 62.32 Hanuman Beniwal   RLP 1,81,260
15 Pali 62.98 P P Chaudhary   BJP 4,81,597
16 Jodhpur 68.89 Gajendra Singh Shekhawat   BJP 2,74,440
17 Barmer 73.30 Kailash Choudhary   BJP 3,23,808
18 Jalore 65.74 Devaji Patel   BJP 2,61,110
19 Udaipur 70.32 Arjunlal Meena   BJP 4,37,914
20 Banswara 72.90 Kanak Mal Katara   BJP 3,05,464
21 Chittorgarh 72.39 Chandra Prakash Joshi   BJP 5,76,247
22 Rajsamand 64.87 Diya Kumari   BJP 5,51,916
23 Bhilwara 65.64 Subhash Chandra Baheria   BJP 6,12,000
24 Kota 70.22 Om Birla   BJP 2,79,677
25 Jhalawar–Baran 71.96 Dushyant Singh   BJP 4,53,928

Assembly segments wise lead of parties

Party Assembly segments Position in Assembly (as of 2018 election)
Bharatiya Janata Party 183 73
Indian National Congress 16 100
Bharatiya Tribal Party 1 2
Others   25
Total 200

Candidates

No Constituency Poll Date Candidates
NDA

  BJP (24)   RLP (1)

INC
1 Ganganagar 6 May 2019 Nihal Chand Chauhan   BJP Bharat Ram Meghwal   INC
2 Bikaner 6 May 2019 Arjun Ram Meghwal   BJP Madangopal Meghwal   INC
3 Churu 6 May 2019 Rahul Kaswan   BJP Rafique Mandelia   INC
4 Jhunjhunu 6 May 2019 Narendra Khinchal   BJP Shrawan Kumar   INC
5 Sikar 6 May 2019 Sumedhanand Saraswati   BJP Subhash Maharia   INC
6 Jaipur Rural 6 May 2019 Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore   BJP Krishna Poonia   INC
7 Jaipur 6 May 2019 Ramcharan Bohra   BJP Jyoti Khandelwal   INC
8 Alwar 6 May 2019 Mahant Balaknath   BJP Jitendra Singh   INC
9 Bharatpur 6 May 2019 Ranjeeta Kohli   BJP Abhijit Kumar Jatav   INC
10 Karauli–Dholpur 6 May 2019 Manoj Rajuriya   BJP Sanjay Kumar Jatav   INC
11 Dausa 6 May 2019 Jaskaur Meena   BJP Savita Meena   INC
12 Tonk–Sawai Madhopur 29 April 2019 Sukhbir Singh Jaunapuria   BJP Namo Narain Meena   INC
13 Ajmer 29 April 2019 Bhagirath Chaudhary   BJP Rijju Jhunjhunuwala   INC
14 Nagaur 6 May 2019 Hanuman Beniwal   RLP Dr. Jyoti Mirdha   INC
15 Pali 29 April 2019 P. P. Chaudhary   BJP Badri Ram Jakhar   INC
16 Jodhpur 29 April 2019 Gajendra Singh Shekhawat   BJP Vaibhav Gehlot   INC
17 Barmer 29 April 2019 Kailash Choudhary   BJP Manvendra Singh   INC
18 Jalore 29 April 2019 Devji Mansinghram Patel   BJP Ratan Dewasi   INC
19 Udaipur 29 April 2019 Arjunlal Meena   BJP Raghuveer Meena   INC
20 Banswara 29 April 2019 Kanak Mal Katara   BJP Tarachand Bhagora   INC
21 Chittorgarh 29 April 2019 Chandra Prakash Joshi   BJP Gopal Singh Idwa   INC
22 Rajsamand 29 April 2019 Diya Kumari   BJP Devkinandan Gurjar   INC
23 Bhilwara 29 April 2019 Subhash Chandra Baheria   BJP Rampal Sharma   INC
24 Kota 29 April 2019 Om Birla   BJP Ramnarayan Meena   INC
25 Jhalawar–Baran 29 April 2019 Dushyant Singh   BJP Pramod Sharma   INC

References

  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. 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)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.