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.
Candidates
Results
Bharatiya Janata Party swept the state winning 28 out of 29 Seats and the Indian National Congress only won one seat.
Party wise
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
Keys: BJP (28) INC (1)
Constituency | Turnout[3] | Winner | Runner-up | Margin |
No. | Name | Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Votes | % |
1 | Morena | 61.96 | Narendra Singh Tomar | | BJP | 5,41,689 | 47.57 | Ramniwas Rawat | | INC | 4,28,348 | 37.62 | 1,13,341 | 10.0 |
2 | Bhind (SC) | 54.53 | Sandhya Rai | | BJP | 5,27,694 | 54.81 | Devashish | | INC | 3,27,809 | 34.05 | 1,99,885 | 20.8 |
3 | Gwalior | 59.82 | Vivek Shejwalkar | | BJP | 6,27,250 | 52.41 | Ashok Singh | | INC | 4,80,408 | 40.14 | 1,46,842 | 12.3 |
4 | Guna | 70.34 | Dr. K.P. Yadav | | BJP | 6,14,049 | 52.1 | Jyotiraditya Scindia | | INC | 4,88,500 | 41.44 | 1,25,549 | 10.7 |
5 | Sagar | 65.54 | Raj Bahadur Singh | | BJP | 6,46,231 | 62.29 | Prabhu Singh Thakur | | INC | 3,40,689 | 32.84 | 3,05,542 | 29.5 |
6 | Tikamgarh (SC) | 66.62 | Virendra Kumar | | BJP | 6,72,248 | 61.26 | Kiran Ahirwar | | INC | 3,24,189 | 29.54 | 3,48,059 | 31.7 |
7 | Damoh | 65.83 | Prahlad Singh Patel | | BJP | 7,04,524 | 60.51 | Pratap Singh Lodhi | | INC | 3,51,113 | 30.15 | 3,53,411 | 30.4 |
8 | Khajuraho | 68.31 | Vishnu Datt Sharma | | BJP | 8,11,135 | 64.46 | Kavita Singh | | INC | 3,18,753 | 25.33 | 4,92,382 | 39.1 |
9 | Satna | 70.71 | Ganesh Singh | | BJP | 5,88,753 | 52.86 | Rajaram Tripathi | | INC | 3,57,280 | 32.08 | 2,31,473 | 20.8 |
10 | Rewa | 60.41 | Janardan Mishra | | BJP | 5,83,769 | 57.54 | Siddharth Tiwari | | INC | 2,70,961 | 26.71 | 3,12,807 | 30.9 |
11 | Sidhi | 69.50 | Riti Pathak | | BJP | 6,98,342 | 54.44 | Ajay Singh | | INC | 4,11,818 | 32.11 | 2,86,524 | 22.3 |
12 | Shahdol (ST) | 74.77 | Himadri Singh | | BJP | 7,47,977 | 60.39 | Pramila Singh | | INC | 3,44,644 | 27.83 | 4,03,333 | 32.6 |
13 | Jabalpur | 69.46 | Rakesh Singh | | BJP | 8,26,454 | 65.38 | Vivek Tankha | | INC | 3,71,710 | 29.41 | 4,54,744 | 36.0 |
14 | Mandla (ST) | 77.79 | Faggan Singh Kulaste | | BJP | 7,37,266 | 48.57 | Kamal Singh Maravi | | INC | 6,39,592 | 42.14 | 97,674 | 6.4 |
15 | Balaghat | 77.66 | Dhal Singh Bisen | | BJP | 6,96,102 | 50.71 | Madhu Bhagat | | INC | 4,54,036 | 33.08 | 2,42,066 | 17.6 |
16 | Chhindwara | 82.42 | Nakul Nath | | INC | 5,87,305 | 47.04 | Nathan Saha Kawreti | | BJP | 5,49,769 | 44.04 | 37,536 | 3.0 |
17 | Hoshangabad | 74.22 | Uday Pratap Singh | | BJP | 8,77,927 | 69.33 | Chandarbhan Singh | | INC | 3,24,245 | 25.61 | 5,53,682 | 43.7 |
18 | Vidisha | 71.83 | Ramakant Bhargav | | BJP | 8,53,022 | 68.19 | Shailendra Patel | | INC | 3,49,338 | 27.97 | 5,03,084 | 40.2 |
19 | Bhopal | 65.74 | Pragya Singh Thakur | | BJP | 8,66,482 | 61.51 | Digvijaya Singh | | INC | 5,01,660 | 35.61 | 3,64,822 | 25.9 |
20 | Rajgarh | 74.42 | Rodmal Nagar | | BJP | 8,23,824 | 65.33 | Mona Sustani | | INC | 3,92,805 | 31.15 | 4,31,019 | 34.2 |
21 | Dewas (SC) | 79.51 | Mahendra Solanki | | BJP | 8,62,429 | 61.62 | Prahlad Tipanya | | INC | 4,90,180 | 35.02 | 3,72,249 | 26.6 |
22 | Ujjain (SC) | 75.43 | Anil Firojiya | | BJP | 7,91,663 | 63.18 | Babulal Malviya | | INC | 4,26,026 | 34 | 3,65,637 | 29.2 |
23 | Mandsour | 77.89 | Sudhir Gupta | | BJP | 8,47,786 | 61.81 | Meenakshi Natarajan | | INC | 4,71,052 | 34.34 | 3,76,734 | 27.5 |
24 | Ratlam (ST) | 75.70 | Guman Singh Damor | | BJP | 6,96,103 | 49.67 | Kantilal Bhuria | | INC | 6,05,467 | 43.21 | 90,636 | 6.5 |
25 | Dhar | 75.26 | Chhatar Singh Darbar | | BJP | 7,22,147 | 53.72 | Dinesh Girwal | | INC | 5,66,118 | 42.12 | 1,56,029 | 11.6 |
26 | Indore | 69.33 | Shankar Lalwani | | BJP | 10,68,569 | 65.57 | Pankaj Sanghvi | | INC | 5,20,815 | 31.96 | 5,47,754 | 33.6 |
27 | Khargone (ST) | 77.85 | Gajendra Patel | | BJP | 7,73,550 | 54.17 | Govind Mujalde | | INC | 5,71,040 | 39.99 | 2,02,510 | 14.2 |
28 | Khandwa | 76.90 | Nandkumar Singh Chauhan | | BJP | 8,38,909 | 57.14 | Arun Yadav | | INC | 5,65,566 | 38.52 | 2,73,343 | 18.6 |
29 | Betul (ST) | 78.18 | Durgadas Uike | | BJP | 8,11,248 | 59.72 | Ramu Tekam | | INC | 4,51,007 | 33.2 | 3,60,241 | 26.5 |
Assembly segments wise lead of parties
Post-election Union Council of Ministers from Madhya Pradesh
Cabinet Ministers
Minister of State
References
- ^ 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.
- ^ [17- State wise seats won and valid votes polled by political parties (PDF)] Election Commission of India, Elections, 2019 (17 LOK SABHA)
- ^ 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)
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