1952 Ajmer State Legislative Assembly election

Elections to the Ajmer Legislative Assembly were held on 27 March 1952. 134 candidates competed for the 30 seats in the Assembly.[1] This was the final election for the Ajmer Legislative Assembly: on 1 November 1956, under the provisions of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, the Ajmer State was abolished and its constituencies were merged into Rajasthan.[2]

1952 Ajmer Legislative Assembly election

27 March 1952 (1952-03-27)

All 30 seats in the Ajmer Legislative Assembly
16 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Haribhau Upadhyaya
Party Indian National Congress Bharatiya Jana Sangh
Seats won 20 3

Constituencies

The Ajmer Legislative Assembly consisted of 30 seats distributed in six two-member constituencies; Ajmer-I (South West), Ajmer-II (East), Jethana, Nasirabad, Kekri and Masuda and eighteen single-member constituencies. None of these seats were under reserved category for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Total 134 candidates contested for these 30 seats. Maximum number of candidates were 13 from Ajmer-I (South West) and Ajmer-II (East), while Bhinai had only 2 contestants, minimum of all the constituencies.[1]

Results

Summary of results of the 1952 Ajmer Legislative Assembly election[1]
PartyFlagSeats
Contested
Won % of
Seats
VotesVote %
Indian National Congress 302066.671,04,41144.47
Bharatiya Jana Sangh 15310.0028,05711.95
Pursharathi Panchayat 6310.0015,7817.72
Communist Party of India 203,4941.49
Socialist Party 201,0550.45
Independent politician 79413.3381,99034.92
Total Seats 30Voters4,62,810Turnout2,34,788 (50.73%)

Elected members

Constituency Member Party
Ajmer-I (South West)ParasramPursharathi Panchayat
ArjandasPursharathi Panchayat
Ajmer-II (East)Bal Krishna KaulIndian National Congress
Harjit LalIndian National Congress
Ajmer-III (Kala Bagh)Ramesh ChandraIndian National Congress
Ajmer-IV (Town Hall)Bhiman DasPursharathi Panchayat
Ajmer - V (Naya Bazar)AmbalalBharatiya Jana Sangh
Ajmer-VI (Dhaldin Ka Jhopra)Syed Abbas AliIndian National Congress
ShrinagarHari Bhao UpadhayaIndian National Congress
DerathuHimmat AliIndian National Congress
JethanaNarayanIndian National Congress
Bhagirath SinghIndian National Congress
Pushker SouthJai NarainIndian National Congress
Pushker NorthShiv Narayan SinghIndian National Congress
GagwanaKishan Lal LamrorIndian National Congress
NasirabadLaxminaryanIndian National Congress
Mahendra SinghIndependent
BhinaiKalyan SinghBharatiya Jana Sangh
Deolia KalanChagan LalIndian National Congress
SawarLaxman SinghIndependent
KekriJethmalIndian National Congress
SewadasIndian National Congress
Beawar City NorthBrijmohanlalIndian National Congress
Beawar City SouthJagan NathIndian National Congress
ShyamgarhWali MohammadIndian National Congress
MasudaNarayan SinghIndependent
Surajmal MoryaIndian National Congress
NayanagarGanpati SinghBharatiya Jana Sangh
JawajaChiman SinghIndependent
TodgarhPrem SinghIndian National Congress

By-elections

In September 1953 a by-election was held for the Bhinai seat.[3][4] In the original election, the Bhinai seat had been won by Kalyan Singh of the Bharatiya Jan Sangh, who defeated the Indian National Congress candidate Madan Singh with 3,164 votes (51.58%) against 2,970 (48.42%).[5] However, the election in Bhinai was declared void as nomination papers had been improperly rejected and a by-election was called.[4] Three candidates contested the by-election; Kalyan Singh of BJS, Chiman Singh of INC and independent candidate Misri Lal Chitlangia.[3][6] Kalyan Singh retained the seat with 3,662 votes (65.3%). The Congress candidate got 1,635 votes (29.2%) and Chitalngia got 310 votes (5.5%).[3][4]

See also

References

  1. "Statistical Report on General Election, 1951 : To the Legislative Assembly of Ajmer" (PDF). Election Commission of India. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  2. "Reorganisation of States, 1955" (PDF). The Economic Weekly. 15 October 1955. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
  3. Election Commission of India. Bye-election results 1952-95
  4. Indian Press Digests. Monograph Series (2-3 ed.). 1956. p. 1.
  5. Election Commission of India. STATISTICAL REPORT ON GENERAL ELECTION, 1951 TO THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF AJMER
  6. Gazette of India. Controller of Publications. 1954. p. 280.
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