2019 Indian general election in Chhattisgarh
The 2019 Indian general elections held in India between 11 April and 23 April 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.[1]
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11 seats | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Turnout | 71.64% (1.24%) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Candidates
Major election candidates are:[2]
| No | Constituency | Candidates | |
|---|---|---|---|
| BJP | INC | ||
| 1 | Sarguja (ST) | Renuka Singh | Khel Sai Singh |
| 2 | Raigarh (ST) | Gomati Sai | Laljeet Singh Rathia |
| 3 | Janjgir-Champa (SC) | Guharam Ajgalley | Ravi Bhardwaj |
| 4 | Korba | Jyotinand Dubey | Jyotsna Charandas Mahant |
| 5 | Bilaspur | Arun Sao | Atal Shrivastav |
| 6 | Rajnandgaon | Santosh Pandey | Bholaram Sahu |
| 7 | Durg | Vijay Baghel | Pratima Chandrakar |
| 8 | Raipur | Sunil Kumar Soni | Pramod Dubey |
| 9 | Mahasamund | Chunni Lal Sahu | Dhanendra Sahu |
| 10 | Bastar (ST) | Baiduram Kashyap | Deepak Baij |
| 11 | Kanker (ST) | Mohan Mandavi | Biresh Thakur |
Results
Results was announced on 23 May 2019.
Party wise
| Parties and coalitions | Seats | Popular vote | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contested | Won | +/− | Votes | % | ±pp | ||
| Bharatiya Janata Party | 11 | 9 | 1 | 69,02,477 | 51.44% | 1.79% | |
| Indian National Congress | 11 | 2 | 1 | 55,69,283 | 41.51% | 2.42% | |
| Bahujan Samaj Party | 11 | 0 | 3,13,261 | 2.33% | 0.31% | ||
| Gondwana Ganatantra Party | 9 | 0 | 86,097 | 0.64% | 0.19% | ||
| Independents | 54 | 0 | 2,59,902 | 1.93% | 2.36% | ||
| Total | 11 | 1,34,18,288 | |||||
| Valid votes | 1,34,18,288 | 98.55 | |||||
| Votes cast / turnout | 1,36,14,553 | 73.79 | |||||
| Registered voters | 1,84,50,225 | 100.0 | |||||
Constituency wise
| No | Constituency | Turnout[3] | Candidate | Party | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sarguja (ST) | 77.40 | Renuka Singh | BJP | 1,57,873 |
| 2 | Raigarh (ST) | 77.91 | Gomati Sai | BJP | 66,027 |
| 3 | Janjgir-Champa (SC) | 65.81 | Guharam Ajgalley | BJP | 83,255 |
| 4 | Korba | 75.38 | Jyotsna Charandas Mahant | INC | 26,349 |
| 5 | Bilaspur | 64.48 | Arun Sao | BJP | 1,41,763 |
| 6 | Rajnandgaon | 76.20 | Santosh Pandey | BJP | 1,11,966 |
| 7 | Durg | 71.78 | Vijay Baghel | BJP | 3,91,978 |
| 8 | Raipur | 66.16 | Sunil Kumar Soni | BJP | 3,48,238 |
| 9 | Mahasamund | 74.65 | Chunni Lal Sahu | BJP | 90,511 |
| 10 | Bastar (ST) | 66.26 | Deepak Baij | INC | 38,982 |
| 11 | Kanker (ST) | 74.42 | Mohan Mandavi | BJP | 6,914 |
Assembly segments wise lead of parties
| Party | Assembly segments | Position in Assembly (as of 2023 election) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bharatiya Janata Party | 66 | 54 | |
| Indian National Congress | 24 | 35 | |
| Others | 7 | 1 | |
| Total | 90 | ||
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.
- "Lok Sabha elections: BJP list of candidates for 2019". Indian Express. 26 March 2019. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
- "Final Voter turnout of Phase 1 and Phase 2 of the Lok Sabha Elections 2019". Election Commission of India. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
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