2014 Indian general election in Madhya Pradesh

Summary

The 2014 Indian general election in Madhya Pradesh were held for 29 seats in the state. The major two contenders in the state were Bharatiya Janta Party (BJP) and the Indian National Congress (INC). The voting process was held in three phases on 10, 17 and 24 April 2014.[1]

Indian general election, 2014 in Madhya Pradesh

← 2009 10, 17, 24 April 2014. 2019 →

All 29 constituencies from Madhya Pradesh to the Lok Sabha
Turnout61.61% (Increase10.44%)
  Majority party Minority party
 
Party BJP INC
Alliance NDA UPA
Last election 16 seats 12 seats
Seats won 27 2
Seat change Increase 11 Decrease 10

Election Schedule edit

Poll event Phase
I II III
Notification date 15 March 2014 19 March 2014 29 March 2014
Last date for filing the nomination 22 March 2014 26 March 2014 5 April 2014
Date of Scrutiny 24 March 2014 27 March 2014 7 April 2014
Last date for withdrawal of nomination 26 March 2014 29 March 2014 9 April 2014
Date of poll 10 April 2014 17 April 2014 24 April 2014
Date of counting 16 May 2014
Voting Phases
I

(9 seats)

II

(10 seats)

III

(10 seats)

Result edit

Results of Indian general election, 2014 in Madhya Pradesh
Parties and coalitions Seats Popular vote
Contested Won +/− Votes % ±pp
Bharatiya Janata Party 29 27   11 1,60,15,685 54.8%   11.4%
Indian National Congress 29 2   10 1,03,40,274 35.4%  4.7%
Bahujan Samaj Party 29 0  1 11,24,772 3.8%   2.1%
Aam Aadmi Party 29 0 New 3,49,488 1.2% New
Samajwadi Party 11 0 - 2,21,306 0.8%   2.0%
Gondwana Ganatantra Party 12 0 - 1,69,453 0.6% -
Communist Party of India 5 0 - 96,683 0.3%  0.1%
Total 29 2,92,47,970
Valid votes 2,92,47,970 98.66
Votes cast / turnout 2,96,48,105 61.61
Abstentions 1,84,73,196 38.38
Registered voters 4,81,21,301 100.0

Constituency-wise results edit

Keys:    BJP (27)   INC (2)

Constituency Turnout Winner Runner-up Margin
No. Name Candidate Party Votes % Candidate Party Votes % Votes %
1 Morena 50.18   Anoop Mishra BJP 3,75,567 43.96 Brindawan Sikarwar BSP 2,42,586 28.40 1,32,981 15.6
2 Bhind (SC) 45.58   Bhagirath Prasad BJP 4,04,474 55.46 Imarti Devi INC 2,44,513 33.52 1,59,961 21.9
3 Gwalior 52.80   Narendra Singh Tomar BJP 4,42,796 44.68 Ashok Singh INC 4,13,097 41.68 29,699 3.0
4 Guna 60.89   Jyotiraditya Madhavrao Scindia INC 5,17,036 52.89 Jaibhan Singh Pawaiya BJP 3,96,244 40.53 1,20,792 12.4
5 Sagar 58.67   Laxmi Narayan Yadav BJP 4,82,580 54.1 Govind Singh Rajput INC 3,61,843 40.57 1,20,737 13.5
6 Tikamgarh (SC) 50.16   Virendra Kumar BJP 4,22,979 55.16 Kamlesh Ahirwar INC 2,14,248 27.94 2,08,731 27.2
7 Damoh 55.33   Prahlad Singh Patel BJP 5,13,079 56.14 Mahendra Pratap Singh INC 2,99,780 32.80 2,13,299 23.4
8 Khajuraho 51.36   Nagendra Singh BJP 4,74,966 54.31 Raja Pateria INC 2,27,476 26.01 2,47,490 28.3
9 Satna 62.63   Ganesh Singh BJP 3,75,288 41.08 Ajay Singh INC 3,66,600 40.13 8,688 0.95
10 Rewa 53.74   Janardan Mishra BJP 3,83,320 46.17 Sunderlal Tiwari INC 2,14,594 25.85 1,68,726 20.3
11 Sidhi 57.00   Riti Pathak BJP 4,75,678 48.07 Inderjeet Kumar INC 3,67,632 37.15 1,08,046 10.9
12 Shahdol (ST) 62.08   Dalpat Singh Paraste

(Died on 1 June 2016)

BJP 5,25,419 54.22 Nandini Singh INC 2,84,118 29.32 2,41,301 24.9
13 Jabalpur 58.55   Rakesh Singh BJP 5,64,609 56.34 Vivek Tankha INC 3,55,970 35.52 2,08,639 20.8
14 Mandla (ST) 66.79   Faggan Singh Kulaste BJP 5,85,720 48.06 Omkar Singh Markam INC 4,75,251 39.00 1,10,469 9.1
15 Balaghat 68.32   Bodh Singh Bhagat BJP 4,80,594 43.17 Hina Kawre INC 3,84,553 34.54 96,041 8.6
16 Chhindwara 79.00   Kamal Nath INC 5,59,755 50.54 Chandrabhan Singh BJP 4,43,218 40.01 1,16,537 10.5
17 Hoshangabad 65.80   Uday Pratap Singh BJP 6,69,128 63.85 Devendra Patel INC 2,79,168 27.06 3,89,960 37.8
18 Vidisha 65.71   Sushma Swaraj BJP 7,14,348 66.53 Lakshman Singh INC 3,03,650 28.28 4,10,698 38.3
19 Bhopal 57.75   Alok Sanjar BJP 7,14,178 63.19 P. C. Sharma INC 3,43,482 30.39 3,70,696 32.8
20 Rajgarh 64.03   Rodmal Nagar BJP 5,96,727 59.03 Narayan Singh INC 3,67,990 36.41 2,28,737 22.6
21 Dewas (SC) 70.75   Manohar Untwal BJP 6,65,646 58.18 Sajjan Singh Verma INC 4,05,333 35.43 2,60,313 22.8
22 Ujjain (SC) 66.63   Chintamani Malviya BJP 6,41,101 63.07 Premchand Guddu INC 3,31,438 32.61 3,09,663 30.5
23 Mandsour 71.41   Sudhir Gupta BJP 6,98,335 60.12 Meenakshi Natarajan INC 3,94,686 33.98 3,03,649 26.1
24 Ratlam (ST) 63.62   Dileep Singh Bhuria

(Died on 24 June 2015)[2]

BJP 5,45,980 50.41 Kantilal Bhuria INC 4,37,523 40.39 1,08,457 10.0
25 Dhar 64.55   Savitri Thakur BJP 5,58,387 51.84 Umang Singhar INC 4,54,059 42.16 1,04,328 9.7
26 Indore 62.26   Sumitra Mahajan BJP 8,54,972 64.92 Satyanarayan Patel INC 3,88,071 29.47 4,66,901 35.5
27 Khargone (ST) 67.67   Subhash Patel BJP 6,49,354 56.33 Ramesh Patel INC 3,91,475 33.96 2,57,879 22.4
28 Khandwa 71.48   Nandkumar Singh Chauhan BJP 7,17,357 57.04 Arun Yadav INC 4,57,643 36.39 2,59,714 20.7
29 Betul (ST) 65.17   Jyoti Dhurve BJP 6,43,651 61.43 Ajay Shah INC 3,15,037 30.07 3,28,614 31.4

Bye-elections edit

No. Constituency Name of Newly elected M.P. Party affiliation
12 Shahdol (ST) Gyan Singh

(Elected on 22 Nov 2016)

Bharatiya Janata Party
24 Ratlam (ST) Kantilal Bhuria

(Elected on 24 Nov 2015)[3]

Indian National Congress

Post-election Union Council of Ministers from Madhya Pradesh edit

Cabinet Ministers edit

S No. Minister Party Lok Sabha Seat/Rajya Sabha Portfolios Term Start Term End
1. Sushma Swaraj Bharatiya Janata Party Vidisha Minister of External Affairs 27 May 2014 30 May 2019
Minister of Overseas Indian Affairs 27 May 2014 7 Jan 2016
2. Narendra Singh Tomar Gwalior Minister of Labour and Employment 27 May 2014 9 Nov 2014
Minister of Mines 27 May 2014 5 July 2016
Minister of Steel 27 May 2014 5 July 2016
Minister of Rural Development 5 July 2016 30 May 2019
Minister of Panchayati Raj 5 July 2016 30 May 2019
Minister of Drinking Water and Sanitation 5 July 2016 3 Sept 2017
Minister of Housing and Urban Affairs 17 July 2017 3 Sept 2017
Minister of Parliamentary Affairs 13 Nov 2018 30 May 2019
3. Najma Heptulla Rajya Sabha Minister of Minority Affairs 27 May 2014 12 July 2016
4. Thawar Chand Gehlot Rajya Sabha Minister of Social Justice and Empowerment 27 May 2014 30 May 2019
5. Prakash Javadekar Rajya Sabha Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change 27 May 2014 5 July 2016
Minister of Information and Broadcasting 27 May 2014 9 Nov 2014
Minister of Human Resource Development 5 July 2016 30 May 2019
6. Anil Madhav Dave Rajya Sabha Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change 5 July 2016 18 May 2017

Minister of State edit

S No. Minister Party Lok Sabha Seat/Rajya Sabha Portfolios Term Start Term End
1. Prakash Javadekar Bharatiya Janata Party Rajya Sabha Minister of State in the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs 27 May 2014 9 Nov 2014
2. Faggan Singh Kulaste Mandla Minister of State in the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare 5 July 2016 3 Sept 2017
3. Virendra Kumar Khatik Tikamgarh Minister of State in the Ministry of Minority Affairs 3 Sept 2017 30 May 2019
Minister of State in the Ministry of Women and Child Development
4. M. J. Akbar Rajya Sabha Minister of State in the Ministry of External Affairs 5 July 2016 17 Oct 2018

Region-wise results edit

Region Total seats Bharatiya Janata Party Indian National Congress Bahujan Samaj Party Others
Baghelkhand 8 8   2 0   1 0   1 0
Bhopal Division 3 3   1 0   1 0   0
Chambal 4 3   1   0   0
Mahakaushal 5 4   2 1   2 0   0
Malwa 4 4   3 0   3 0   0
Nimar 5 5   3 0   3  
Total 29 27   11 2   10 0   1 0

References edit

  1. ^ "Lok Sabha polls 2014: EC announces 9 phase schedule". zeenews.india.com. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  2. ^ "BJP Lok Sabha Member Dileep Singh Bhuria Dies at 71". NDTV. 25 June 2015.
  3. ^ "Congress wrests back Ratlam in Madhya Pradesh from BJP in by-election, its tally goes up to 45 in Lok Sabha". CNN-IBN. 24 November 2015.