Dewas Lok Sabha constituency

Dewas Lok Sabha constituency is one of the 29 Lok Sabha (parliamentary) constituencies in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. This constituency came into existence in 2008 as a part of the implementation of delimitation of parliamentary constituencies. Following delimitation, Shajapur constituency ceased to exist and Dewas constituency came into being.[2][3] This constituency is reserved for the candidates belonging to the Scheduled castes and covers parts of Sehore, Shajapur, Agar Malwa and Dewas districts.

Dewas
Lok Sabha constituency
Dewas Lok Sabha constituency within Madhya Pradesh
Constituency details
CountryIndia
RegionCentral India
StateMadhya Pradesh
Assembly constituenciesAshta
Agar
Shajapur
Shujalpur
Kalapipal
Sonkatch
Dewas
Hatpipliya
Established1962–1967; 2009–
Total electors1,296,627[1]
ReservationSC
Member of Parliament
17th Lok Sabha
Incumbent
PartyBharatiya Janata Party
Elected year2019
Preceded byManohar Untwal

Since May 2019, the Member of Parliament for this constituency is Mahendra Solanki[4] whose term is expected to last until May 2024.

Assembly segments edit

Presently, Dewas Lok Sabha constituency comprises the following eight Vidhan Sabha (legislative assembly) segments:[1]

# Name District Member Party
157 Ashta (SC) Sehore Gopal Singh BJP
166 Agar (SC) Agar Malwa Madhav Singh Gehlot BJP
167 Shajapur Shajapur Arun Bhimawad BJP
168 Shujalpur Inder Singh Parmar BJP
169 Kalapipal Ghanshyam Chandravansi BJP
170 Sonkatch (SC) Dewas Rajendra Sonkar BJP
171 Dewas Gayatri Raje Pawar BJP
172 Hatpipliya Manoj Choudhary BJP

Agar, Shajapur, Shujalpur, Dewas, Sonkatch and Hatpipliya Vidhan Sabha segments were earlier part of the erstwhile Shajapur (Lok Sabha constituency), while Ashta segment was earlier part of Bhopal (Lok Sabha constituency).

Members of Parliament edit

Year Member Party
1962 Hukam Chand Kachwai Bharatiya Jana Sangh
1967-2008 : See Shajapur
2009 Sajjan Singh Verma Indian National Congress
2014 Manohar Untwal Bharatiya Janata Party
2019 Mahendra Solanki
2024

Election results edit

2024 edit

2024 Indian general election: Dewas
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
BJP Mahendra Solanki
INC Rajendra Malviya
NOTA None of the above
Majority
Turnout
gain from Swing

2019 edit

2019 Indian general elections: Dewas[4]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
BJP Mahendra Solanki 862,429 61.62
INC Prahlad Singh Tipanya 490,180 35.02
BSP Badrilal Akela 18,338 1.31
NOTA None of the Above 9,034 0.65 -0.35
Majority 372,249 26.60
Turnout 1,398,946 79.46 +8.72
BJP hold Swing

2014 edit

2014 Indian general elections: Dewas[5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
BJP Manohar Untwal 665,646 58.19
INC Sajjan Singh Verma 405,333 35.43   12.66
BSP Gokul Prasad Dongare 17,238 1.51
NOTA None of the Above 10,253 0.90   0.90
Majority 260,313 22.76
Turnout 1,143,970 70.74   10.39
BJP gain from INC Swing

2009 edit

2009 Indian general elections: Dewas[6]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
INC Sajjan Singh Verma 376,421 48.06
BJP Thavarchand Gehlot 360,964 46.09
BSP Bhagirath Parihar 10,743 1.37
Majority 15,457 1.97
Turnout 782,929 60.35
INC gain from BJP Swing

1962 edit

1962 Indian general election: Dewas[7]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
ABJS Hukumchand Kacchaway 106,706 46.49
INC Kanhaiyalal 99,557 43.38%
RRP Ramlal 23,240 10.13%
Turnout 229,503 54.81%

[7][6][5][4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Three new Parliamentary seats come into existence Dewas, Tikamgarh and Ratlam in Shajapur, Seoni and Jhabua out". Department of Public Relations, Madhya Pradesh government. 19 December 2008. Archived from the original on 21 June 2009.
  2. ^ "Delimitation of Parliamentary and Assembly Constituencies Order, 2008" (PDF). 26 November 2008. Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  3. ^ "Three new faces in Cong candidates' list". Central Chronicle. 14 March 2009. Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 16 April 2009.
  4. ^ a b c "Statistical Report on General Elections, 2019 to the Lok Sabha".
  5. ^ a b "Statistical Report on General Elections, 2014 to the Lok Sabha".
  6. ^ a b "Statistical Report on General Elections, 2009 to the Lok Sabha".
  7. ^ a b "General Election, 1962 (Vol I, II) - General Election Archive (1951-2004) - Election Commission of India". eci.gov.in. Retrieved 30 November 2020.

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