Hirapur Assembly constituency

Hirapur Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in Paschim Bardhaman district in the Indian state of West Bengal.

Hirapur
Former constituency No. 259 for the West Bengal Legislative Assembly
Constituency details
CountryIndia
RegionEast India
StateWest Bengal
DistrictPaschim Bardhaman
LS constituencyAsansol
Established1957
Abolished2011
ReservationNone

Overview edit

Hirapur assembly constituency was part of Asansol (Lok Sabha constituency). The Delimitation Commission abolished Hirapur as an assembly constituency in 2011. The area is now covered under Asansol Dakshin Assembly constituency.[1]

Election results edit

1977-2006 edit

Amitava Mukhopadhyay of CPI(M) won the Hirapur assembly seat in 2006, defeating his nearest rival Moloy Ghatak of Trinamool Congress. Contests in most years were multi cornered but only winners and runners are being mentioned. In 2001, Moloy Ghatak of Trinamool Congress defeated Dilip Ghosh (Independent). In 1996, Shyamadas Banerjee of Congress defeated Mumtaz Hussein of Janata Dal. In 1991, Mumtaz Hussein of JD defeated Suhrid Basu Mallick of Congress. In 1987, Suhrid Basu Mallick of Congress defeated Bamapada Mukherjee of CPI (M). In 1982, Bamapada Mukherjee of CPI (M) defeated Shibdas Ghatak of Congress. In 1977, Bamapada Mukherjee of CPI (M) defeated Santimoy Aich of Congress.[2]

1957-1972 edit

In 1972, Triptimoy Aich of Congress won the Hirapur seat. In 1971 and 1969, Bamapada Mukherjee of CPI (M) won the seat. In 1967, Shibdas Ghatak of Congress won the seat. In 1962, Dr. Gopika Ranjan Mitra of Congress won the seat. In 1957, Taher Hossain (Independent) won the seat. Prior to that the Burnpur area was part of Asansol assembly constituency.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Delimitation Commission Order No. 18" (PDF). Government of West Bengal. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-09-18. Retrieved 2010-08-21.
  2. ^ "259 - Hirapur Assembly Constituency". Partywise Comparison Since 1977. Election Commission of India. Retrieved 2009-08-29.
  3. ^ Bandopadhyay, Santimoy, Asansol Parikrama (History of Asansol), (in Bengali), pp157-158, Trinity Trust, Election results 1957-1972.

23°40′01″N 86°55′59″E / 23.667°N 86.933°E / 23.667; 86.933