Amravati Assembly constituency

Coordinates: 20°55′54.99″N 77°45′55.05″E / 20.9319417°N 77.7652917°E / 20.9319417; 77.7652917
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Amravati
Constituency No. 38 for the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly
Constituency details
CountryIndia
RegionWestern India
StateMaharashtra
DistrictAmravati
LS constituencyAmravati
ReservationNone
Member of Legislative Assembly
14th Maharashtra Legislative Assembly
Incumbent
PartyIndian National Congress
Elected year2019

Amravati Assembly constituency is one of the 288 constituencies of Maharashtra Vidhan Sabha and one of the eight which are located in the Amravati district.

It is a part of the Amravati (Lok Sabha constituency) along with five other Vidhan Sabha assembly constituencies, viz. Badnera, Teosa, Daryapur (SC), Melghat (ST) and Achalpur.[1]

As per orders of Delimitation of Parliamentary and Assembly constituencies Order, 2008, No. 38 Amravati Assembly constituency is composed of the following: 1. Amravati Tehsil (Part), Amravati (M.Corp.) – Ward No. 1 to 5, 19 to 31, 41 to 56 and 62 to 71 of the district.[2]

In 2019 Sulbha Sanjay Khodke defeated incumbent Sunil Deshmukh To become MLA. Indian National Congress is the most successful party in this constituency

Members of the Legislative Assembly

Year Member Party
1962 Umerlalji Kedia Indian National Congress
1967 K. N. Nawathe
1972 Dattatray Metkar
1978 Surendra Bhuyar Indian National Congress
1980
1985 Devisingh Shekhawat Indian National Congress
1990 Jagdish Gupta Bharatiya Janata Party
1995
1999 Sunil Deshmukh Indian National Congress
2004
2009 Raosaheb Shekhawat
2014 Sunil Deshmukh Bharatiya Janata Party
2019 Sulbha Khodke Indian National Congress

Election results

2019

2019 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly election: Amravati[3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
INC Sulbha Sanjay Khodke 82,582
BJP Deshmukh Sunil Punjabrao 64,313
NOTA None of the Above
Majority
Turnout
INC gain from BJP Swing

Previous elections

Year A C No. Winner Gender Party Votes Runner Up Gender Party Votes
2014 38 Dr. Deshmukh Sunil Panjabrao M BJP 84033 Raosaheb Shekhawat M INC 48961
2009 38 Raosaheb Shekhawat M INC 61331 Dr. Deshmukh Sunil Panjabrao M IND 55717
2004 124 Dr. Deshmukh Sunil Panjabrao M INC 81698 Jagdish Gupta M BJP 49435
1999 124 Dr. Deshmukh Sunil Panhjabrao M INC 57270 Gupta Jagdish Motilal M BJP 47400
1995 124 Jagdish Motilal Gupta M BJP 71845 Mujaffar Ahmad Mo. Yusuf M IND 22509
1990 124 Jagdish Gupta M BJP 35319 Pushpatai Vijay Bonde F INC 31133
1985 124 Shekhawat Devisingh Ramsingh M INC 37330 Chandrabha F ICS 15612
1980 124 Bhuyar Surendra Chatrapal M INC(I) 29712 Sawalakhe Sudhakar Ramchandra M INC(U) 14155
1978 124 Bhuyar Surendra Chhatrapal M INC(I) 38507 Munirkhan Usmankhan M JNP 20296
1972 114 Dattatraya Nagorao Metkar M INC 41157 Kolhe Satappa Shioappa M BJS 4505
1967 114 K.N. Nawathe M INC 21634 B.D. Karanjikar M SSP 20663
1962 178 Umerlalji Mathuradas Kedia M INC 27838 Gopal Dattatray kaloti M IND 20878

Source:[4]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "District wise List of Assembly and Parliamentary Constituencies". Chief Electoral Officer, Maharashtra website. Archived from the original on 18 March 2010. Retrieved 19 January 2010.
  2. ^ "Schedule – XVII of Constituencies Order, 2008 of Delimitation of Parliamentary and Assembly constituencies Order, 2008 of the Election Commission of India" (PDF). Schedule XVII Maharashtra, Part A – Assembly constituencies, Part B – Parliamentary constituencies. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
  3. ^ "Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Election, 2019". Election Commission of India. Retrieved 2 February 2022.
  4. ^ "Live Amravati (Maharastra) Assembly Election Results 2019 Updates, Winner, Runner-up Candidates 2019 Updates, Vidhan Sabha Current MLA and Previous MLAs".

20°55′54.99″N 77°45′55.05″E / 20.9319417°N 77.7652917°E / 20.9319417; 77.7652917