Английская Википедия:Arambagh Lok Sabha constituency

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use Indian English Шаблон:Infobox Indian constituency Arambagh Lok Sabha constituency is one of the 543 parliamentary constituencies in India. The constituency centres on Arambagh in West Bengal. While six assembly segments of Arambagh Lok Sabha constituency are in Hooghly district, one segment is in Paschim Medinipur district. The seat was earlier an open seat but from 2009 it was reserved for scheduled castes.

Overview

Файл:Westbengalen Wahlkreise Lok Sabha.svg
1. Cooch Behar, 2. Alipurduars, 3. Jalpaiguri, 4. Darjeeling, 5. Raiganj, 6. Balurghat, 7. Maldaha Uttar, 8. Maldaha Dakshin, 9. Jangipur, 10. Baharampur, 11. Murshidabad, 12. Krishnanagar, 13. Ranaghat, 14. Bangaon, 15. Barrackpore, 16. Dum Dum, 17. Barasat, 18. Basirhat, 19. Jaynagar, 20. Mathurapur, 21. Diamond Harbour, 22. Jadavpur, 23. Kolkata Dakshin, 24. Kolkata Uttar, 25. Howrah, 26. Uluberia, 27. Serampore, 28. Hooghly, 29. Arambagh, 30. Tamluk, 31, Kanthi, 32. Ghatal, 33. Jhargram, 34. Medinipur, 35. Purulia, 36. Bankura, 37. Bishnupur, 38. Bardhaman Purba, 39. Bardhaman Durgapur, 40. Asansol, 41. Bolpur, 42. Birbhum

In the 2004 Lok Sabha polls Anil Basu of CPI(M) won the Arambagh seat by a margin of 592,502 votes, which remained for a long time the highest ever victory margin in Lok Sabha polls in the country.[1] Pritam Munde won the Beed Lok Sabha constituency in 2014 by 6,92,245 votes [1][2]

Assembly segments

As per order of the Delimitation Commission issued in 2006 in respect of the delimitation of constituencies in the West Bengal, parliamentary constituency no. 29 Arambag, reserved for Scheduled castes (SC), is composed of the following assembly segments:[2]

Constituency number Name Reserved for (SC/ST/None) District
196 Haripal None Hooghly
198 Tarakeswar None Hooghly
199 Pursurah None Hooghly
200 Arambag SC Hooghly
201 Goghat SC Hooghly
202 Khanakul None Hooghly
232 Chandrakona SC Paschim Medinipur

Prior to delimitation Arambagh Lok Sabha constituency was composed of the following assembly segments:[3] Tarakeswar (assembly constituency no. 185), Pursurah (assembly constituency no. 192), Khanakul (SC) (assembly constituency no. 193), Arambagh (assembly constituency no. 194), Goghat (SC) (assembly constituency no. 195), Chandrakona (assembly constituency no. 196), Ghatal (SC) (assembly constituency no. 197)

Members of Parliament

Lok Sabha Duration Constituency Name of M.P. Party Affiliation
Fourth 1967-71 Arambagh Amiyanath Bose Шаблон:Full party name with color[4]
Fifth 1971-77 Manoranjan Hazra Шаблон:Full party name with color[5]
Sixth 1977-80 Prafulla Chandra Sen Шаблон:Full party name with color[6]
Seventh 1980-84 Bijoy Krishna Modak Шаблон:Full party name with color[7]
Eighth 1984-89 Anil Basu[8][9][10][11][12][13][14]
Ninth 1989-91
Tenth 1991-96
Eleventh 1996-98
Twelfth 1998-99
Thirteenth 1999-04
Fourteenth 2004-09
Fifteenth 2009-14 Sakti Mohan Malik[15]
Sixteenth 2014-19 Aparupa Poddar (Afrin Ali) Шаблон:Full party name with color[16]
Seventeenth 2019-Incumbent

Election results

General election 2014

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General election 2009

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General elections 1967-2009

Most of the contests were multi-cornered. However, only winners and runners-up are mentioned below:

Year Winner Runner-up
Candidate Party Candidate Party
1967 Amiyanath Bose All India Forward Bloc Sachin Choudhury Indian National Congress[4]
1971 Manoranjan Hazra Communist Party of India (Marxist) Santi Mohan Ray Indian National Congress[5]
1977 Prafulla Chandra Sen Bharatiya Lok Dal Santi Mohan Roy Indian National Congress[6]
1980 Bijoy Krishna Modak Communist Party of India (Marxist) Prafulla Chandra Sen Janata Party[7]
1984 Anil Basu Communist Party of India (Marxist) Gopal Das Nag Indian National Congress[8]
1989 Anil Basu Communist Party of India (Marxist) Sheikh Hasan Imam Indian National Congress[9]
1991 Anil Basu Communist Party of India (Marxist) Sheikh Hasan Imam Indian National Congress[10]
1996 Anil Basu Communist Party of India (Marxist) Monoranjan Hazra Indian National Congress[11]
1998 Anil Basu Communist Party of India (Marxist) Chunilal Chakraborty Bharatiya Janata Party[12]
1999 Anil Basu Communist Party of India (Marxist) Chunilal Chakraborty Bharatiya Janata Party[13]
2004 Anil Basu Communist Party of India (Marxist) Swapan Kumar Nandi Bharatiya Janata Party[14]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Lok Sabha constituencies of West Bengal Шаблон:Hooghly topics

Шаблон:Coord