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Khajuraho Lok Sabha constituency

Coordinates: 24°45′N 80°10′E / 24.75°N 80.16°E / 24.75; 80.16
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Khajuraho
Lok Sabha constituency
Khajuraho Lok Sabha constituency within Madhya Pradesh
Constituency details
CountryIndia
RegionCentral India
StateMadhya Pradesh
Assembly constituenciesChandla
Rajnagar
Pawai
Gunnaor
Panna
Vijayraghavgarh
Murwara
Bahoriband
Established1957
Total electors19,97,483[1]
ReservationNone
Member of Parliament
18th Lok Sabha
Incumbent
PartyBharatiya Janata Party
Elected year2024

Khajuraho is a Lok Sabha constituency in Madhya Pradesh state in central India. Presently it covers the entire Panna district and parts of Chhatarpur and Katni districts.

Vidhan Sabha segments

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Presently, after delimitation of the parliamentary constituencies in 2008, this constituency comprises the following eight Vidhan Sabha segments:[2]

# Name District Member Party 2024 Lead
49 Chandla (SC) Chhatarpur Dileep Ahirwar BJP BJP
50 Rajnagar Arvind Pateriya BJP BJP
58 Pawai Panna Prahlad Lodhi BJP BJP
59 Gunnaor (SC) Rajesh Kumar Verma BJP BJP
60 Panna Brijendra Pratap Singh BJP BJP
92 Vijayraghavgarh Katni Sanjay Pathak BJP BJP
93 Murwara Sandeep Jaiswal BJP BJP
94 Bahoriband Pranay Prabhat Pandey BJP BJP

From 1976 to 2008, Khajuraho Lok Sabha constituency comprised the following eight Vidhan Sabha (Legislative Assembly) segments:

# Name District
43 Niwari Niwari
44 Jatara Tikamgarh
45 Khragapur (SC)
46 Tikamgarh
48 Bijawar Chhatarpur
49 Chhatarpur
50 Maharajpur (SC)
51 Chandla

Members of Lok Sabha

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Year Member Party
1957 Ram Sahai Tiwary Indian National Congress[a]
Moti Lal Malaviya
1962 Ram Sahai Tiwary
1967-1977 : Constituency defunct
1977 Laxminarayan Nayak Janata Party
1980 Vidyawati Chaturvedi Indian National Congress (I)
1984 Indian National Congress
1989 Uma Bharti Bharatiya Janata Party
1991
1996
1998
1999 Satyavrat Chaturvedi Indian National Congress
2004 Ramkrishna Kusmaria Bharatiya Janata Party
2009 Jeetendra Singh Bundela
2014 Nagendra Singh
2019 V. D. Sharma
2024

Election results

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2024

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2024 Indian general election: Khajuraho[3][4]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
BJP Vishnu Datt Sharma 772,774 67.75 +3.26
BSP Kamlesh Kumar 2,31,545 20.30 N/A
AIFB R. B. Prajapati 50,011 4.40 N/A
NOTA None of the Above 16,157 1.42 +0.43
Majority 5,41,229 47.45 +8.30
Turnout 11,37,867[b] 56.97
BJP hold Swing

2019

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2019 Indian general elections: Khajuraho
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
BJP Vishnu Datt Sharma 811,135 64.49
INC Kavita Singh 3,18,753 25.34
SP Veer Singh Patel 40,077 3.19
IND Meena /Lalit Raikwar 12,450 0.99
Majority 4,92,382 39.15
Turnout 12,58,316 68.31 +16.95
BJP hold Swing

Lok Sabha 2014

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2014 Indian general elections: Khajuraho
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
BJP Nagendra Singh 4,74,966 54.31
INC Raja Pateria 2,27,476 26.01
BSP Ram Lakhan Singh 60,368 6.90
SP Siddharth Sukhlal Kushwaha 40,069 4.58
Majority 2,47,490 28.30
Turnout 8,74,531 51.36
BJP hold Swing

Lok Sabha 2009

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2009 Indian general elections: Khajuraho
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
BJP Jeetendra Singh Bundela 2,29,369 39.33
INC Raja Paterya 2,01,037 34.47
BSP Sewa Lal Patel 77,107 13.22
SP Jayawant Singh 20,045 3.44
Majority 28,332 4.86
Turnout 5,83,083 43.21
BJP hold Swing

Lok Sabha 1957

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  • Seat One.
  • Motilal Malviya (INC) : 144,834 votes [5]
  • Nathoo Ram (BJS) : 73,024
  • Seat Two
  • Ram Sahai (Congress) : 122,970 votes
  • Pyare M (PSP) : 72,962

[6]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Two-member seat
  2. ^ does not include postal ballots

References

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  1. ^ https://elections24.eci.gov.in/docs/WYKXFehhEH.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ "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.
  3. ^ "Khajuraho Constituency Lok Sabha Election Results 2024". Bru Times News.
  4. ^ Election Commission of India (4 June 2024). "2024 Loksabha Elections Results - Khajuraho". Archived from the original on 8 August 2024. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  5. ^ "1957 India General (2nd Lok Sabha) Elections Results".
  6. ^ "General Election, 1999 (Vol I, II, III)". Election Commission of India. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
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24°45′N 80°10′E / 24.75°N 80.16°E / 24.75; 80.16