2004 Indian general election in Jammu and Kashmir

The 2004 Indian general election in Jammu and Kashmir to the 14th Lok Sabha were held for 6 seats. Jammu and Kashmir National Conference won 2 seats, Indian National Congress won 2, Jammu and Kashmir Peoples Democratic Party won one seat and one was won by an Independent politician Thupstan Chhewang from Ladakh.[1]

Indian general election in Jammu and Kashmir, 2004

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Jammu and Kashmir

Constituency Details

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Constituency Candidates Electors Voters Polling % Polling Stations
Baramulla 13 940998 335442 35.65 1167
Srinagar 16 1053734 195678 18.57 1080
Anantnag 19 998905 150219 15.04 1049
Ladakh 8 175768 129230 73.52 442
Udhampur 22 1348721 608079 45.09 1655
Jammu 31 1849989 820595 44.49 1822

[2]

Results

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Party-wise Results

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Party Seats Popular Vote
Contested Won ± Votes % ±
Jammu & Kashmir National Conference 6 2   2 4,93,067 22.02  2.03
Jammu & Kashmir Peoples Democratic Party 3 1 New 2,67,457 11.94 New
Indian National Congress 3 2   3 6,23,182 27.83  10.0
Bharatiya Janata Party 6 0   2 5,15,965 23.04  8.52
Independent 37 1   1 1,65,352 7.38   2.25
Total (valid votes) 6     22,39,342 100.0  

List of Elected MPs

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Parliamentary Constituency Turnout Winner Runner Up Margin
No. Name Type Candidate Party Votes Vote% Candidate Party Votes Vote% Votes %
1 Baramulla GEN 35.65 Abdul Rashid Shaheen JKNC 1,27,653 Nizamuudin Bhat JKPDP 1,17,758 9,895 2.96%
2 Srinagar GEN 18.57 Omar Abdullah JNNC 98,422 Ghulam Nabi Lone JKPDP 75,263 23,159 11.84%
3 Anantnag GEN 15.04 Mehbooba Mufti JKPDP 74,436 Mirza Mehboob Beg JKNC 35,498 38,938 25.92%
4 Ladakh GEN 73.52 Thupstan Chhewang Independent 66,839 Hassan Khan JKNC 41,126 25,713 19.94%
5 Udhampur GEN 45.09 Ch. Lal Singh INC 2,40,872 Chaman Lal Gupta BJP 1,93,697 47,175 7.76%
6 Jammu GEN 44.49 Madan Lal Sharma INC 3,19,994 Nirmal Singh BJP 3,02,426 17,568 2.14%

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "General Elections 2004 - Statewise Winners Details for Independent". eci.nic.in. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  2. ^ "Statistical Report on General Elections, 2004 to the 14th Lok Sabha" (PDF). New Delhi: Election Commission Of India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2010.