Arrah Lok Sabha constituency

Arrah Lok Sabha constituency (formerly Shahabad) is one of the 40 Lok Sabha (parliamentary) constituencies in Bihar, India. It is a part of the Bhojpur district and comprises seven Assembly constituencies: Sandesh, Barhara, Arrah, Agiaon (SC), Tarari, Jagdishpur and Shahpur.

Arrah Lok Sabha constituency
Lok Sabha constituency
Constituency details
CountryIndia
RegionEast India
StateBihar
Assembly constituenciesSandesh
Barhara
Arrah
Agiaon
Tarari
Jagdishpur
Shahpur
Established1957 (Shahabad)
1977 (Arrah)
ReservationNone
Member of Parliament
17th Lok Sabha
Incumbent
PartyBharatiya Janata Party
Elected year2019
Preceded byMeena Singh

About edit

In 1977, the erstwhile Shahabad Lok Sabha constituency was renamed as Arrah Lok Sabha.

Social equation edit

The constituency was represented by only two parliamentarians till 1980. Bali Ram Bhagat, who hailed from Yadav caste and Chandradeo Prasad Verma, who was a member of Kushwaha (Koeri) caste were the parliamentarians, who had the distinction of getting elected from this seat for multiple times. After these two parliamentarians, the constituency elected different candidates everytime in next elections till 2009. This constituency is known for struggle between some caste groups for getting their men elected in Indian General Elections to Lok Sabha from the first General Elections itself.[1]

Until 2004, only Yadav and Koeri candidates were elected in different elections, except in 1989, when Rameshwar Prasad, a member of Extremely Backward Caste was elected on the symbol of Indian People's Front. In 1996, 1998 and 1999 elections, Chandradeo Prasad Verma, Haridwar Prasad Singh and Ram Prasad Kushwaha, all three belonging to Koeri caste were elected from this constituency. From 2009 onwards, the candidates belonging to Rajput caste are getting elected.[1][2]

Assembly segments edit

1976-2008 edit

From 1976 to 2008, the Arrah Lok Sabha constituency had 6 Bihar Legislative Assembly seats. Maner and Paliganj from Patna district and Sandesh, Barhara, Arrah and Sahar from Bhojpur district.[3]

2008-Present edit

Arrah Lok Sabha constituency comprises the following seven Bihar Legislative Assembly seats, all from Bhojpur district.

NoNameDistrictMemberParty
192SandeshBhojpurKiran Devi YadavRJD
193BarharaRaghvendra Pratap SinghBJP
194ArrahAmrendra Pratap SinghBJP
195Agiaon (SC)Manoj ManzilCPIML
196TarariSudama PrasadCPIML
197JagdishpurRam Vishnun SinghRJD
198ShahpurRahul TiwariRJD

Members of Parliament edit

1952-1957 edit

See Patna-cum-Shahabad Lok Sabha constituency for 1st Lok Sabha.

1957-1977 edit

See Shahabad Lok Sabha constituency. It was in existence from 2nd to 5th Lok Sabha

1977-Present edit

As present day Arrah Lok Sabha constituency. It is in existence since the 6th Lok Sabha. The erstwhile Shahabad district was bifurcated into Bhojpur district (Arrah) and Rohtas district (Sasaram) in year 1972.

YearNameParty
1977Chandradeo Prasad VermaBharatiya Lok Dal
1980Janata Party
1984Bali Ram BhagatIndian National Congress
1989Rameshwar PrasadIndian People's Front
1991Ram Lakhan Singh YadavJanata Dal
1996Chandradeo Prasad Verma
1998Haridwar Prasad SinghSamata Party
1999Ram Prasad SinghRashtriya Janata Dal
2004Kanti Singh
2009Meena SinghJanata Dal
2014R. K. SinghBharatiya Janata Party
2019

Election results edit

2024 edit

2024 Indian general election: Arrah
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
BJPR. K. Singh
CPI(ML)LSudama Prasad
NOTANone of the above
Majority
Turnout
gain fromSwing

2019 edit

2019 Indian general elections: Arrah
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
BJPR. K. Singh 566,480 52.42 +8.64
CPI(ML)LRaju Yadav4,19,19538.79+27.73
NOTANone of the Above21,8252.02+0.37
BSPManoj Yadav10,7721.53
Majority1,47,28513.63-1.58
Turnout10,82,46451.81+2.85
BJP holdSwing

General Elections 2014 edit

2014 Indian general elections: Arrah
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
BJPR. K. Singh3,91,07443.78
RJDShri Bhagwan Singh Kushwaha2,55,20428.57
CPI(ML)LRaju Yadav98,80511.06
JD(U)Meena Singh75,9628.50
Akhil Bharatiya Jan SanghBharat Bhushan Pandey10,9501.23
NOTANone of the Above14,7031.65
Majority1,35,87015.21
Turnout8,93,21348.96
BJP gain from JD(U)Swing

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Arrah Lok Sabha constituency, will BJP become victorious?". Hindustan. Archived from the original on 15 October 2023. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  2. ^ "BJP wave seen in Agra, RK Singh elected for second time". Dainik Jagran. Archived from the original on 17 October 2023. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  3. ^ "DPACO (1976) - Archive Delimitation Orders - Election Commission of India". Retrieved 12 October 2022.

External links edit

25°36′N 84°42′E / 25.6°N 84.7°E / 25.6; 84.7