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1980 Indian general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1980 Indian general election

← 19773 and 6 January 19801984 →

529 of the 531 seats in theLok Sabha[a]
265 seats needed for a majority
Registered356,205,329
Turnout56.92% (Decrease 5.55pp)
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
Indira Gandhi 2017 stamp.png
Prime minister Charan Singh (cropped).jpg
E. M. S. Namboodiripad.jpg
LeaderIndira GandhiCharan SinghE. M. S. Namboodiripad
PartyINC(I)JP(S)CPI(M)
AllianceINC (I)+LF
Last election34.55%, 154 seats4.29%, 22 seats
Seats won3534137
Seat changeIncrease 199NewIncrease 15
Popular vote84,455,31318,574,69612,352,331
Percentage42.69%9.39%6.24%
SwingIncrease 8.17ppNewIncrease 1.95pp

 Fourth partyFifth party
 
Jagjivan Ram stamp (cropped).jpg
A. K. Antony.jpg
LeaderJagjivan RamA. K. Antony
PartyJPINC(U)
AllianceJP+
Last election41.32%, 295 seats
Seats won3113
Seat changeDecrease 264New
Popular vote37,530,22810,449,859
Percentage18.97%5.28%
SwingDecrease 22.35ppNew

Results by constituency

Prime Minister before election

Charan Singh
JP(S)

ElectedPrime Minister

Indira Gandhi
INC(I)

General elections were held inIndia on 3 and 6 January 1980 to elect the members of theseventhLok Sabha. TheJanata Party alliance came into power in the1977 general elections amidst public anger with theIndian National Congress (R) and theEmergency. However, its position was weak; the loose coalition barely held on to a majority with only 295 seats in the Lok Sabha and never quite had a firm grip on power.Bharatiya Lok Dal leadersCharan Singh andJagjivan Ram, who had quit the Congress, were members of the Janata alliance but were at loggerheads with Prime MinisterMorarji Desai.

The Janata Party, an amalgam of socialists and Hindu nationalists, split in 1979 when several coalition members including the Bharatiya Lok Dal of Charan Singh and several members of the Socialist Party withdrew support for the government. Subsequently, Desai lost a vote of confidence in parliament and resigned. Charan Singh, who had retained some partners of the Janata alliance, was sworn in as prime minister in June 1979. TheIndian National Congress (Indira), which succeeded the Indian National Congress (Requisition) from 1978 promised to support Singh in parliament but later backed out just two days before the Government was scheduled to prove its majority on the floor of Lok Sabha. Charan Singh, forced to resign, called for elections in January 1980 and is the only prime minister of India never to have obtained the confidence of Parliament. In the run up to the general elections,Indira Gandhi's leadership faced a formidable political challenge from a galaxy of regional satraps and prominent leaders of Janata party likeSatyendra Narayan Sinha andKarpuri Thakur in Bihar,Ramakrishna Hegde in Karnataka,Sharad Pawar in Maharashtra,Devi Lal in Haryana &Biju Patnaik in Orissa. Janata Party contested the election with Jagjivan Ram as its prime ministerial candidate.[1][2] However, internal feud between Janata Party leaders and the political instability in the country worked in favour of Indira Gandhi's Congress (I), that reminded voters of the strong government of Indira Gandhi during campaigning.

In the ensuing elections the INC(I) won 353 seats and the Janata Party just 31 seats, with Charan Singh's Janata Party (Secular) taking 41. The Janata Party alliance continued to split over the subsequent years.

Results

[edit]
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Indian National Congress (Indira)84,455,31342.69353+199
Janata Party37,530,22818.9731–264
Janata Party (Secular)18,574,6969.3941New
Communist Party of India (Marxist)12,352,3316.2437+15
Indian National Congress (Urs)10,449,8595.2813New
Communist Party of India4,927,3422.4910+3
All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam4,674,0642.362–16
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam4,236,5372.1416+14
Shiromani Akali Dal1,396,4120.711–8
Revolutionary Socialist Party1,285,5170.6540
All India Forward Bloc1,011,5640.5130
Jammu & Kashmir National Conference493,1430.253+1
Indian Union Muslim League475,5070.2420
Peasants and Workers Party of India470,5670.240–5
Republican Party of India (Khobragade)383,0220.190–2
Kerala Congress356,9970.181–1
Republican Party of India351,9870.1800
Socialist Unity Centre of India307,2240.1600
Jharkhand Party254,5200.131+1
All India Muslim League196,8200.1000
United Democratic Front140,2100.070–1
Shiv Sena129,3510.070New
Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party127,1880.0610
Tripura Upajati Juba Samiti111,9530.0600
People's Party of Arunachal69,8100.040New
Akhil Bharatiya Ram Rajya Parishad61,1610.0300
Peoples Conference53,8910.030New
Manipur Peoples Party49,2770.0200
Indian Socialist Party39,3990.020New
Shoshit Samaj Dal (Akhil Bharatiya)38,2260.0200
Sikkim Janata Parishad31,7500.021New
Muslim Majlis26,3630.010New
All India Labour Party14,7200.0100
All Party Hill Leaders Conference13,0580.010New
Sikkim Congress (Revolutionary)11,6320.010New
Sikkim Prajatantra Congress5,1250.000New
Independents12,717,5106.4390
AppointedAnglo-Indians20
Total197,824,274100.00531–13
Valid votes197,824,27497.57
Invalid/blank votes4,928,6192.43
Total votes202,752,893100.00
Registered voters/turnout356,205,32956.92
Source:ECI

Results by state

[edit]

Andhra Pradesh

[edit]
Assembly ConstituencyWinnerRunner-upMargin
#NameCandidatePartyVotes%CandidatePartyVotes%
1SrikakulamRajagopalarao BoddepalliINC(I)197,33649.33Gouthu LatchannaJNP(S)118,34729.5878,989
2Parvathipuram (ST)K.C. Suryanarayana Deo VyricherlaINC(U)173,17949.03Narsimha Rao ViswasraiINC(I)158,37944.8414,800
3BobbiliP.V. Gajapathi RajuINC(I)189,16364.34Gedela Prasada RaoJNP51,03717.36138,126
4VisakhapatnamAppalaswamy KommuruINC(I)206,58150.50Bhattam Srirama MurthyINC(U)171,94642.0434,635
5Bhadrachalam (ST)B. Radhabai Ananda RaoINC(I)147,53453.35Karam ChandraiahCPI79,20828.6468,326
6AnakapalliAppala Naidu S.R.A.S.INC(I)178,13946.89Anand Gajapathi Raju PusapatiJNP(S)149,01639.2329,123
7KakinadaSanjeevi Rao M.S.INC(I)242,90161.93Vaddi Mutyala RaoJNP79,92420.38162,977
8RajahmundryS.B.P. Pattabhi Rama RaoINC(I)249,37753.18Gadam KamaladeviINC(U)130,88627.91118,491
9Amalapuram (SC)Kusuma KrishnamurthiINC(I)244,28361.63Iswari BaiJNP123,19331.08121,090
10NarasapurAlluri Subhaschandra BoseINC(I)272,12461.56Uddaraju RamamCPM114,15625.82157,968
11EluruChittoori Subbarao ChowdaryINC(I)266,80559.15K. SuryanarayanaJNP83,47018.50183,335
12MachilipatnamAnkineedu MagantiINC(I)249,44453.93Buragadda Niranjana RaoJNP115,10824.89134,336
13VijayawadaVidya ChennupatiINC(I)240,62246.39K.L. RaoJNP141,92027.3698,702
14TenaliMeduri Nageswara RaoINC(I)214,80748.62Lavu Balagangadhara RaoCPM144,45732.7070,350
15GunturN.G. RangaINC(I)252,96157.60K. Sadasiva RaoJNP(S)95,62521.77157,336
16BapatlaAnkineedu Prasada Rao PamulapatiINC(I)258,11653.99Sambaiah PallaproluJNP(S)106,37522.25151,741
17NarasaraopetK. Bramhananda ReddyINC(I)238,85454.87Popuri BrahmanandamIND154,55835.5084,296
18OngoleVenkata Reddi PuliINC(I)266,83157.19A. Bhakthavastala ReddyJNP115,65624.79151,175
19Nellore (SC)D. KamakshaiahINC(I)294,32671.05T. P. Bhanu RajuCPM67,07516.19227,251
20Tirupathi (SC)Pasala PenchalaiahINC(I)241,96568.66Balakrishnaiah TamburaJNP86,65924.59155,306
21ChittoorP. Rajagopal NaiduINC(I)232,24951.55N. P. Chengalraya NayuduJNP172,40238.2759,847
22RajampetP. ParthasarathyINC(I)189,31152.51Rathnasabapathy BandaruINC(U)147,91041.0241,401
23CuddapahK. Obul ReddyINC(I)256,20450.88P. V. S. MurthyJNP205,65840.8550,546

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Two seats were reserved forAnglo-Indians and filled by presidential nomination

References

[edit]
  1. ^Chawla, Prabhu (30 September 2013)."As general elections loom large, new four-party United Front formed to counter Cong(I)".India Today. Retrieved23 September 2019.
  2. ^Jagjivan Ram: Most experienced artful dodger of Indian politicsArchived 13 February 2021 at theWayback Machine India Today, 23 December 2014
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