Indian general election, 1998
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General elections were held in India in 1998, after the government elected in 1996 collapsed and the 12th Lok Sabha was convened. New elections were called when Indian National Congress (INC) left the United Front government led by I.K. Gujral, after they refused to drop the regional Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) party from the government after the DMK was linked by an investigative panel to Sri Lankan separatists blamed for the killing of Rajiv Gandhi.[1] The outcome of the new elections was also indecisive, with no party or alliance able to create a strong majority. Although the Bharatiya Janata Party's Atal Bihari Vajpayee regained his position of Prime Minister getting support from 286 members out of 545, the government collapsed again in late 1998 when the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, with its 18 seats, withdrew their support, leading to new elections in 1999. It also marked the first time since independence that India's traditional governing party, the INC, failed to win two consecutive elections.
Turnout was 61.97%.
Results
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of India |
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Summary
Alliance | % of votes | Seats |
---|---|---|
National Democratic Alliance | 46.61% | 254 |
Congress & allies | 26.42% | 144 |
United Front | 11.74% | 64 |
Jan Morcha | 4.40% | 24 |
Others | 10.82% | 59 |
Total | 100% | 545 |
Results by state
States
(Please help expand this section with correct data) National Democratic Alliance (NDA) won the election. Its constituents were Bharatiya Janata Party, Akali Dal, Shiv Sena, Telugu Desam, All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagham (AIADMK of Jayalalithaa) et al. Constituents of United Progressive Alliance (UPA) were Congress, Lalu Janata Dal, Nationalist Congress Party (NCP of Sharad Pawar), Kerala Muslim League, et al.
Andhra Pradesh (Total seats - 42) Congress - 22, Telugu Desam - 12, BJP - 4
Assam (Seats - 13) Congress - 10
Bihar (Total - 54) BJP (Part of NDA) - 19, Samata Party (Part of NDA) - 10, Rashtriya Janata Dal (Lalu Yadav) - 17, Congress - 4
Gujarat (Total seats - 26) Bharatiya Janata Party - 19, Congress - 7
Karnataka (Seats - 28) BJP - 13, Congress - 9
Madhya Pradesh (Seats in MP - 40) BJP - 30, Congress - 10
Maharashtra (Seats - 48) BJP - 4, Shiv Sena - 6, Congress (Part of UPA) - 31, RPI (Part of UPA) - 6,
Rajasthan (Total - 25) BJP - 5, Congress - 19
Tamil Nadu AIADMK (Part of NDA) - 18, BJP (NDA) - 3, DMK - 5, Tamil Manila Congress - 3
Uttar Pradesh (Seats in UP - 85) BJP - 58, Congress - Zero, Samajwadi Party (Mulayam Singh Yadav) - 19, BSP (Mayawati) - 4
West Bengal (Total - 42) CPI(M) - 24, CPI - 3, FB - 2, RSP - 4, Trinamool Congress - 7 Congress - 1, BJP - 1
See also
- State Assembly elections in India, 1998
- Election Commission of India
- Indian presidential election, 1997
References
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