1995 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly election

Revision as of 22:31, 13 August 2023 by CleanupBot II (talk | contribs) (Removed empty portal template using script)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Assembly elections 1995 was held in Maharashtra, India in two phases on February 12, 1995, and March 9, 1995. Election results were declared on March 13, 1995. The major parties were Bharatiya Janata Party - Shiv Sena Yuti (alliance) against the Congress.

Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Election 1995

← 1990 March 9, 1995 1999 →

All 288 assembly constituencies
145 seats needed for a majority
Turnout71.69%
  Majority party Minority party Third party
  Sharad Pawar, Minister of AgricultureCrop.jpg File:Shri.Manohar Joshi.jpg Gopinath Munde.jpg
Leader Sharad Pawar Manohar Joshi Gopinath Munde
Party INC SHS BJP
Alliance INC+ NDA NDA
Last election 141 52 42
Seats won 80 73 65
Seat change Decrease 61 Increase 21 Increase 23
Popular vote 11,941,832 6,315,493 4,932,767
Percentage 31% 16.39% 12.80%

1995 Maharashtra.png

Chief Minister before election

Sharad Pawar
INC

Elected Chief Minister

Manohar Joshi
Shiv Sena

ResultsEdit

In the election Shiv Sena and Bharatiya Janata Party Alliance or Mahayuti got the majority. Manohar Joshi from Shiv Sena became the 12th Chief minister of Maharashtra, Thus, forming the first Non-Congress Government in Maharashtra.

The details are as follows:[1]

Political Party Seats Popular Vote
Contested Won +/- Votes polled Votes% +/-
Indian National Congress
80 / 288 (28%)
286 80   61 1,19,41,832 31.00%   7.17%
Shiv Sena
73 / 288 (25%)
171 73   21 63,15,493 16.39%   0.45%
Bharatiya Janata Party
65 / 288 (23%)
117 65   23 49,32,767 12.80%   2.09%
Janata Dal
11 / 288 (4%)
182 11   13 22,58,914 5.86%   4.85%
Peasants and Workers Party of India
6 / 288 (2%)
42 6   2 7,88,286 2.05%   0.37%
Communist Party of India (Marxist)
3 / 288 (1%)
18 3   3,86,009 1.00%   0.13%
Samajwadi Party
3 / 288 (1%)
22 3   3 3,56,731 0.93%   0.93%
Nag Vidarbha Andolan Samiti
1 / 288 (0.3%)
2 1  1 82,677 0.21%   0.21%
Maharashtra Vikas Congress 3 1  1 45,404 0.12%   0.12%
Independents
45 / 288 (16%)
3196 45   32 91,04,036 23.63%   10.04%
Total 4727 288 3,8,526,206 100%

Chief Ministerial CandidateEdit

Shiv Sena-Bhartiya Janata Party National Democratic AllianceEdit

Shiv Sena Bharatiya Janata Party
National Democratic Alliance
For Chief Minister
Manohar Joshi

Shiv Sena

Indian National CongressEdit

Indian National Congress
United Progressive Alliance
Sharad Pawar

Indian National Congress

Region-wise BreakupEdit

Region Total seats Indian National Congress Shiv Sena Bharatiya Janata Party Janata Dal Others
Western Maharashtra 70
28 / 70 (40%)
  4
16 / 70 (23%)
  8
7 / 70 (10%)
  2
1 / 70 (1%)
  8 18
Vidarbha 62
11 / 62 (18%)
  20
9 / 62 (15%)
 
22 / 62 (35%)
  11
8 / 62 (13%)
  1 12
Marathwada 46
12 / 46 (26%)
  12
8 / 46 (17%)
  3
19 / 46 (41%)
  9
2 / 46 (4%)
  5
Thane+Konkan 39
3 / 39 (8%)
  9
29 / 39 (74%)
  16
2 / 39 (5%)
  4
0 / 39 (0%)
  5 5
Mumbai 36
3 / 36 (8%)
  8
9 / 36 (25%)
  6
7 / 36 (19%)
  2
0 / 36 (0%)
  17
North Maharashtra 35
23 / 35 (66%)
  8
2 / 35 (6%)
 
8 / 35 (23%)
 7
0 / 35 (0%)
  2
Total[2] 288
80 / 288 (28%)
  61
73 / 288 (25%)
  21
65 / 288 (23%)
 23
11 / 288 (4%)
  13

Alliance Wise Results:-

80 73 65
INC SHS BJP
Region Total Seats National Democratic Alliance Indian National Congress+ Janata Dal Others
Western Maharashtra 70   10
23 / 70 (33%)
  4
28 / 70 (40%)
  8
1 / 70 (1%)
  1
19 / 70 (27%)
Vidarbha 62   11
31 / 62 (50%)
  20
11 / 62 (18%)
  1
8 / 62 (13%)
  10
12 / 70 (17%)
Marathwada 46   12
27 / 46 (59%)
  12
12 / 46 (26%)
  5
2 / 46 (4%)
 
5 / 46 (11%)
Thane +Konkan 39   12
31 / 39 (79%)
  9
3 / 39 (8%)
    2
5 / 39 (13%)
Mumbai 36   8
16 / 36 (44%)
  8
3 / 36 (8%)
    15
17 / 36 (47%)
North Maharashtra 35   7
10 / 35 (29%)
  8
23 / 35 (66%)
    1
2 / 35 (6%)
Total   44
138 / 288 (48%)
  61
80 / 288 (28%)
  13
11 / 288 (4%)
  31
60 / 288 (21%)

Vidhan Sabha Results

  Indian National Congress (28%)
  Shiv Sena (26%)
  Bharatiya Janata Party (22%)
  Others/Independents (24%)
Name of Division District Seats INC SHS BJP
Amravati Division Akola 5 1   1 2   1 2   1
Amravati 8 4   4 2   2 2   2
Buldhana 7 3   3   0   1
Yavatmal 7 1   2 4   1   1
Washim 3 3   1 0   0  
Total Seats 30 12   6 11   3 5   3
Aurangabad Division Aurangabad 9 2   2 5   2   1
Beed 6 0   3 3   2 3   1
Jalna 5 1   4 2   2 2   2
Osmanabad 4 2   2   0  
Nanded 9 2   3 3   1 1  
Latur 6 2   4 1   1 1   1
Parbhani 4 1   2 1   0   1
Hingoli 3 1   1 1   1   1
Total Seats 46 11   19 18   6 10   6
Konkan Division Mumbai City 9 2   1 6   4 1  
Mumbai Suburban 26 2   4 15   6 2   2
Thane 24 0   1 5   3   1
Raigad 7 0   1 5   1 0
Ratnagiri 3 0   1 0   0
Total Seats 69 4   8 31   11 6   3
Nagpur Division Bhandara 3 1   1 1   1   1
Chandrapur 6 6   3 0   0   3
Gadchiroli 3 1   2 1   1 1   1
Gondia 4 2   0   2  
Nagpur 12 1   5 0   11   6
Wardha 4 1   1 0   1   1
Total Seats 32 12   7 2   1 16   6
Nashik Division Dhule 5 2   3 3   3 0  
Jalgaon 11 9   2 2   0   2
Nandurbar 4 4   0   0  
Nashik 15 3   7 1   10   10
Ahmednagar 12 3   6 0   2 4   4
Total Seats 47 21   14 6   1 14   12
Pune Division Kolhapur 10 2   2   1 7   6
Pune 21 10   11 3   3 2   2
Sangli 8 3   2 0   2 5   2
Satara 8 2   1 0   2 0   1
Solapur 11 3   1 0   1 0  
Total Seats 58 20   7 5   1 14   9
288 80   61 73   21 65   23
138
Alliance Political Party Seats Won Total Seats
NDA Shiv Sena 73 152
Bharatiya Janata Party 65
Independents 14
INC+ Indian National Congress 80 120
Peasants and Workers Party of India 6
Samajwadi Party 3
Independents 31

The Shiv Sena and BJP won primarily by opposing incumbent chief minister Sharad Pawar's decision to approve a power project of Enron at Dabhol. The $2.8 billion project was being stalled on charges of corruption.

To save the project after the elections, Enron's Rebecca Mark rushed from United States to India. She officially scheduled her meeting with Chief Minister Manohar Joshi at the Secretariat House on 1 November 1995. But before that, she was called to Matoshree to meet Shiv Sena Chief Balasaheb Thackeray. He not only involved himself in the project and key decisions but also decided the appointments of top bureaucrats.[3]

ReferencesEdit

  1. "Statistical Report on General Election, 1995 to the Legislative Assembly of Maharashtra" (PDF). eci.nic.in. Election Commission of India New Delhi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 January 2012. Retrieved 28 October 2009.
  2. "Spoils of five-point duel". Retrieved 26 September 2017.
  3. Suryawanshi, Sudhir (30 May 2020). "'Baba, you have to accept challenge': Aaditya Thackeray said after Pawar wanted Uddhav as CM". theprint.in. Archived from the original on 31 May 2020. Retrieved 10 June 2021.

{{#seo: |keywords=State Assembly elections in Maharashtra, 1990s in Maharashtra |description= }}