General elections were held in India in 1989 to elect the members of the 9th Lok Sabha.[1] The incumbent Indian National Congress (I) government under the premiership of Rajiv Gandhi was defeated by the National Front, an alliance forged by Janata Dal, which won a plurality of seats. The alliance formed the government with outside support from Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).[2][3] V. P. Singh was sworn in as the seventh Prime Minister of India on 2 December 1989. [4]
BJP wins 12 seats, Janata Dal wins 11 and Congress wins 3 seats out of a total of 26 seats.
Party-wise results summary
| Party | Seats won | |
|---|---|---|
| BJP | 12 | |
| Janata Dal | 11 | |
| Congress | 3 | |
Results- Constituency wise
| No | Constituency | Winner | Party | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kachchh | BABU BHAI MEGHJI SHAH | BJP | 
| 2 | Surendranagar | KOLI PATEL SOMABHAI GANDHI | BJP | 
| 3 | Jamnagar | KORADIYA CHANDRESH KUMAR VALJIBHAI
 (CHANDRESH PATEL)  | 
BJP | 
| 4 | Rajkot | VEKARIA SHIVLAL NAGIBHAI | BJP | 
| 5 | Porbandar | MANVAR BALVANTBHAI BACHUBHAI | JD | 
| 6 | Junagadh | SHEKHADA GOVINDHHAL KANJIBHAI | JD | 
| 7 | Amreli | MANUBHAI KOTADIYA | JD | 
| 8 | Bhavnagar | JAMOD SHASHIKANT MAVJIBHAI | INC | 
| 9 | Dhandhuka (SC) | RATILAL KALIDAS VERMA | BJP | 
| 10 | AHMEDABAD | HARIN PATHAK | BJP | 
| 11 | Gandhinagar | VEGHELA SHANKARJI LAXMANJI | BJP | 
| 12 | Mahesana | A.K.PATEL | BJP | 
| 13 | Patan (SC) | CHAWADA KHEM CHANDBHAI SOMABHAI | JD | 
| 14 | BANASKANTHA | SHAH JAYANTILAL VIRCHANDBHAI | JD | 
| 15 | SABARKANTHA | MAGANBHAI MANIBHAI PATEL | JD | 
| 16 | Kapadvanj | GABHAJI MANGAJI THAKOR | BJP | 
| 17 | DOHAD (ST) | SOMAIBAHI DAMOR | INC | 
| 18 | Godhra | PATEL SHANTILA PURUSHOTTAMDAS | JD | 
| 19 | KAIRA | CHAUHAN PRABHATSINH HATHISINH | JD | 
| 20 | Anand | PATEL NATHUBHAI MANIBHAI | BJP | 
| 21 | Chota Udaipur (ST) | RAHAWA NARANBHAI JAMALBHAI | JD | 
| 22 | BARODA | KOKO ALIAS PRAKASH KANUBHAI BRAHMBHATT | JD | 
| 23 | BROACH | DESHMUKH CHANDUBHAI SHAMBHAI | BJP | 
| 24 | Surat | KASHIRAM RANA | BJP | 
| 25 | MANDAVI (ST) | GHAMIT CHHITUBHAI DEVIBHAI | INC | 
| 26 | BULSAR (ST) | AJUNBHAI LALLUBHAI PATEL | JD | 
References
- ↑ "Elections 1989: Congress(I) faces prospect of being routed in Bihar".
 - ↑ "V. P. Singh, a Leader of India Who Defended Poor, Dies at 77". The New York Times. 29 November 2008.
 - ↑ Indian Parliamentary Democracy. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. 2003. p. 124. ISBN 978-81-269-0193-7.
 - ↑ "Elections in Gujarat in 1989".
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.