2004 Indian general election in Haryana

2004 Indian general election in Haryana

← 1999 10 May 2004 2009 →

10 seats
  First party Second party Third party
 
Party INC BJP INLD
Last election 0 5 5
Seats won 9 1 0
Seat change Increase9 Decrease4 Decrease5
Percentage 42.13% 17.21% 22.43%
Swing Increase7.9% Decrease 11.9% Decrease6.29%

The 2004 Indian general election occurred in Haryana for 10 seats.

Result by party

Results of Indian general election, 2004 in Haryana
Parties and coalitions Seats Popular vote
Contested Won +/− Votes % ±pp
Indian National Congress 10 9 Increase 9 34,09,950 42.13% Increase7.2%
Bharatiya Janata Party 10 1 Decrease 4 13,93,106 17.21 Decrease 11.9%
Indian National Lok Dal 10 0 Decrease5 18,15,683 22.43 Decrease 6.29%
Haryana Vikas Party 9 0 Steady 5,06,122 6.25 Increase 3.54%
Bahujan Samaj Party 10 0 Steady 4,03,254 4.98 Increase 3.02%

Result by constituency

Constituency Turnout Winner Runner-up Margin
No. Name Type Candidate Party Votes Candidate Party Votes Votes %
1 Ambala SC 70.69 Selja Kumari[1] INC 4,15,264 Rattan Lal Kataria BJP 1,80,329 2,34,935 27.71
2 Kurukshetra GEN 73.24 Naveen Jindal[2] INC 3,62,054 Abhay Singh Chautala INLD 2,01,864 1,60,190 18.83
3 Karnal GEN 66.04 Arvind Kumar Sharma INC 3,18,948 I. D. Swami BJP 1,54,186 1,64,762 20.12
4 Sonepat GEN 64.75 Kishan Singh Sangwan BJP 2,33,477 Dharam Pal Singh Malik INC 2,25,908 7,569 1.03
5 Rohtak GEN 62.96 Bhupinder Singh Hooda INC 3,24,235 Captain Abhimanyu BJP 1,73,800 1,50,435 22.72
6 Faridabad GEN 54.62 Avtar Singh Bhadana INC 3,57,284 Mohammad Ilyas INLD 2,05,355 1,51,929 17.99
7 Mahendragarh GEN 59.44 Inderjit Singh Rao INC 3,58,714 Sudha Yadav BJP 1,48,373 2,10,341 24.77
8 Bhiwani GEN 73.09 Kuldeep Bishnoi INC 2,90,936 Surender Singh HVP 2,66,532 24,404 2.8
9 Hissar GEN 67.74 Jai Parkash INC 4,07,210 Surender Singh Barwala INLD 2,24,442 1,82,768 23.74
10 Sirsa SC 68.99 Atma Singh Gill[3] INC 3,49,397 Sushil Kumar Indora INLD 2,77,922 71,475 8.49

References

  1. ^ "Detailed profile: Kumari Selja". Government of India. Archived from the original on 12 June 2019. Retrieved 12 October 2019.
  2. ^ "The Hindu Business Line : Naveen Jindal wins Kurukshetra for Cong". thehindubusinessline.com.
  3. ^ "Current Lok Sabha Members Biographical Sketch". 19 December 2007. Archived from the original on 19 December 2007. Retrieved 23 February 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)