Elections in Haryana


Elections in Haryana, which is [States and Territories of India|a States and union territories of India|state in India], have been conducted since 1967 to elect the members of state-level Haryana Legislative Assembly and national-level Lok Sabha. There are 90 assembly constituencies and 10 Lok Sabha constituencies.

History

Before formation of Haryana

Prior to Haryana's establishment as a separate state in 1966, after carving out Haryana from Punjab, elections in Haryana were part of [Elections in Punjab, India|Punjab, India|elections in unified Punjab]. Cis-Sutlej states, which included princely states of Jind, Kaithal and Kalsia, as well as the parts of princely states of Patiala and Nabha falling in Haryana, were merged with the PEPSU Legislative Assembly. On 1 November 1956, PEPSU was merged mostly into Punjab State following the States Reorganisation Act. Part of former state of PEPSU lie within the present state of Haryana which was separated from Punjab on 1 November 1966, those parts include the area around Jind and the Narnaul enclave. Until 1967 elections in Haryana were part of the Elections in Punjab.

After formation of Haryana

Haryana was carved out of the former state of East Punjab on 1 November 1966 on linguistic as well as on cultural basis. Since 1967 elections have been held by the Election Commission of Haryana. 1st, 2nd and 3rd Lok Sabha elections were held when Haryana was still part of Punjab. Haryana was divided into 10 Lok Sabha constituencies, out of which 2 are reserved. After the electoral boundaries delimitation in 2007 by the Delimitation Commission of India, Bhiwani and Mahendragarh
constituencies became dysfunctional and those were replaced by 2 new reorganised constituencies.

Delimitation

After formation of Haryana in 1966, the composition of Lok Sabha was changed and seats were enhanced to accommodate additional seats from the newly formed state of Haryana. Last delimitation of electoral boundaries of Lok Sabha and Vidhan Sabha constituencies in Haryana was done by the Delimitation Commission of India in 2007-08. After the delimitation in 2007-08, Bhiwani and Mahendragarh constituencies were merged to form Bhiwani–Mahendragarh and a new Gurgaon Lok Sabha constituency was craved out by bifurcating the existing Faridabad Lok Sabha Constituency.
Currently Haryana has 10 Lok Sabha and 90 Vidhan Sabha seats, of which 2 Lok Sabha and 17 Vidhan Sabha seats are reserved for the Scheduled Castes. For the 2026 delimitation, Haryana is proposed to have 14 Lok Sabha and 126 Vidhan Sabha seats, of which 3 Lok Sabha and 25 Vidhan Sabha seats will be reserved. This will add 4 Lok Sabha and 36 Vidhan Sabha seats to Haryana.

Major Political Parties

In politics of Haryana, the Indian National Congress, Janata Party, Indian National Lok Dal are the major political parties in the state. In the past, various parties such as Haryana Vikas Party, Haryana Janhit Congress (BL), Janata Dal, Janata Party, Vishal Haryana Party, Bharatiya Jana Sangh among others have been influential in the state.
The dynastic political clans of Haryana are often criticised for the infamous self-serving politics of the Aaya Ram Gaya Ram turncoats who notoriously engage in the frequent party switching, political horse trading, unholy political alliances, political corruption, political cronyism, nepotistic-dynastic rule which serves their own clan more than it serves their voters and people of Haryana they are ought to serve.

Conducting elections

Elections in Haryana are conducted by the Election Commission of Haryana, which operates under the Election Commission of India. Administration of ECH at state level is under the "Chief Electoral Officer of Haryana", who is an IAS officer of Principal Secretary rank. At the district and constituency levels, the District Magistrates, Electoral Registration Officers and Returning Officers perform election work. Election Commission of India is an autonomous constitutional authority responsible for administering election processes in India at national, state and district level. The body administers elections to the Lok Sabha, Rajya Sabha, state Legislative Assemblies, state legislative Councils, and the offices of the President and Vice President of the country. The Election Commission operates under the authority of Constitution per Article 324, and subsequently enacted Representation of the People Act.

Type of elections

Haryana, after being separated from Punjab, first went to polls in 1967. Lok Sabha elections, also called the General Elections, are held at national level, Vidhan Sabha elections are held to elect the state level assembly, and the grassroots local self-governance elections are held at Municipal and Gram panchayat level.

Lok Sabha elections

Haryana has 10 Lok Sabha constituencies, including 2 reserved constituencies.
; Current constituency
; Defunct constituency
; List of Lok Sabha elections in Haryana.
YearLok Sabha ElectionParty-wise Details
1967Fourth Lok SabhaTotal: 9. INC: 7, BJS: 1, Independent: 1
1971Fifth Lok SabhaTotal: 9. INC: 7, BJS: 1, VHP: 1
1977Sixth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. Janata Party/BLD: 10.
1980Seventh Lok SabhaTotal: 10. Congress(Indira): 5, JP(S): 4, JP: 1
1984Eighth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. INC: 10
1989Ninth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. Janata Dal: 6, INC: 4
1991Tenth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. INC: 9, HVP: 1
1996Eleventh Lok SabhaTotal: 10. BJP: 4 + HVP: 3, INC: 2, Independent: 1
1998Twelfth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. HLD(R): 4 + BSP: 1, INC: 3, NDA: 2
1999Thirteenth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. NDA: 10, INC: 0
2004Fourteenth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. INC: 9, BJP: 1
2009Fifteenth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. INC: 9, HJC(BL): 1
2014Sixteenth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. BJP: 7, INLD: 2, INC: 1
2019Seventeenth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. BJP: 10, INLD: 0, INC: 0
2024Eighteenth Lok SabhaTotal: 10. BJP: 5, INC: 5, INLD: 0

Vidhan Sabha Elections

The elections for the Haryana Vidhan Sabha are being held since 1967.
YearVidhan Sabha ElectionParty-wise DetailsChief MinisterParty
1966First Assembly*Constituted out of Punjab assemblyBhagwat Dayal SharmaINC
1967Second AssemblyTotal: 81. INC: 48, BJS: 12, Independents: 16Rao Birender SinghVHP, infamous Aaya Ram Gaya Ram started
1968Third AssemblyTotal: 81. INC: 48, VHP: 16, BJS: 7Chaudhary Bansi LalINC
1972Fourth AssemblyTotal: 81. INC: 52, NCO: 12Chaudhary Bansi Lal
Banarsi Das Gupta
INC
1977Fifth AssemblyTotal: 90. Janata: 75, VHP: 5, INC: 3Chaudhary Devi Lal
Bhajan Lal
JP
JP/INC
1982Sixth AssemblyTotal: 90. INC: 36, Lok Dal: 31 + BJP: 6, Independents: 16Bhajan Lal
Chaudhary Bansi Lal
INC
1987Seventh AssemblyTotal: 90. Lok Dal: 60 + BJP: 16, INC: 5Chaudhary Devi Lal
Om Prakash Chautala
Banarsi Das Gupta
Ch. Hukam Singh Phogat
Lok Dal/JD
1991Eighth AssemblyTotal: 90. INC: 51Bhajan LalINC
1996Ninth AssemblyTotal: 90. HVP: 33 + BJP: 11, SAP: 24, INC: 9Chaudhary Bansi LalHVP
2000Tenth AssemblyTotal: 90. INLD: 47 + BJP: 6, INC: 21Om Prakash ChautalaINLD
2005Eleventh AssemblyTotal: 90. INC: 67, INLD: 9Bhupinder Singh HoodaINC
2009Twelfth AssemblyTotal: 90. INC: 40, INLD: 31, HJC(BL): 6, BJP: 4Bhupinder Singh HoodaINC
2014Thirteenth AssemblyTotal: 90. BJP: 47, INLD: 19, INC: 15Manohar Lal KhattarBJP
2019Fourteenth AssemblyTotal: 90. BJP: 40, INC: 31, JJP: 10, Others : 9Manohar Lal KhattarBJP
2024Fiftennth AssemblyTotal: 90. BJP: 48, INC: 37, INLD: 2, Others : 3Nayab Singh SainiBJP

Local elections

Local self-government in India refers to governmental jurisdictions below the level of the state in the federal republic of India with three spheres of government: central, state and local. The 73rd and 74th constitutional amendments give recognition and protection to local governments and in addition each state has its own local government legislation. Since 1993, local government in India takes place in two very distinct forms. Urban localities, covered in the 74th amendment to the Constitution, have Nagar Palika but derive their powers from the individual state governments, while the powers of rural localities have been formalized under the panchayati raj system, under the 73rd amendment to the Constitution. District Magistrates, Electoral Registration Officers and Returning Officers are responsible for conducting municipal and panchayat raj elections at village, block and district level.
Haryana has 22 districts, 72 sub-divisions, 93 tehsils, 50 sub-tehsils, 142 blocks, 154 cities and towns, 6,841 villages, 6,212 villages panchayats and numerous smaller dhanis. Haryana has at least 10 municipal corporations, 18 municipal councils and 52 municipalities. See the partial list of
and

Electoral demography

Voters

According to Election Commission of Haryana, Haryana had a population of 2,1145,000 and 25,352,000 in 2001 and 2011 respectively. In October 2019, Haryana had 1,82,98,714 voters, including 1,81,91,228 general voters and 1,07,486 Service Voters, who will cast votes 19,425 polling stations for the 2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election. Psephologists, electoral data scientists, political analysts, Political forecasters, opinion polls and media often analyse and discuss the electoral demography in terms of gender, age group, castes, electoral geography, ethnic enclaves, swing of voters from/to a particular party or candidate.
According to 2011 Census of India, there are 87.46% Hindus, 7.03% Muslims, and 4.91% Sikhs. In terms of native language, 87.31% use Hindi, 10.57% Punjabi, and 1.23% Urdu. Haryana has 70% rural population who primarily speak Haryanvi dialect of Hindi, and related dialects, such as Bagri and Mewati.

Psephological regions

Haryana was made a separate state on linguistic and cultural basis. Consequently, within the limited context of elections the psephologists often refer to various geo-ethnic enclaves and geo-linguistic areas of Haryana, which are the Ahirwal, Deshwal belt, GT Road belt, Jat belt, Mewat, Punjabi belt, and Ror belt. Description of these psephological regions is as follows: Bighot region in South Haryana, centered around Rewari, has 11 assembly segments spread over three Lok Sabha seats — Bhiwani-Mahendergarh, Gurgaon and Rohtak only Kosli constituency. Ahirs are numerically founder higher here.Jat belt is an area where Jats are dominant in politics and numerically higher numbers compared to other castes.Mewat region spread across Nuh district and Hathin tehsil of Palwal district in South Haryana is numerically dominated by the Meo community who speak Mewati dialect in rural areas.Braj- Faridabad and Palwal, populated in large numbers by Gujjars and Jats.Deswali belt- Rohtak, Sonipat and Jhajjar i.e. dominated by Jats.Nardak region or Ror belt- Karnal, Kurukshetra, Yamunanagar and Panipat. Dominated by Rors, Sainis and Jats.Bangar- Jind, Kaithal and Uklana- Narnaud region of Hisar i.e. dominated by Jats.Bagar- Sirsa, Fatehabad, Charkhi-Dadri, Bhiwani, western Hisar i.e. dominated by Jats.Puadh region- Ambala and Panchkula are Puadhi speaking areas dominated by Sikhs and Hindus of various castes.

Electoral female disempowerment

According to ECH data Haryana has poor female participation in contesting elections, out of the 90 assembly seats there are 58 seats which have never elected a female MLA. The Kalanaur Vidhan Sabha reserved constituency has elected the most number of female MLAs. From 1967 to 2014, 44 elected female MLAs were from congress, 11 from BJP, 6 from Janata Dal and INLD, 4 from Janata Party, 2 from Vishal Haryana Party, 2 from Hariyana Vikas Party. As of September 2019, only 3 female have won elections an independent candidate: Sharada Rani from Ballabgarh in 1982, Meritorious from Jhajjar in 1987 and Shakuntala Bhagwadia from Bawal in 2005. In 2014, 10 candidates were fielded by Congress, 16 by INlD, 15 by BJP, 12 by Haryana lokhit Party, 5 of HJC, 6 by Bahujan Samaj Party, and 4 by Jan Chetna Party, among them Rohita Rewari of BJP from Panipat city garnered a maximum of 63.5% votes, and a minimum of 30.3% votes were gained by Santosh Chauhan Sarwan of BJP from Mullana. In 2019 Vidhan Sabha elections, only 9 female candidate were elected, 4 from Congress, 3 from BJP, 1 from JJP and 1 independent. In 2024 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, 13 female candidates were elected to the legislative assembly, 7 from Congress, 5 from the BJP and an independent.
Prominent female politicians of Haryana include the late Sushma Swaraj - former Union Foreign Minister, and Chandravati - former Governor who had defeated then Chief Minister Bansi Lal in 1972.
; Female contestants in Vidhan Sabha elections
Election YearTotal candidates% of female# female candidates# female won% of female won % of female won -
19678450-
196812758-
197212433-
197720420-
198227726-
198735514-
199141615-
19969344-
20004948-
2005681116-
2009-
20141151311-
201911684?9?-
202410281010013131