Sreerampur (Lok Sabha constituency)

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Sreerampur
Serampore
Existence 1951-present
Reservation None
Current MP Kalyan Banerjee
Party Trinamool Congress
Elected Year 2014
State West Bengal
Total Electors 1,624,038[1]
Assembly Constituencies Jagatballavpur
Domjur
Uttarpara
Sreerampur
Champdani
Chanditala
Jangipara

Serampore (Lok Sabha constituency) (Bengali: শ্রীরামপুর লোকসভা কেন্দ্র) is one of the 543 parliamentary constituencies in India. The constituency centres on Serampore in West Bengal. Five assembly segments of the constituency are in Hooghly district and two are in Howrah district.

Overview

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Sreerampur (Lok Sabha constituency) is basically an industrial constituency with an agricultural hinterland. The Howrah-Hooghly industrial belt on the west bank of the Hooghly river covers the Howrah, Hooghly and Sreerampur constituency. According to the Hindustan Times in 2011:

"For the workers of Dunlop tyre plant at Sahagunj, the 2006 and the 2011 assembly polls are in sharp contrast.

“In 2006, chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee had inaugurated the reopening of the once-glorious plant and claimed it as a success of the government. He promised that the workers would, henceforth, not have to worry about the future. Cut to the present and in 2011, Bhattacharjee is nowhere near to be seen.

“Instead, with the gradual demise of the plant, it was the turn of Trinamool chief Mamata Banerjee to choose the factory entrance on GT Road as the venue of her campaign rally for Saptagram assembly constituency.

“The disappointment over Bhattacharjee’s industrialisation drive is so much among the Dunlop workers that, in 2010 civic polls, Sunil Malakar, a Save-Dunlop Citizen’s Committee leader who was terminated by the management on disciplinary grounds, defeated the incumbent civic chairman of Hooghly-Chinsurah municipality by a big margin.

“'No one buys the CPI(M)’s promises of bringing industries. We have seen them for years and now it is time to see if Banerjee manages to do something,' said Chandra Prakash Yadav, who settled in Sahagunj from Bihar about a decade ago and is now a voter of the Saptagram constituency.

“But the sentiments over Dunlop are just the tip of the iceberg! The entire jute industry, with eight mills in Hooghly, is sick and the state government seems helpless in finding any remedy for it, earning criticism from all trade unions, except CPI(M)’s workers’ wing, Citu.

“From Tribeni in north to Hind Motor in south, by the bank of Hooghly and sprawled over six Assembly constituencies—Saptagram, Chinsurah, Chandernagore, Champdani, Serampore and Uttarpara—exists the Hooghly industrial belt, now seeking oxygen.

“Two fertiliser units, one food processing unit, two cotton mills, one steel plant and many other small and medium scale units have closed down over the years.”[2]

The seven assembly constituencies mentioned above are spread across Sreerampur and Hooghly parliamentary constituencies . The most significant change in the industrial scenario since 2011 is that Hindustan Motors shut down its Hindmotor plant in May 2014. It is in Sreerampur parliamentary constituency. [3]

According to The Hindu, Sreerampur and Howrah constituencies have more than 25 % non-Bengali voters with their roots in Rajasthan, Bihar or Uttar Pradesh.[4]

Assembly segments

As per order of the Delimitation Commission issued in 2006 in respect of the delimitation of constituencies in the West Bengal, parliamentary constituency no. 27 Sreerampur is composed of the following segments:[5]

Prior to delimitation Serampore Lok Sabha constituency was composed of the following assembly segments:[6]Jagatballavpur (assembly constituency no. 167), Panchla (assembly constituency no. 168), Jangipara (assembly constituency no. 177), Chanditala (assembly constituency no. 178), Uttarpara (assembly constituency no. 179), Serampore (assembly constituency no. 180), Champdani (assembly constituency no. 181)

Members of Parliament

Lok Sabha Duration Constituency Name of M.P. Party Affiliation
First 1952-57 Sreerampur Tushar Kanti Chattopadhyay Communist Party of India [7]
Second 1957-62 Jitendra Nath Lahiri Indian National Congress[8]
Third 1962-67 Dinendra Nath Bhattacharya Communist Party of India [9]
Fourth 1967-71 B.Ghosh Indian National Congress[10]
Fifth 1971-77 Dinendra Nath Bhattacharya Communist Party of India (Marxist)[11]
Sixth 1977-80 Dinendra Nath Bhattacharya Communist Party of India (Marxist)[12]
Seventh 1980-84 Dinendra Nath Bhattacharya Communist Party of India (Marxist)[13]
Eighth 1984-89 Bimal Kanti Ghosh Indian National Congress[14]
Ninth 1989-91 Sudarsan Roy Choudhury Communist Party of India (Marxist) [15]
Tenth 1991-96 Sudarsan Roy Choudhury Communist Party of India (Marxist)[16]
Eleventh 1996-98 Pradip Bhattacharya Indian National Congress[17]
Twelfth 1998-99 Akbar Ali Khandokar All India Trinamool Congress[18]
Thirteenth 1999-04 Akbar Ali Khandokar All India Trinamool Congress[19]
Fourteenth 2004-09 Santasri Chatterjee Communist Party of India (Marxist)[20]
Fifteenth 2009-14 Kalyan Banerjee All India Trinamool Congress[21]
Sixteenth 2014-incumbent Kalyan Banerjee All India Trinamool Congress[22]

Election results

General elections 1951-2004

Most of the contests were multi-cornered. However, only winners and runners-up are mentioned below:

Year Winner Runner-up
Candidate Party Candidate Party
1951 Tushar Kanti Chattopadhyaya Communist Party of India Sachindra Chaudhuri Indian National Congress[7]
1957 Jitendra Nath Lahiri Indian National Congress Tushar Kanti Chattopadhyaya Communist Party of India[8]
1962 Dinendra Nath Bhattacharya Communist Party of India Jitendra Nath Lahiri Indian National Congress[9]
1967 B.Ghosh Indian National Congress Dinendra Nath Bhattacharya Communist Party of India (Marxist)[10]
1971 Dinendra Nath Bhattacharya Communist Party of India (Marxist) Jadu Gopal Sen Communist Party of India[11]
1977 Dinendra Nath Bhattacharya Communist Party of India (Marxist) Jadu Gopal Sen Communist Party of India[12]
1980 Dinendra Nath Bhattacharya Communist Party of India (Marxist) Gopal Das Nag Indian National Congress (I)[13]
1984 Bimal Kanti Ghosh Indian National Congress Ajit Bag Communist Party of India (Marxist)[14]
1989 Sudarsan Roy Chowdhury Communist Party of India (Marxist) Bimal Kanti Ghosh Indian National Congress[15]
1991 Sudarsan Roy Chowdhury Communist Party of India (Marxist) Bimal Kanti Ghosh Indian National Congress[16]
1996 Pradip Bhattacharya Indian National Congress Sudarsan Roy Chowdhury Communist Party of India (Marxist)[17]
1998 Akbar Ali Khandoker All India Trinamool Congress Sudarsan Roy Chowdhury Communist Party of India (Marxist)[18]
1999 Akbar Ali Khandoker All India Trinamool Congress Sudarsan Roy Chowdhury Communist Party of India (Marxist)[19]
2004 Santasri Chatterjee Communist Party of India (Marxist) Akbar Ali Khandoker All India Trinamool Congress[20]

General election 2004

General Election, 2004: Sreerampur[20]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
CPI(M) Santasri Chatterjee 4,04,082 37.36
Trinamool Congress Akbar Ali Khandoker 3,84,395 35.54
INC Kesto Mukherjee 1,25,020 11.56
Independent Sukumar Malik 9,808 0.90
BSP Sabitri Das 6,370 0.58
RPI(A) Dilip Bhattacharya 5,400 0.49
Independent Avash Munshi 3,664 0.33
Independent Bidyut Raut 3,021 0.27
SP Indradeo Ray 2,845 0.26
JD(S) Suresh Nayek 1,640 0.15
Majority 19,987 1.84
Turnout 10,81,402 77.49
CPI(M) gain from Trinamool Congress Swing

General election 2009

General Election, 2009: Sreerampur[21]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Trinamool Congress Kalyan Banerjee 5,69,725 52.68 +17.14
CPI(M) Santasri Chatterjee 4,32,535 39.99 +2.63
BJP Debabrata Chowdhury 38,476 3.55 N/A
Independent Sekh Soleman 14,252 1.31 N/A
AIUDF Pradip Ghosh 11,803 1.09 N/A
BSP Rakesh Kumar Gautam 7,245 0.66 +0.08
Independent Amitava Bhattacharya 3,758 0.34 N/A
Independent Chiranjit Naskar 3,648 0.33 N/A
Majority 1,37,190 12.68
Turnout 10,81,442 77.51
Trinamool Congress gain from CPI(M) Swing

General election 2014

General Elections, 2014: Sreerampur[22]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Trinamool Congress Kalyan Banerjee 6,14,933 39.90 -12.78
CPI(M) Tirthankar Roy 3,62,407 28.08 -11.91
BJP Bappi Lahiri 2,87,712 22.29 +18.74
INC Abdul Mannan 86,099 6.67 N/A
Independent Dr. Somnath Ghosh 6,613 0.51 N/A
Independent Raju Dey Sarkar 4,277 0.33 N/A
Indian Unity Centre Nasiruddin Mir 4,240 0.32 N/A
WPI Manasa Sen 3,406 0.26 N/A
SUCI(C) Md. Shahnawaz 2,698 0.20 N/A
Independent Kailash Naskar 2,674 0.20 N/A
Majority 1,52,526 11.81 -0.87
Turnout 12,90,433 79.46 +1.97
Trinamool Congress hold Swing -12.78


e • d Indian general election, 2014
West Bengal summary
Party Seats won Seat change Vote percentage
Trinamool Congress 34 Increase15 39.3
Communist Party of India (Marxist) 2 Decrease7 22.7
Communist Party of India 0 Decrease2 2.3
Revolutionary Socialist Party 0 Decrease2 2.4
Forward Bloc 0 Decrease2 2.1
Indian National Congress 4 Decrease2 9.6
Bharatiya Janata Party 2 Increase1 16.8
Socialist Unity Centre of India (Communist) 0 Decrease1 0.7

Source: Party-wise trends in General Election to the Lok Sabha 2014
List of successful candidates in General Elections 2009 to the 15th Lok Sabha


References

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See also

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