Bharatiya Janata Party, Jammu and Kashmir

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Bharatiya Janata Party, Jammu and Kashmir
भारतीय जनता पार्टी, जम्मू कश्मीर
AbbreviationBJP
PresidentSat Paul Sharma[1]
Founder
Founded6 April 1980
(44 years ago)
 (1980-04-06)
Split fromJanata Party
Preceded by
HeadquartersDr. Shyama Prasad Mookherjee Bhawan, Sector - 3 Extension, Trikuta Nagar, Jammu - 180 012 Jammu and Kashmir[3]
NewspaperKamal Sandesh
Youth wingBharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha
Women's wingBJP Mahila Morcha
Labour wingBharatiya Mazdoor Sangh[4]
Peasant's wingBharatiya Kisan Sangh[5]
Ideology
International affiliation
Colours  Saffron
Alliance
Seats in Lok Sabha
2 / 5
(as of 2024)
Seats in Rajya Sabha
0 / 4
(as of 2024)
Seats in Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly
29 / 90
(as of 2024)
Seats in Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Council
0 / 36
(as of 2024)
Election symbol
Lotus
Party flag
Website
jkbjp.in

The Bharatiya Janata Party, or simply, BJP Jammu and Kashmir (BJP; [bʱaːɾət̪iːjə dʒənət̪aː paːrtiː] ; lit.'Indian People's Party'), is the unit of the Bharatiya Janata Party of the Union Territory, Jammu and Kashmir. Its head office is situated at Dr. Shyama Prasad Mookherjee Bhawan, Sector - 3 Extension, Trikuta Nagar, Jammu - 180 012, Jammu and Kashmir.[9] The current president of BJP, Jammu and Kashmir is Sat Paul Sharma[1]

Electoral performance

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Lok Sabha Election

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Year Seats won +/- Outcome
1984
0 / 6
new Opposition
1989
0 / 6
Steady Opposition
1991 Election not held because of insurgency until 1996 Opposition
1996
1 / 6
Increase1 Government, later Opposition
1998
2 / 6
Increase1 Government
1999
2 / 6
Steady
2004
0 / 6
Decrease2 Opposition
2009
0 / 6
Steady
2014
3 / 6
Increase3 Government
2019
3 / 6
Steady
After Revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir
2024
2 / 5
Steady Government

Rajya Sabha Election

[edit]
Name Photo Date of
appointment
Date of
retirement
Shamsheer Singh Manhas 11/2/2015 10/2/2021

Legislative Assembly Election

[edit]
Year Seats won +/- Voteshare (%) +/- (%) Outcome
1983
0 / 76
New 3.19% New opposition
1987
2 / 76
Increase 2 5.10% Increase 1.91%
1996
8 / 87
Increase 6 12.13% Increase7.03%
2002
1 / 87
Decrease 7 8.57% Decrease 3.56%
2008
11 / 87
Increase 10 12.45% Increase 3.88%
2014
25 / 87
Increase 14 23.0% Increase 10.55% Coalition Government with PDP
After Revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir
2024
29 / 90
Increase 4 25.64% Increase 2.64% opposition
75 / 278

Municipal corporation

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43 / 75
4 / 74

Leadership

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No Portrait Name Constituency Term Assembly Chief minister
1 Nirmal Kumar Singh Billawar 4 April 2016 29 April 2018 2 years, 25 days 12th Mehbooba Mufti
2 Kavinder Gupta Gandhinagar 30 April 2018 19 June 2018 50 days

List of opposition leaders

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No Portrait Name Constituency Term Assembly Chief Minister
1 Sunil Kumar Sharma Padder–Nagseni 3 November 2024 Incumbent 25 days 13th Omar Abdullah

Elected members

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Incumbent member(s) of Lok Sabha

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S.No. Constituency Portrait Name Win Margin in 2024
# Name
01. 4 Udhampur Jitendra Singh 1,24,373
02. 5 Jammu Jugal Kishore Sharma 1,35,498

Incumbent member(s) of Legislative Assembly

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S.No. Constituency Name Remarks Win Margin in 2024
# Name
Kishtwar District
01. 49 Kishtwar Shagun Parihar 521
02. 50 Padder–Nagseni Sunil Kumar Sharma Leader of Opposition 1,445
Doda District
03. 51 Bhaderwah Daleep Singh Parihar 10,130
04. 53 Doda West Shakti Raj Parihar 3,453
Reasi District
05. 57 Reasi Kuldeep Raj Dubey 18,815
06. 58 Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Baldev Raj Sharma 1,995
Udhampur District
07. 59 Udhampur West Pawan Kumar Gupta 20,752
08. 60 Udhampur East Ranbir Singh Pathania 2,349
09. 61 Chenani Balwant Singh Mankotia 15,611
10. 62 Ramnagar Sunil Bhardwaj 9,306
Kathua District
11. 64 Billawar Satish Kumar Sharma 21,368
12. 65 Basohli Darshan Kumar 16,034
13. 66 Jasrota Rajiv Jasrotia 12,420
14. 67 Kathua Bharat Bhushan 12,117
15. 68 Hiranagar Vijay Kumar 8,610
Samba District
16. 69 Ramgarh Devinder Kumar Manyal 14,202
17. 70 Samba Surjeet Singh Slathia 30,309
18. 71 Vijaypur Chander Prakash Ganga 19,040
Jammu District
19. 72 Bishnah Rajeev Kumar Bhagat 15,627
20. 73 Suchetgarh Gharu Ram Bhagat 11,141
21. 74 R. S. Pura–Jammu South Narinder Singh Raina 1,966
22. 75 Bahu Vikram Randhawa 11,251
23. 76 Jammu East Yudhvir Sethi 18,114
24. 78 Jammu West Arvind Gupta 22,127
25. 79 Jammu North Sham Lal Sharma 27,363
26. 80 Marh Surinder Kumar Bhagat 23,086
27. 81 Akhnoor Mohan Lal Bhagat 25,248
Rajouri District
28. 83 Kalakote–Sunderbani Thakur Randhir Singh 14,409

See Also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Sat Sharma appointed as Jammu and Kashmir BJP president". The Hindu. Retrieved 3 November 2024.
  2. ^ "What you need to know about India's BJP". AlJazeera. 23 May 2019. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
  3. ^ "BJP J&K unit address".
  4. ^ Pragya Singh (15 January 2008). "Need to Know BJP-led BMS is biggest labour union in India". live mint. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  5. ^ Gupta, Sejuta Das (2019e). Class, Politics, and Agricultural Policies in Post-liberalisation India. Cambridge University Press. pp. 172–173. ISBN 978-1-108-41628-3.
  6. ^ Pillalamarri, Akhilesh. "India's Bharatiya Janata Party Joins Union of International Conservative Parties — The Diplomat". The Diplomat. Archived from the original on 28 February 2016.
  7. ^ "Members". idu.org. International Democrat Union. February 2018. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  8. ^ "International Democrat Union » Asia Pacific Democrat Union (APDU)". International Democrat Union. Archived from the original on 16 June 2017. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
  9. ^ "BJP J&K unit address".

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