NA-14 Mansehra

(Redirected from NA-14 Mansehra-I)

NA-14 Mansehra (این اے-14، مانسہرہ) is a constituency for the National Assembly of Pakistan. The constituency was formerly known as NA-20 (Mansehra-I) from 1977 to 2018. The name changed to NA-13 (Mansehra-I) after the delimitation in 2018 and to NA-14 Mansehra after the delimitation in 2023.[2]

NA-14 Mansehra
Constituency
for the National Assembly of Pakistan
RegionBalakot Tehsil, Mansehra Tehsil (partly), and Baffa Pakhal Tehsil (partly) of Mansehra District
Electorate582,844 [1]
Current constituency
Member(s)Vacant
Created fromNA-14 Mansehra-I

Members of Parliament edit

1937–1945: Indian elections edit

Election Constituency Member Party
1937 Mansehra- I Khan Sahib Atai Khan Swati Indian National Congress
1937 Mansehra- II Khan Muhammad Abbas Khan Swati Indian National Congress
1937 Mansehra- III Khan Haji Faqeera Khan Swati Indian National Congress


1977–2024: Mansehra-I edit

Election Member Party
1977 Muhammad Hanif Khan Swati PPP
1985 Syed Qasim Shah Independent
1988 Syed Qasim Shah Independent
1990 Sardar Muhammad Yousaf Independent
1993 Sardar Muhammad Yousaf PML-N
1997 Sardar Muhammad Yousaf
Election Member Party
2002 Sardar Shahjahan Yousuf PML (Q)
2008
2013 Sardar Muhammad Yousuf PML (N)
Election Member Party
2018 Saleh Muhammad Khan Swati PTI

Elections since 2002 edit

2002 general election edit

2002 General Election: NA-20 (Mansehra-I) [3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
  PML-Q Sardar Shah Jehan Yousuf 40,853 34.80
Independent Lt General Syed Salahuddin Tirmizi 37,520 31.96
  MMA Al-Haj Syed Ghulam Nabi Shah 35,576 30.30
  PML-N Muhammad Saqib Murntaz 1,754 1.49
  PPPP Sardar Wilqarul Mulk 1,442 1.23
  MQM Naveed Akhter Khan 250 0.22
Majority 3,333 2.84
Turnout 117,395 36.89
PML(Q) gain from PML(N)

A total of 3,379 votes were rejected.

2008 general election edit

2008 General Election: NA-20 (Mansehra-I) [4]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
  PML Sardar Shajehan Yousaf 73,644 47.48
  PML-N Lt General Salah-ud-Din Trimzi 72,526 46.75 +45.26
  PPPP Ghayas-ud-din Khan 8,114 5.23 +4.00
  MQM Naveed Akhter Khan 830 0.54
Majority 1,118 0.73
Turnout 155,114 36.02 -0.87
PML gain from PML (Q)

A total of 3,669 votes were rejected.

2013 general election edit

2013 General Election: NA-20 (Mansehra-I) [5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
  PML-N Sardar Muhammad Yousuf 106,467 48.14 +1.39
  PTI Azam Khan Swati 75,197 34.00
  JUI-F Syed Qasim Shah 29,001 13.11
  JI Muhammad Younis Khattak 3,321 1.50
Independent Muhammad Fayaz 1,971 0.89
Independent Samar Ul Islam 1,862 0.84
Independent Muhammad Irfan 643 0.29
Tehreek-e-Suba Hazara Fakhar E Alam urf Hazrat 630 0.28
Independent Wali Ur Rehman Chichi 613 0.28
PML-H Naveed Akhtar Khan 472 0.22
Independent Ijaz Hussain Shazal 415 0.19
  MQM Ghulam Nabi 274 0.13 -0.41
PPP (SB) Sheikh Kamran Iqbal 286 0.13
Majority 31,270 14.14
Turnout 221,152 54.60 +18.58
PML (N) gain from PML

A total of 8,452 votes were rejected.

2018 general election edit

General elections were held on 25 July 2018.

General election 2018: NA-13 (Mansehra-I)[6]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Saleh Muhammad Khan 109,282 41.85  41.85
PML(N) Shahjahan Yousuf 107,808 41.28  6.86
MMA Muhammad Baseer Awan 19,716 7.55  7.06
Others Others (eleven candidates) 16,748 6.41
Turnout 261,154 49.56  5.04
Rejected ballots 7,600 2.91
Majority 1,474 0.57
Registered electors 526,974
Independent gain from PML(N)

JI and JUI-F contested as part of MMA'

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Election Commission of Pakistan". ecp.gov.pk. Retrieved 2024-01-06.
  2. ^ "ECP - Election Commission of Pakistan". www.ecp.gov.pk. Retrieved 2022-12-25.
  3. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 2016-05-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ http://test1947.ecp.gov.pk/ConstResult.aspx?Const_Id=NA-20&type=NA[dead link]
  5. ^ http://test1947.ecp.gov.pk/ConstResult.aspx?Const_Id=NA-20&type=NA[dead link]
  6. ^ "ECP – Election Commission of Pakistan". www.ecp.gov.pk. Archived from the original on 3 August 2018. Retrieved 2 August 2018.

External links edit