Uttarakhand · Vidhan Sabha (State Assembly) Election 2007
Anil Nautiyal of Bharatiya Janata Party won the Karnprayag Vidhan Sabha (Assembly) constituency in Uttarakhand in the 2007 state assembly election, securing 15,716 votes (36.10% vote share). The runner-up was Prithvipal (Indian National Congress) with 8,565 votes.
A total of 16 candidates contested this assembly seat. State Assembly elections elect Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) using India's First-Past-The-Post (FPTP) system, and the party or alliance winning a majority of seats forms the state government. Full candidate-wise vote breakdown, vote shares, and constituency information are shown below.
| Position | Candidate Name | Votes | Votes% | Party |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Anil Nautiyal | 15716 | 36.10% | Bharatiya Janata Party |
| 2 | Prithvipal | 8565 | 19.70% | Indian National Congress |
| 3 | Surendra Singh Bisht | 6558 | 15.10% | Independent |
| 4 | Radhakrishna Bhatt | 4287 | 9.80% | Bahujan Samaj Party |
| 5 | Awatar Singh Pundir | 1996 | 4.60% | Independent |
| 6 | Birendra Mingwal | 1348 | 3.10% | Communist Party Of India (MARXIST) |
| 7 | Geeta Bisht | 1313 | 3.00% | Uttarakhand Kranti Dal |
| 8 | Ranjeet Singh | 662 | 1.50% | Independent |
| 9 | Man Singh | 610 | 1.40% | Independent |
| 10 | Birendra Singh Negi(GHAVRI) | 520 | 1.20% | Nationalist Congress Party |
| 11 | Pratap Singh | 496 | 1.10% | Bharatiya Jan Shakti |
| 12 | Devendra Singh Negi | 340 | 0.80% | Vishwa Vikas Sangh |
| 13 | Kunwar Singh Negi | 333 | 0.80% | Independent |
| 14 | Laxman Prasad | 326 | 0.80% | Lok Jan Shakti Party |
| 15 | Dharm Singh Pangati | 273 | 0.60% | Independent |
| 16 | Deepak Pant | 215 | 0.50% | Janata Dal (Secular) |
The Karnprayag constituency is part of the Uttarakhand Vidhan Sabha (Legislative Assembly). In the 2007 Assembly election, 16 candidates contested for this seat. Anil Nautiyal (Bharatiya Janata Party) emerged as the winner securing 15,716 votes.
State Assembly elections in India determine which party or coalition forms the state government. The party or alliance winning a majority of Assembly seats in a state gets to form the government and appoint the Chief Minister. Unlike Lok Sabha elections which are held simultaneously across India, each state follows its own election cycle, typically every five years.
How to read this data: The candidate table above shows all contestants ranked by position. The vote percentage column shows each candidate's share of the total votes polled in this constituency. The bar chart visualizes the top candidates' vote counts for quick comparison.