advertisement
The ruling BJP ( Bharatiya Janta Party) and opposition Congress registered victory in one teachers' constituency each in the biennial election to the Karnataka Legislative Council for which results were declared on Wednesday, 15 June, while counting of votes is underway for two graduates' seats in which both national parties are leading in one each.
North-West Graduates', South Graduates', North-West Teachers', and West Teachers' constituencies went for polls on Monday,13 June, witnessing an overall voter turnout of 71.01 percent.
The elections to the four seats of the Upper House of Karnataka Legislature were necessitated as the term of BJP's Nirani Hanamant Rudrappa (N-W Graduates') and JD(S)' K T Srikante Gowda (S-Graduates'), BJP's Arun Shahpur (N-W Teachers') and JD(S)' Basavaraj Horatti (W-Teachers') are coming to an end on 4 July.
It is a major setback for JD(S) as with the two seats it had won last time, the party has lost West Teachers' and is on the verge of losing South Graduates' constituency.
His closest rival Basavaraj Gurikar of Congress got 4,597 votes, while Shrishail Gadadinni of JD(S) got just 273 votes.
Horatti, who was elected as MLC successive times from 1980, had recently ended his long association with the JD(S) by joining BJP.
Considered to be among the senior-most MLCs, the 76-year-old is seen as a prominent Lingayat face from north Karnataka. He had been education minister in the state, and was elected as the Chairman of the Legislative Council in February 2021.
In the North-West Teachers' constituency, Arun Shahpur of BJP, who was seeking re-election was defeated by Congress' Prakash Hukkeri. Both of them have secured 6,405 and 11,460 votes respectively, while Chandrashekhar Esappa Loni of JD(S) secured 544 votes.
Counting of votes is underway for South Graduates' and North-West Graduates constituencies.
The N-W Graduates' seat witnessed a direct fight between BJP and Congress, with JD(S) not in the fray.
BJP's Nirani Hanamant Rudrappa, who is seeking re-election, is leading against Congress' Sunil Annappa Sank.
If the BJP and Congress manage to win one seat each where the counting is on, the 75-member Legislative Council will have 39 BJP members, 27 Congress and eight JD(S), and one Independent member.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)