For the upper chamber of the Indian Parliament
2018 Rajya Sabha elections
Rajya Sabha elections were held in 2018 to elect the 65 retiring members of the Rajya Sabha , Indian Parliament 's upper chamber . There were, as routine, three such elections held among relevant State and Union Territory legislators by single transferable vote (STV) and Open Ballot: on 16 January to elect 3 members from Delhi and 1 member from Sikkim; on 23 March to elect 58 members from 16 States; and lastly on 21 June to elect 3 members from Kerala. Being even-numbered, 2018 was a year in which about 30% of the State Legislature-elected 233-seat component of the body is elected. The other 12 seats of the body are appointed by the President.
Not as part of a six-yearly cycle, a by-election was held to elect 1 member from Kerala in March, which proved to be a re-election but as an independent member, of M. P. Veerendra Kumar , the only by-election of the year.[ 1]
The elections were held to elect 3 members from National Capital Territory of Delhi and 1 member from Sikkim. 3 members from the National Capital Territory of Delhi retired on 27 January 2018 and 1 member from Sikkim retired on 23 February 2018. Elections for 58 seats and a by-election for 1 seat were held on 23 March 2018. The election was held for 3 seats of Kerala on 21 June 2018.
Delhi had an election for 3 Rajya Sabha seats on 16 January 2018 to replace members retiring on 27 January 2018.
Sikkim had an election for 1 Rajya Sabha seat on 16 January 2018 to replace member retiring on 23 February 2018.
From Andhra Pradesh State, 3 members are elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 3]
From Bihar State, 6 members are elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 4]
From Chhattisgarh State, 1 member is elected for the Rajya Sabha seat on 23 March 2018, to replace member retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 5]
From Gujarat State, 4 members are elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 7]
From Haryana State, 1 member is elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace member retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 8]
From Himachal Pradesh State, 1 member is elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace member retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 9]
From Jharkhand State, 2 members are elected for the Rajya Sabha seats on 23 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 3 May 2018.[ 10]
From Karnataka State, 4 members are elected for the Rajya Sabha seats on 23 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 11]
From Madhya Pradesh State, 5 members are elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 12]
From Maharashtra State, 6 members are elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 13]
From Odisha State, 3 members are elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 3 April 2018.[ 14]
From Rajasthan State, 3 members are elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 3 April 2018.[ 15]
From Telangana State, 3 members are elected for the Rajya Sabha seats on 23 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 16]
From Uttarakhand State, 1 member is elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 15 March 2018, to replace member retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 17]
From Uttar Pradesh State, 10 members are elected for the Rajya Sabha seats on 23 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 2 April 2018.[ 18]
From West Bengal State, 5 members are elected for the Rajya Sabha seats on 23 March 2018, to replace members retiring on 2 April 2018.
From Kerala State, 3 members are elected unopposed for the Rajya Sabha seats on 14 June 2018, to replace members retiring on 1 July 2018.
In addition to scheduled elections, unforeseen vacancies, caused by members' resignation, death or disqualification, may also be filled via By-elections .
^ "Archived copy" (PDF) . eci.nic.in . Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 February 2018. Retrieved 13 January 2022 .{{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link ) ^ Hindustan Times (4 January 2018). "Billionaire, chartered accountant, party loyalist: Meet AAP's 3 nominees for RS" . Archived from the original on 5 February 2024. Retrieved 5 February 2024 . ^ a b "Rajya Sabha polls: Two from TDP, one from YSR Congress get elected" . The Times of India . Press Trust of India. 15 March 2018. Retrieved 16 March 2018 . ^ a b "Six including Ravi Shankar Prasad elected to Rajya Sabha unopposed" . United news of India. 15 March 2018. Retrieved 15 March 2018 . ^ a b Trivedi, Vivek (24 March 2018). "Rajya Sabha Polls: BSP's MLA Votes in Favour of BJP's Saroj Pandey, Ensures Win" . news18.com. Retrieved 26 March 2018 . ^ a b c d e f Shrivastava, Rahul. "All you need to know about Rajya Sabha election 2018" . India Today . Retrieved 26 March 2018 . ^ a b "Rajya Sabha Polls: All four candidates from Gujarat elected unopposed" . DNA. Press Trust of India. 15 March 2018. Retrieved 15 March 2018 . ^ a b c "BJP's Vats makes Rajya Sabha debut, J P Nadda begins 2nd innings" . The Times of India . TNN. 16 March 2018. Retrieved 16 March 2018 . ^ a b "JP Nadda Elected Unopposed to Rajya Sabha Seat From Himachal Pradesh" . India.com News Desk . india.com. 15 March 2018. Retrieved 15 March 2018 . ^ a b "Convicted MLA's vote puts Congress Rajya Sabha nominee's victory in Jharkhand under cloud; BJP to move high court" . The New Indian Express . Express News Service. Retrieved 26 March 2018 . ^ a b "Amid high drama, Congress wins 3 Rajya Sabha seats in Karnataka" . The Times of India . 24 March 2018. Retrieved 26 March 2018 . ^ a b Rajendra Sharma (15 March 2018). "Four BJP leaders, a Congress veteran elected unopposed to RS from MP" . The Times of India . TNN. Retrieved 16 March 2018 . ^ a b "RS polls now a formality as 7th nominee opts out of race" . The Times of India . TNN. 16 March 2018. Retrieved 16 March 2018 . ^ a b "Achyuta, Prashanta, Soumya Ranjan elected to Rajya Sabha from Odisha" . kalingatv.com. KalingaTV News Network. 15 March 2018. Retrieved 15 March 2018 . ^ a b "All three BJP Rajya Sabha candidates from Rajasthan elected unopposed" . The Indian Express. Press Trust of India. 15 March 2018. Retrieved 15 March 2018 . ^ a b "Rajya Sabha polls: Three TRS candidates declared winners, Congress's P Balram loses" . Zee News. Zee Media Bureau. 23 March 2018. Retrieved 26 March 2018 . ^ a b "अनिल बलूनी राज्यसभा के लिए निर्विरोध निर्वाचित, मिला सर्टिफ़िकेट" . news18.com. 15 March 2018. Retrieved 15 March 2018 . ^ a b "Rajya Sabha Elections Results: BJP Wins 9 Seats in Uttar Pradesh, BSP's BR Ambedkar Loses" . india.com. India.com News Desk. Retrieved 26 March 2018 . ^ "Kerala Rajya Sabha election 2018: Two LDF candidates, one from elected unopposed" . 14 June 2018. ^ "RSS thinker Rakesh Sinha, Dalit leader Ram Shakal among 4 nominated to Rajya Sabha" . India Today . ^ "Parrikar, Rane take oath as newly-elected MLAs" . Retrieved 9 September 2017 .