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Mizoram Election 2023: Kolasib Assembly Seat
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Kolasib
Mizoram Assembly Election 2023
Mizoram Election: Kolasib Assembly Constituency 2023
Kolasib Assembly constituency comes under the district of Kolasib and is one of the 40 Mizoram Legislative Assembly constituencies. Voters of the Kolasib Assembly segment polled as per the Mizoram Election 2023 Schedule on November 7 and the Mizoram Assembly Election 2023 results will be declared on December 4.
What happened last time
In the 2018 Mizoram Assembly elections, Kolasib Assembly constituency recorded 85.50%% voter turnout, with 17,705 of the 20,699 registered voters in the Assembly constituency exercising their voting right.
Of the 40 Mizoram Assembly seats, 39 are reserved for candidates belonging to the Scheduled Tribes (ST). Aizawl East 1 is the only unreserved constituency in the state.
The Congress, then in power with 34 of the 40 Assembly seats, was in direct contest with the eventual winner Mizo National Front (MNF), and Zoram People’s Movement (a regional six-party alliance) in most Assembly segments; the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was a distant fourth.
Kolasib
Mizoram Assembly Election 2018
20,699
Total Electors
17,705
Total Votes
85.50%
Percentage of votes polled
279
Winning margin
1.60%
Margin Percentage
Mizoram Election: Kolasib Assembly Constituency 2023
Kolasib Assembly constituency comes under the district of Kolasib and is one of the 40 Mizoram Legislative Assembly constituencies. Voters of the Kolasib Assembly segment polled as per the Mizoram Election 2023 Schedule on November 7 and the Mizoram Assembly Election 2023 results will be declared on December 4.
What happened last time
In the 2018 Mizoram Assembly elections, Kolasib Assembly constituency recorded 85.50%% voter turnout, with 17,705 of the 20,699 registered voters in the Assembly constituency exercising their voting right.
Of the 40 Mizoram Assembly seats, 39 are reserved for candidates belonging to the Scheduled Tribes (ST). Aizawl East 1 is the only unreserved constituency in the state.
The Congress, then in power with 34 of the 40 Assembly seats, was in direct contest with the eventual winner Mizo National Front (MNF), and Zoram People’s Movement (a regional six-party alliance) in most Assembly segments; the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was a distant fourth.