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2024 Sindh provincial election

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2024 Sindh provincial election

← 2018 8 February 2024 Next →

130 out of 168 seats in the Sindh Assembly[a]
85 seats needed for a majority
Registered26,994,769
Turnout43.7% (Decrease 4.41%) [1]
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Murad Ali Shah Ali Khursheedi Ali Palh
Party PPP MQM-P IND
(backed by PTI)
Leader since 29 July 2016 - -
Leader's seat Jamshoro-I Karachi West-IV Karachi East-VII (lost)
Last election 38.44%, 99 Seats 7.65%, 20 seats 14.47%
Seats before 99 21 30
Seats won 115 36 12
Seat change Increase 16 Increase 15 Decrease 18
Popular vote 5,228,678 905,896 1,105,243
Percentage 46.11% 7.99% 9.75%
Swing Increase 7.77pp Increase 0.34pp Decrease 4.72pp

Map of Sindh with Provincial Assembly constituencies

Chief Minister before election

Murad Ali Shah
PPP

Elected Chief Minister

Murad Ali Shah
PPP

Provincial elections were held in Sindh on 8 February 2024 to elect a new provincial legislature.[2] On 5 August 2023, after the approval of the results of the 2023 digital census by the Council of Common Interests headed by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, elections have been delayed for several months, as new delimitations will be published on 14 December 2023.[3][4] On 2 November 2023, the Election Commission of Pakistan announced, in agreement with the President of Pakistan, Arif Alvi, that the elections should be held on 8 February 2024.[5] This election was held concurrently with nationwide general elections and other provincial elections.

Background

[edit]

In the 2018 election, the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) won 99 seats, gaining a majority in the Provincial Assembly. It became the third consecutive time that the PPP was able to form government in Sindh Since 2008.[6]

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) became the largest party in Karachi by winning 21 out of 44 seats from the city. It was the first time since 1988 that any party other than the MQM-P got the mandate to represent the city on the provincial and national levels.[7] Overall, the PTI won 30 seats and became the second largest party, and the largest party in the opposition.

The Muttahida Qaumi Movement - Pakistan (MQM-P), which was the largest and most popular party in Karachi, Hyderabad and other urban areas of Sindh, faced a tough challenge from the rising popularity of the PTI and received its worst ever result. It won only 21 seats and became the third largest party in the province. The MQM-P also opted to join the opposition.

In April 2022, after circumstances arising during a political crisis in Pakistan after the successful no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Imran Khan, the MQM-P left the opposition and joined the PPP-led provincial government.

In September 2022, Former Prime Minister and Leader of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Imran Khan announced to liberate Sindh from Zardari Mafia.[8] He stated that Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf will team up with the youth to liberate the poor and oppressed people of Interior Sindh from Feudal lords of Pakistan People's Party.[9] This was the very first time some party leader threatened dominance of People's Party in Sindh and upcoming election will be a battle for survival of PPP[10] in interior Sindh as Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf has support of the people of Karachi and Hyderabad and will be able to gain seats in Interior Sindh if they campaign well.[11]

Merger of MQM factions

[edit]

Since the appointment of Kamran Tessori as the Governor of Sindh, efforts began to merge breakaway factions of the MQM-P like the Pak Sarzameen Party (PSP) and the Farooq Sattar group back into the MQM-P to unite their vote bank to overcome the growing popularity of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI).[12][13] The Mohajir Qaumi Movement Pakistan - Haqiqi (MQM-H) was also approached, but refused to merge the with the MQM-P.[14]

On the evening of 12 January 2023 Syed Mustafa Kamal, the leader of the PSP, and Farooq Sattar announced their merger with the MQM-P in a press conference.[15]

Ban on PTI from contesting as a party

[edit]

On 22 December 2023, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) decided against letting the PTI retain its electoral symbol, arguing that the party had failed to hold intra-party elections. On 22 December, the PTI approached the Peshawar High Court (PHC) against the ECP's order and hence, a single-member bench suspended the ECP's order until 9 January 2024. On 30 December 2023, the ECP filed a review application within the PHC, and days later, a two-member bench withdrew the suspension order as it heard the case. However, on 10 January 2024, the two-member bench had declared the ECP's order to be "illegal, without any lawful authority, and of no legal effect. On 11 January, the ECP challenged this ruling in the Supreme Court, and on 13 January, a three-member bench ruled in favor of the ECP and stripped the PTI of its electoral symbol. As a consequence of this ruling, the PTI could not allot party tickets to any of its candidates. Therefore, all candidates of the party will be listed as independent candidates and each will have a different electoral symbol.[16]

Schedule

[edit]

The schedule of the election was announced by the Election Commission of Pakistan on 15 December 2023.[17]

Sr no Poll Event Schedule
1 Public Notice Issued by the Returning Officers 19 December 2023
2 Dates of filing Nomination papers with the Returning Officers by the candidates 20 December 2023 to 24 December 2023
3 Publication of names of the nominated candidates. 24 December 2023
4 Last date of scrutiny of nomination papers by the Returning Officer 25 December 2023 to 30 December 2023
5 Last date of filing appeals against decisions of the Returning Officer rejecting/accepting nomination papers. 3 January 2024
6 Last date for deciding of appeals by the Appellate Tribunal 10 January 2024
7 Publication of revised list of candidates 11 January 2024
8 Last date of withdrawal of candidate and publication of revised list of candidates 12 January 2024
9 Allotment of election symbol to contesting candidates 13 January 2024
10 Date of Polling and Counting of Votes 8 February 2024

Electoral system

[edit]

The 168 seats of the Sindh Assembly consist of 130 general seats, whose members are elected by the first-past-the-post voting system through single-member constituencies. 29 seats are reserved for women and 9 seats are reserved for non-Muslims. The members on these seats are elected through proportional representation based on the total number of general seats secured by each political party.

Opinion polls

[edit]
Polling firm Last date
of polling
Link PPP PTI MQM(P) Other MMA Ind. Lead Sample
size
Undecideds &
Non-voters[b]
PA 11 August 2023 The Provincial Assembly is dissolved by Governor Kamran Tessori on the advice of Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah.[18]
Gallup Pakistan 30 June 2023 PDF 35% 36% 2% 1% N/A 17%
NA 11–12 April 2022 Imran Khan is removed from office in a no-confidence motion
IPOR (IRI) 21 March 2022 PDF 44% 17% 5% 34% 27% ~810 N/A[c]
Gallup Pakistan 31 January 2022 PDF 34% 30% 3% 28% 3% 2% 4% ~1,300 39%
IPOR (IRI) 9 January 2022 PDF 44% 13% 7% 36% 31% 867 N/A[c]
IPOR (IRI) 11 November 2020 PDF 22% 13% 1% 61% 9% 467 N/A[c]
2018 Elections 25 July 2018 ECP 38.4% 14.5% 7.7% 25.9% 6.1% 7.4% 23.6% 10,025,437 N/A
Directly elected seats 76 23 16 GDA 11 TLP 2 1 1 post. 53 Women: 29 / non-Muslims: 9 Total =168 seats
ECP 2024 Gen.Elections delimitations for Sindh PA seats: 130 directly elected + 29 women + 9 non-Muslims = 168

Results

[edit]

Result by party

[edit]
Party Popular vote Seats
General Reserved Total +/−
Votes % ±pp Contested Won Independents joined Total Women Non-Muslims
Pakistan Peoples Party 5,228,678 46.11 Increase7.77 130 85 4 89 20 6 115 Increase16
Muttahida Qaumi Movement Pakistan 905,896 7.99 Increase0.34 88 28 0 28 6 2 36 Increase15
Independents (backed by PTI) 1,105,243 9.75 Decrease4.72 113 10 −1[19] 9 12 Decrease18
Grand Democratic Alliance 1,399,137 12.34 Decrease2.77 75 2 0 2 1 0 3 Decrease11
Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan 708,413 6.25 N/A 102 2 0 2 0 0 2 Increase1
Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan 329,715 2.91 Decrease1.60 119 0 0 0 0 0 0 Decrease3
Pakistan Muslim League (N) 188,473 1.66 Decrease0.34 51 0 0 0 0 0 0 Steady
Istehkam-e-Pakistan Party 4951 0.04 N/A 28 0 0 0 0 0 0 Steady
Wafa Parast Group[d] 103,592 0.91 N/A 54 0 0 0 0 Steady
Independents 921,159 8.12 Decrease2.09 3[24] −3 0 0 Steady
Others 0 0 0
Total 11,338,919 100% 130 29 9 168
Valid votes 11,338,919
Invalid votes
Votes cast/ turnout
Abstentions
Registered voters 26,994,769
Source: Election Commission of Pakistan[25]

Results by region

[edit]
Region Seats PPP MQM IND[e] JI GDA IND Others
Upper Sindh 44 39 0 0 0 2 3 0
Lower Sindh 39 35 3 1 0 0 0 0
Karachi 47 11 25 9 2 0 0 0
Total 130 85 28 10 2 2 3 0

Results by division

[edit]

[26]

Division Total seats PPP MQM IND[e] JI GDA IND Others
Larkana 17 16 0 0 0 0 1 0
Sukkur 14 11 0 0 0 1 2 0
Nawabshah 13 12 0 0 0 1 0 0
Mirpur Khas 11 11 0 0 0 0 0 0
Hyderabad 28 24 3 1 0 0 0
Karachi 47 11 25 9 2 0 0 0
Total 130 85 28 10 2 2 3 0

Results by district

[edit]

[26]

Division District Seats PPP MQM IND[e] JI GDA IND Others
Larkana Jacobabad 3 2 0 0 0 0 1 0
Kashmore 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Shikarpur 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Larkana 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Qambar Shahdadkot 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sukkur Ghotki 4 2 0 0 0 0 2 0
Sukkur 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Khairpur 6 5 0 0 0 1 0 0
Nawabshah Naushahro Feroz 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Nawabshah 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sanghar 5 4 0 0 0 1 0 0
Mirpur Khas Mirpur Khas 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Umerkot 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Tharparkar 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Hyderabad Matiari 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Tando Allahyar 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Hyderabad 6 2 3 1 0 0 0 0
Tando Muhammad Khan 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Jamshoro 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Dadu 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Badin 5 5 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sujawal 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Thatta 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Karachi Malir 6 5 0 1 0 0 0 0
Korangi 7 1 2 3 1 0 0 0
East 9 1 8 0 0 0 0 0
South 5 1 1 3 0 0 0 0
Keamari 5 2 1 2 0 0 0 0
West 6 1 5 0 0 0 0 0
Central 9 0 8 0 1 0 0 0
Total 130 85 28 10 2 2 3 0

Results by constituency

[edit]

[26]

District Constituency Winner Runner Up Margin
No. Name Candidate Party Votes % Candidate Party Votes %
Jacobabad PS-1 Jacobabad-I Sher Muhammad Khan Mugheri PPP 48385 Abdul Razzaque Khan IND 18115 30,270
PS-2 Jacobabad-II Sohrab Khan Sarki PPP 53298 Shafique Ahmed Khoso JUI(F) 47662 5,636
PS-3 Jacobabad-III Mumtaz Hussain Khan IND 39600 Mir Aurang Zaib Panhwar PPP 31587 8,013
Kashmore PS-4 Kashmore-I Abdul Rauf Khoso PPP 58046 Mir Ghalib Hussain Khan IND 25758 32,288
PS-5 Kashmore-II Ghulam Abid Khan PPP 31132 Rabnawaz JUI(F) 21052 10,080
PS-6 Kashmore-III Mir Mehboob Ali Khan Bijarani PPP 86365 Abdul Qayoom JUI(F) 9945 76,420
Shikarpur PS-7 Shikarpur-I Imtiaz Ahmed Shaikh PPP 60354 Agha Taimor Khan JUI(F) 44480 15,874
PS-8 Shikarpur-II Muhammad Arif Khan Mahar PPP 64016 Abid Hussain Jatoi JUI(F) 51869 12,147
PS-9 Shikarpur-III Agha Siraj Khan Durrani PPP 63760 Rushdullah Shah JUI(F) 25634 38,126
Larkana PS-10 Larkana-I Faryal Talpur PPP 85917 Kifayatullah JUI(F) 18475 67,442
PS-11 Larkana-II Jameel Ahmed Soomro PPP 41158 Kazim Ali Khan GDA 20807 20,351
PS-12 Larkana-III Sohail Anwar Siyal PPP 54077 Moazam Ali Khan Abbasi GDA 31850 22,227
PS-13 Larkana-IV Adil Altaf Unnar PPP 89662 Naseer Muhammad JUI(F) 4028 85,634
Qambar Shahdadkot PS-14 Qambar Shahdadkot-I Mir Nadir Ali Khan Magsi PPP 38473 Muzafar Ali Brohi GDA 20422 18,051
PS-15 Qambar Shahdadkot-II Nisar Ahmed Khuhro PPP 44810 Mir Humayun Khan PML(N) 17211 27,599
PS-16 Qambar Shahdadkot-III Nawab Ghaibi Sardar Khan Chandio PPP 38057 Muhammad Ali Hakro IND[e] 12581 25,476
PS-17 Qambar Shahdadkot-IV Burhan Chandio PPP 43885 Javed Hussain Khokhar GDA 21658 22,227
Ghotki PS-18 Ghotki-I Jam Mehtab Hussain Dahar IND 57143 Shehryar Khan Shar PPP 55190 1,953
PS-19 Ghotki-II Sardar Nadir Akmal Khan Leghari IND 55683 Abdul Bari Pitafi PPP 44186 11,497
PS-20 Ghotki-III Muhammad Bux Khan Mahar PPP 87431 Mohammad Ishaq Laghari JUI(F) 9401 78,030
PS-21 Ghotki-IV Ali Nawaz Khan Mahar PPP 63758 Ghulam Ali Abbas JUI(F) 29273 34,485
Sukkur PS-22 Sukkur-I Ikramullah Khan PPP 41828 Muhammad Mubeen JUI(F) 39778 2,050
PS-23 Sukkur-II Awais Qadir Shah PPP 69266 Inayatullah GDA 21137 48,129
PS-24 Sukkur-III Syed Farukh Ahmed Shah PPP 41235 Mubeen Ahmed IND 19622 21,613
PS-25 Sukkur-IV Nasir Hussain Shah PPP 51792 Ameer Bux Alias Meer JUI(F) 25059 26,733
Khairpur PS-26 Khairpur-I Syed Qaim Ali Shah PPP 63686 Imam Bux Phulpoto GDA 19041 44,645
PS-27 Khairpur-II Hallar Wassan PPP 91131 Muhammad Sharif Buriro JUI(F) 10734 80,397
PS-28 Khairpur-III Sajid Ali Banbhan PPP 59217 Ismail Shah GDA 54839 4,378
PS-29 Khairpur-IV Shiraz Shaukat Rajpar PPP 69590 Muhammad Rafique Banbhan GDA 45734 23,856
PS-30 Khairpur-V Naeem Ahmed Kharal PPP 57000 Shaikh Khalid Hussain GDA 26913 30,087
PS-31 Khairpur-VI Muhammad Rashid Shah GDA 58091 Muhammad Bachal Shah PPP 51769 6,322
Naushahro Feroze PS-32 Naushahro Feroze-I Syed Serfraz Hussain Shah PPP 60322 Syed Zohaib Ali Shah GDA 28546 31,776
PS-33 Naushahro Feroze-II Syed Hassan Ali Shah PPP 60617 Shakeel Ahmed Jalbani GDA 28175 32,442
PS-34 Naushahro Feroze-III Mumtaz Ali Chandio PPP 52385 Shahnawaz Jatoi GDA 46442 5,943
PS-35 Naushahro Feroze-IV Zia Ul Hassan Lanjar PPP 80464 Masroor Ahmed Khan Jatoi GDA 29608 50,856
Nawabshah PS-36 Nawabshah-I Azra Fazal Pechuho PPP 75260 Mir Bahawal Khan Rind IND[e] 16657 58,603
PS-37 Nawabshah-II Chaudhary Javed Iqbal Arain PPP 70383 Inayat Ali Rind IND[e] 20492 49,891
PS-38 Nawabshah-III Ghulam Qadir Chandio PPP 66121 Syed Zain Ul Abdin GDA 40839 25,282
PS-39 Nawabshah-IV Bahadur Khan Dahri PPP 69876 Arif Niaz Arain GDA 15015 54,861
Sanghar PS-40 Sanghar-I Ghulam Dastageer Rajar GDA 56345 Naveed Dero PPP 52923 3,422
PS-41 Sanghar-II Ali Hassan Hingorjo PPP 63750 Qazi Shams Din GDA 62118 1,632
PS-42 Sanghar-III Jam Shabbir Ali Khan PPP 58383 Jam Nafees Ali Khan GDA 47999 10,384
PS-43 Sanghar-IV Sardar Paras Dero PPP 67851 Niaz Hussain GDA 23869 43,982
PS-44 Sanghar-V Shahid Abdul Salam Thahim PPP 60385 Muhamamd Bux GDA 49143 11,242
Mirpur Khas PS-45 Mirpur Khas-I Hari Ram PPP 33197 Dr Zafar Ahmed Khan MQM(P) 20099 13,098
PS-46 Mirpur Khas-II Syed Zulfiqar Ali Shah PPP 51656 Shuja Muhammad Shah IND 30096 21,560
PS-47 Mirpur Khas-III Noor Ahmed Bhurgri PPP 56522 Faisal kachelo IND 17420 39,102
PS-48 Mirpur Khas-IV Mir Tariq Ali Khan Talpur PPP 66002 Inayatullah GDA 15638 50,364
Umerkot PS-49 Umerkot-I Syed Sardar Ali Shah PPP 50204 Khizar Hayat GDA 23492 26,712
PS-50 Umerkot-II Syed Ameer Ali Shah PPP 61386 Fakir Ghulam Nabi Mangrio GDA 15648 45,738
PS-51 Umerkot-III Nawab Muhammad Taimur Talpur PPP 58958 Dr. Dost Muhammad Memon GDA 27725 31,233
Tharparkar PS-52 Tharparkar-I Dost Muhammad PPP 69616 Sher Khan GDA 15713 53,903
PS-53 Tharparkar-II Muhammad Qasim Soomro PPP 73302 Arbab Anwar Jabbar GDA 41047 32,255
PS-54 Tharparkar-III Fakeer Sher Muhammad Bilalani PPP 69088 Arbab Togachi Fawad Razzaq GDA 34413 34,675
PS-55 Tharparkar-IV Arbab Lutfullah PPP 107552 Arbab Zakaullah GDA 17768 89,784
Matiari PS-56 Matiari-I Makhdoom Mehboob Zaman PPP 72178 Naseer Ahmed PML(N) 35432 36,746
PS-57 Matiari-II Makhdoom Fakhar Zaman PPP 52175 Syed Jalal Shah GDA 44873 7,302
Tando Allahyar PS-58 Tando Allahyar-I Syed Zia Abbas Shah PPP 57217 Rahila Magsi GDA 42587 14,630
PS-59 Tando Allahyar-II Imdad Ali Pitafi PPP 62771 Muhammad Mohsin Magsi GDA 29325 33,446
Hyderabad PS-60 Hyderabad-I Jam Khan Shoro PPP 37538 Ayaz Latif Palijo GDA 6922 30,616
PS-61 Hyderabad-II Sharjeel Inam Memon PPP 63079 Saeed Ahmed Talpur JUI(F) 11368 51,711
PS-62 Hyderabad-III Sabir Hussain MQM(P) 24385 Abdul Jabbar PPP 18209 6,176
PS-63 Hyderabad-IV Rehan Rajpoot IND[e] 40709 Kamran Shafique MQM(P) 11882 28,827
PS-64 Hyderabad-V Muhammad Rashid Khan MQM(P) 35235 Naeem Ud Din IND[e] 26063 9,172
PS-65 Hyderabad-VI Nasir Hussain Qureshi MQM(P) 23184 Shoaib Shoukat IND[e] 14321 8,863
Tando Muhammad Khan PS-66 Tando Muhammad Khan-I Syed Aijaz Hussain Shah PPP 47649 Ahmed Saeed Jan IND 17632 30,017
PS-67 Tando Muhammad Khan-II Khurram Karim Soomro PPP 51886 Qadir Bux Magsi KS 16602 35,284
Badin PS-68 Badin-I Muhammad Halepoto PPP 63348 Mansoor Ali Nizamani GDA 14203 46,145
PS-69 Badin-II Allah Bux Talpur PPP 38759 Mir Abdullah Khan GDA 33378 5,384
PS-70 Badin-III Sardar Arbab Ameer Amanullah Khan PPP 44126 Hassnain Ali Mirza GDA 36861 7,265
PS-71 Badin-IV Taj Muhammad PPP 41134 Muhammad Hassam Mirza GDA 32477 8,657
PS-72 Badin-V Ismail Rahoo PPP 39849 Ameer Hassan GDA 24296 15,553
Sujawal PS-73 Sujawal-I Shah Hussain Shah Sheerazi PPP 72942 Muhammad Ismail Memon JUI(F) 6167 66,775
PS-74 Sujawal-II Muhammad Ali Malkani PPP 83900 Abdul satar IND 14259 69,641
Thatta PS-75 Thatta-I Riaz Hussain Shah Sheerazi PPP 80744 Muhammad Arshad Memon JUI(F) 6596 74,148
PS-76 Thatta-II Ali Hassan Zardari PPP 71408 Altaf Hussain Kachhi TLP 4812 66,596
Jamshoro PS-77 Jamshoro-I Murad Ali Shah PPP 74613 Roshan Ali Buriro GDA 10268 64,345
PS-78 Jamshoro-II Sikandar Ali Shoro PPP 51188 Syed Muneer Haider GDA 10850 40,338
PS-79 Jamshoro-III Malik Sikandar Khan (Sindh politician) PPP 42959 Malik Changez Khan IND 7849 35,110
Dadu PS-80 Dadu-I Abdul Aziz Junejo PPP 52131 Karim Ali Jatoi GDA 43815 8,316
PS-81 Dadu-II Fayaz Ali Butt PPP 54338 Liaquat Ali Jatoi GDA 46963 7,375
PS-82 Dadu-III Pir Mujeeb ul Haq PPP 44565 Ashique Ali Zounr GDA 19618 24,947
PS-83 Dadu-IV Pir Saleh Shah Jeelani PPP 48944 Imdad Hussain Leghari GDA 20712 28,232
Malir PS-84 Karachi Malir-I Muhammad Yousuf Baloch PPP 25348 Zain Ul Abedin Kolachi IND[e] 13437 11,911
PS-85 Karachi Malir-II Muhammad Sajid PPP 27791 Pir Hafeez Ullah PML(N) 14304 13,487
PS-86 Karachi Malir-III Abdul Razak Raja PPP 15017 Muhammad Yaqoob PML(N) 6633 8,438
PS-87 Karachi Malir-IV Mehmood Alam Jamot PPP 19220 Tause Khan IND[e] 7703 11,517
PS-88 Karachi Malir-V Ajaz Khan IND[e] 17580 Syed Muzammil Shah PPP 12762 4,818
PS-89 Karachi Malir-VI Muhammad Saleem Baloch PPP 25326 Ahsan Khattak IND[e] 15768 9,558
Korangi PS-90 Karachi Korangi-I Shariq Jamal MQM(P) 35609 Waqas Iqbal IND[e] 32645 2,964
PS-91 Karachi Korangi-II Muhammad Farooq JI 23499 Abid Jilani IND 22732 767
PS-92 Karachi Korangi-III Wajid Hussain Khan IND[e] 28276 Mirza Farhan Baig JI 20830 7,446
PS-93 Karachi Korangi-IV Sajid Hussain IND[e] 20372 Abdul Hafeez JI 10832 9,540
PS-94 Karachi Korangi-V Najam Mirza MQM(P) 24161 Arshad Hussain JI 19633 4,528
PS-95 Karachi Korangi-VI Muhammad Farooq Awan PPP 16386 Raja Azhar Khan IND[e] 11027 5,359
PS-96 Karachi Korangi-VII Muhammad Owais IND[e] 16997 Shafiq Ahmed JI 9644 7,353
Karachi East PS-97 Karachi East-I Shoukat Ali MQM(P) 4997 Bashir Ahmed PPP 4277 720
PS-98 Karachi East-II Arsalan Perwaiz MQM(P) 13903 Hammad Ullah Khan JI 5551 8,352
PS-99 Karachi East-III Syed Farhan Ansari MQM(P) 26658 Muhammad Yunus Barai JI 22321 4,337
PS-100 Karachi East-IV Syed Muhammad Usman MQM(P) 21970 Haider Ali Umrani PPP 15241 6,729
PS-101 Karachi East-V Moid Anver MQM(P) 43080 Agha Arsalan Khan IND[e] 34745 8,335
PS-102 Karachi East-VI Muhammad Aamir Siddiqui MQM(P) 25330 Muhammad Najeed Ayubi JI 19512 5,818
PS-103 Karachi East-VII Faisal Rafiq MQM(P) 15870 Muhammad Yunus JI 12345 3,525
PS-104 Karachi East-VIII Muhammad Daniyal MQM(P) 30465 Muhammad Junaid Mukati JI 23588 6,877
PS-105 Karachi East-IX Saeed Ghani PPP 26168 Irfanullah Khan Marwat GDA 20111 6,057
Karachi South PS-106 Karachi South-I Sajjad Ali IND[e] 20658 Usman Ghani PPP 16854 3,804
PS-107 Karachi South-II Muhammad Yousuf PPP 26902 Khalid IND[e] 19673 7,229
PS-108 Karachi South-III Muhammad Dilawar MQM(P) 20014 Murad Sheikh IND[e] 16850 3,164
PS-109 Karachi South-IV Bilal Hussain Khan Jadoon IND[e] 27854 Muhammad zakir Mahanty JI 12825 15,029
PS-110 Karachi South-V Rehan Bandukda IND[e] 47450 Sufian JI 22630 24,820
Keamari PS-111 Karachi Keamari-I Liaquat Ali Askani PPP 29396 Amjad Iqbal Afridi IND[e] 7743 21,653
PS-112 Karachi Keamari-II Sirbuland Khan IND[e] 16287 Muhammad Asif PPP 10784 5,503
PS-113 Karachi Keamari-III Faheem Ahmed MQM(P) 24465 Ghulam Qadir IND[e] 21031 3,434
PS-114 Karachi Keamari-IV Muhammad Shabbir IND[e] 21531 Niaz Muhammad PPP 14559 6,972
PS-115 Karachi Keamari-V Muhammad Asif Khan PPP 20310 Shah Nawaz Jadoon IND[e] 19544 766
Karachi West PS-116 Karachi West-I Ali Ahmed PPP 7085 Hassan Ali IND 3640 3,445
PS-117 Karachi West-II Sheikh Abdullah MQM(P) 11154 Tariq Hussain IND[e] 9617 1,537
PS-118 Karachi West-III Naseer Ahmed MQM(P) 9740 Salih Zada IND[e] 7136 2,604
PS-119 Karachi West-IV Ali Khurshidi MQM(P) 22020 Saeed Ahmed IND[e] 16326 5,694
PS-120 Karachi West-V Mazahir Amir Khan MQM(P) 35789 Syed Shafiq IND[e] 21097 14,692
PS-121 Karachi West-VI Syed Ejaz Ul Haque MQM(P) 26454 Shakeel Ahmad IND[e] 21460 4,994
Karachi Central PS-122 Karachi Central-I Rehan Akram MQM(P) 48170 Farhan Saleem IND[e] 23018 25,152
PS-123 Karachi Central-II Abdul Waseem MQM(P) 17526 Muhammad Akbar JI 13117 4,409
PS-124 Karachi Central-III Abdul Basit MQM(P) 31035 Muhammad Ahmed JI 18438 12,597
PS-125 Karachi Central-IV Syed Adil Askari MQM(P) 63812 Muhammad Farooq Naimatullah JI 49943 13,869
PS-126 Karachi Central-V Muhammad Iftikhar Alam MQM(P) 38729 Nusrat Ullah JI 25835 12,894
PS-127 Karachi Central-VI Muhammad Maaz Mehboob MQM(P) 23389 Muhammad Masood Ali JI 12642 10,747
PS-128 Karachi Central-VII Taha Ahmed Khan MQM(P) 34417 Syed Wajeeh Hassan JI 18588 15,829
PS-129 Karachi Central-VIII Hafiz Naeem Ur Rehman JI 26926 Maaz Mukaddam MQM(P) 20608 6,318
PS-130 Karachi Central-IX Jamal Ahmed MQM(P) 38884 Haris Ali Khan JI 19366 19,518

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ 29 seats are reserved for women and 9 are reserved for non-Muslims filled through Proportional representation
  2. ^ This is a column that lists the percentage of undecided voters and non-voters in certain polls that publish this data. As some polls do not publish any data whatsoever on undecided voters and non-voters, the columns with survey participants that had a preference when polled are all that is needed to reach 100%. In surveys that do include data on non-voters and undecided voters, a scaling factor is applied to the margin of error and the rest of the data (for example, if the number of undecideds and non-voters equals 20%, each party would have their vote share scaled up by a factor of 100/80 (the formula is 100/(100-UndecidedPercentage)). This is done to keep consistency between the different polls and the different types data they provide.
  3. ^ a b c This poll or crosstabulation did not include any data about undecided voters or non-voters and cut them out completely from the published results.
  4. ^ Panel name of Independent candidates supported by MQM's London faction controlled by its founder Altaf Hussain[20][21][22][23]
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Backed by the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf

References

[edit]
  1. ^ https://fafen.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/FAFEN_GE-2024_Turnout_Analysis_Final.pdf
  2. ^ "The Constitution of Pakistan, Part VIII: Elections". Archived from the original on 2018-12-26. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  3. ^ "Pakistan's general election may be delayed by new census". Al Jazeera English. Retrieved 2023-08-06.
  4. ^ Sadozai, Irfan (2023-08-17). "Election delay all but certain as ECP decides to go for fresh delimitation". Dawn. Retrieved 2023-08-17.
  5. ^ Sadozai, Irfan; Guramani, Nadir; Bhatti, Haseeb; Momand, Abdullah (2023-11-02). "President, ECP agree on holding elections on Feb 8". Dawn. Retrieved 2023-11-02.
  6. ^ "PPP sweeps Sindh". The Express Tribune. 2018-07-26. Archived from the original on 2022-09-25. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  7. ^ "PTI breaks decades-old MQM hegemony in Karachi". Daily Times. 2018-07-27. Archived from the original on 2018-07-28. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  8. ^ "Imran urges Sindh's youth to be part of his team to defeat Zardari". Pakistan Observer. 2022-09-06. Retrieved 2022-09-26.
  9. ^ Malik, Adam (2014-11-20). "'Liberating Sindh': Imran Khan and the Hero syndrome". Dawn. Retrieved 2022-09-26.
  10. ^ Khan, Ayaz Muhammad (2021-08-07). "Can PTI dethrone PPP from Sindh government?". Global Village Space. Retrieved 2022-09-26.
  11. ^ News Desk (2018-04-06). "Will PTI be able to gain seats in Interior Sindh?". Global Village Space. Retrieved 2022-09-26.
  12. ^ "Karachi-based MQM factions in talks for merger". Gulf News. 9 January 2023. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  13. ^ "All MQM factions agree to unite, says Tessori". The News International. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  14. ^ "Afaq not against merger of MQM factions, says governor". Dawn. 2023-01-07. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  15. ^ "PSP, Farooq Sattar formally announce merger with MQM-P". ARY NEWS. 2023-01-12. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  16. ^ Bhatti, Haseeb (2024-01-13). "PTI bat-tered, loses iconic electoral symbol as SC restores ECP order". Dawn. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  17. ^ Sadozai, Irfan (2023-12-15). "ECP issues election schedule for Feb 8 general polls". Dawn. Retrieved 2023-12-15.
  18. ^ "Sindh Assembly bows out as Governor Tissori signs dissolution summary". Geo.tv. 2023-08-11. Retrieved 2023-08-11.
  19. ^ Ayub, Imran (2024-02-15). "PTI-backed independent MPA-elect Ejaz Swati joins PPP". Dawn. Retrieved 2024-07-13.
  20. ^ Azfar-ul-Ashfaque (2024-02-06). "MQM-P in tight spot after London faction backs independent candidates". Dawn. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  21. ^ "Close contest expected between PTI, JI and MQM-P in District West". The News International. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  22. ^ "Candidates backed by Altaf Hussain's MQM arrested ahead of national polls in Pakistan's southeast". Arab News. 2024-02-06. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  23. ^ "WAFAPARAST CANDIDATES ELECTION - 2024". mqm.org. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  24. ^ "Party Positions". Geo News. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
  25. ^ "General Elections 2024 - Sindh Assembly". elections.gov.pk. Retrieved 2024-02-09.
  26. ^ a b c "Sindh Assembly Election Results 2024 - Exclusive Coverage by Dunya News".