Jaipur: Three candidates, two from the BJP and one from the Congress, were elected unopposed to the Rajya Sabha from Rajasthan on Thursday as no other candidate was in the fray following the expiry of the deadline to withdraw nominations.The returning officer declared Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) candidates Satish Poonia and Alka Gurjar, and Congress's Neeraj Dangi elected unopposed to the Upper House of Parliament.They were declared elected after the last date for withdrawal of candidature passed and the number of validly-nominated candidates was equal to the number of seats to be filled.Read More: ‘Won’t leave Mamata in difficult times’: Shatrughan Sinha's message amid TMC's internal rumblingsThe biennial election was being held for three Rajya Sabha seats from Rajasthan as the terms of Congress MP Dangi and BJP MPs Rajendra Gehlot and Ravneet Singh are set to end on June 21.All nine nomination papers filed by the three candidates were found valid during a scrutiny conducted at the Rajasthan Assembly earlier this week.With the election of Poonia and Gurjar, the BJP secured two of the three seats, while the Congress retained one seat through the election of Dangi.Read More: TMC MP Prakash Chik Baraik resigns as member of Rajya SabhaRajasthan has a total of 10 Rajya Sabha seats, equally shared between the ruling BJP and the Congress.
BJP's Satish Poonia, Alka Gurjar, Cong's Neeraj Dangi elected unopposed to RS from Rajasthan
Three candidates have been elected unopposed to the Rajya Sabha from Rajasthan. Satish Poonia and Alka Gurjar from the BJP, and Neeraj Dangi from the Congress secured their seats. This happened after the deadline for withdrawing nominations passed. The biennial election was for three seats. The terms of the current MPs were ending on June 21.
BJP candidates Satish Poonia and Alka Gurjar, plus Congress's Neeraj Dangi, were elected unopposed to Rajya Sabha from Rajasthan after the nomination deadline expired with zero competing candidates. The result maintains even 5-5 parity between both parties in Rajasthan's 10-seat upper house allocation.













