NA-46 Islamabad-I | |
Parl Name: | National Assembly of Pakistan |
Party: | Pakistan Muslim League (N) |
Member: | Anjum Aqeel Khan |
Region: | Islamabad City area of Islamabad Capital Territory |
Electorate: | 350,581 [1] |
Previous: | NA-54 Islamabad-II |
NA-46 Islamabad-I is a constituency for the National Assembly of Pakistan.[2]
The constituency consists of a mix of urban and rural areas of Islamabad Capital Territory from Sector G-10 to Tarnol and also includes Sector I-10.[3] During 2018 delimitation, NA-49 (Islamabad-II) constituency was divided between this constituency and NA-53 (Islamabad-II). On the granular basis, the following areas of Islamabad are included in this constituency:
See also: Pakistani general election, 2002. General elections were held on 10 October 2002. Mian Muhammad Aslam of Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal won by 40,365 votes.[6]
Election | Member | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Mian Muhammad Aslam | MMA | |||
Anjum Aqeel Khan | PML-N | |||
Makhdoom Javed Hashmi | PTI | |||
2013 By-election | Asad Umar | PTI |
The result of general election 2008 in this constituency is given below.Anjum Aqeel Khan succeeded in the election 2010 and became the member of National Assembly.[7]
See also: Pakistani general election, 2013.
Javed Hashmi succeeded in the 2013 general election and became the member of National Assembly.
The seat fell vacant after Javed Hashmi choose to retain his Multan constituency. A re-election was held on 22 August 2013 in which Asad Umar secured a win with 48,073 votes his closest rival was PML-N Chaudhary Muhammad Ashraf Gujjar who came second at 41,186 votes[8]
Contesting Candidates | Party Affiliation | Votes Polled | |
---|---|---|---|
Mian Ghulam Rasool Advocate | Pakistan Justice Party | 7 | |
Mian Ehsan ul Haq | Independent candidate | 7 | |
Malik Muhammad Zubair Advocate | Independent candidate | 53 | |
Faisal Sakhi Butt | Pakistan Peoples Party Parliamentarians | 3943 | |
Abdul Rauf Khan | Independent candidate | 107 | |
Shah Dil Awan | Independent candidate | 63 | |
Syed Zaigham Ali Shah Gillani | Independent candidate | 5 | |
Syed Zia Gillani | Independent candidate | 34 | |
Sarfaraz wald Sohni | Independent candidate | 7 | |
Rab Nawaz Malik | Independent candidate | 26 | |
Doctor Muhammad Rashid Qammar | Pakistan Freedom Party | 17 | |
Hussain Ahmed | Independent candidate | 34 | |
Hafiz Muhammad Yasin Bhatti | Independent candidate | 37 | |
Chaudhary Muhammad Ashraf Gujjar | PML-N | 41186 | |
Pir Syed Faisal Shah Hamdani | Independent candidate | 178 | |
Pir Syed Doctor Tasneem ul Haq Hasni | Independent candidate | 8 | |
Ameen Shahid Gill | Independent candidate | 77 | |
Altaf Hussain Awan Pakistani | Independent candidate | 110 | |
Alhaj Muhammad Asad Bhatti | Pakistan Peoples Party (Shaheed Bhutto) | 161 | |
Asad Umar | Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf | 48073 | |
Ihsan ul Haq | JUI-F | 82 | |
Asia Choudhry | Independent candidate | 34 |
General elections were held on 25 July 2018. Asad Umar managed to retain his seat he won in the 2013 by-election.
General elections were held on 8 February 2024.[9] Anjum Aqeel Khan won the election with 82,536 votes.