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Rajya Sabha Elections: Seat Distribution and Political Fallout

Wednesday, June 10, 2026
5 min read
Rajya Sabha Elections: Seat Distribution and Political Fallout

So, we’re talking about those Rajya Sabha elections coming up. Twenty-four spots are up for grabs across ten states, and they’re slated for June 18th. Right in the middle of monsoon season, which just adds another layer of pressure to everything happening politically.

The Election Commission finally dropped the notification back on June 1. The deadline for filing nominations? That was June 8th. Just a quick administrative detail, but it sets the timeline ticking.

And you have these states that are getting split up: Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, and Odisha all have their own Rajya Sabha by-elections kicking off too. It’s just one big wave of voting happening right now.

The way those twenty-four seats are broken up is kind of interesting.

Andhra Pradesh gets four seats. Gujarat also has four. Karnataka splits three ways. Then you have Madhya Pradesh with three, Rajasthan with three. Jharkhand gets two. And then the smaller ones Arunachal Pradesh one seat, Manipur one, Meghalaya one, and Mizoram one each.

It’s a mess of numbers.

And the political fallout from this is where it gets messy.

In Andhra Pradesh, things look relatively smooth. The TDP and Janasena alliance managed to field candidates that match exactly those vacancies. So they're aiming for a unanimous election there. That feels like a solid base for them.

But Madhya Pradesh? That’s going to be a real fight. The BJP threw in a third candidate there, which really tests how the Congress opposition is holding together, especially with all those cross-voting worries hanging over things. It's high stakes.

Karnataka is another hot spot too. The BJP put Dr M. Nagaraja forward, which basically rules out another term for H.D. Deve Gowda right now. And the projection is that the Congress might actually flip a seat because of how strong they are numerically.

Gujarat feels different. Because of the sheer size of their assembly numbers, the BJP seems set to snag all those seats. That means Congress might end up with zero representation from Gujarat in the upper house. A massive shift there.

Jharkhand, on the other hand, seems expected to stay with the JMM-led coalition, nothing much shifts there yet.

It’s worth remembering that the Rajya Sabha isn't something you can just dissolve. It’s a continuing body. Members get elected for these staggered six-year terms, and one-third of them retire every couple of years. That structure is all tied up in how we vote.

The system itself follows strict rules. Members are chosen by the MLAs from the State Assemblies. They use that Single Transferable Vote method for voting. There was this whole open ballot thing introduced back in 2003, meant to stop cross-voting. You have to show your marked paper to the party agent before you cast it. It’s all very procedural when it comes down to it.

But ignoring the rules? That's what this feels like right now. A lot of uncertainty just hanging there.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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