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This Article is From Aug 16, 2018

How Atal Bihari Vajpayee Chose Lucknow After Defeat In Gwalior In 1984

After his defeat in Gwalior in 1984, Atal Bihari Vajpayee chose Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh over Vidisha, which he had won in 1991 Lok Sabha polls.

How Atal Bihari Vajpayee Chose Lucknow After Defeat In Gwalior In 1984
Mr Vajpayee died at the AIIMS hospital this evening at the age of 93 following prolonged illness. (Filed)
Gwalior:

Former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee had represented Madhya Pradesh twice in the Lok Sabha-from his birth place Gwalior in 1971 and Vidisha in 1991.

However, after his defeat in Gwalior in 1984, Mr Vajpayee chose Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh over Vidisha, which he had won in 1991 Lok Sabha polls.

Mr Vajpayee died at the AIIMS hospital in Delhi this evening at the age of 93 following prolonged illness.

"Vajpayee ji's father Krishna Bihari Vajpayee was working as a teacher at Gorkhi School," recalled veteran journalist and social worker Dr Keshav Pandey.

He said Mr Vajpayee had studied at Gorkhi School in Gwalior and graduated from Victoria College (now called as Maharani Laxmi Bai College).

Mr Vajpayee had won the Gwalior Lok Sabha seat in 1971 as a Jan Sangh candidate.

However, he lost Gwalior to Madhavrao Scindia, the royal of the Scindia dynasty, of the Congress in 1984.

Another veteran journalist Rakesh Pathak said Mr Vajpayee was surprised to find that Mr Scindia too had filed the nomination papers for the seat on the last day of filing the nominations.

Mr Pathak claimed that Mr Scindia had filed the nomination papers at the behest of the then prime minister Rajiv Gandhi.

He said Mr Vajpayee then tried to file his nomination papers from neighbouring Bhind seat and travelled there in a car, but couldn't make it in time.

After the defeat, Mr Vajpayee chose to contest Lok Sabha polls from Vidisha in MP and Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh in 1991 and won both the seats.

However, he quit as Vidisha MP and retained Lucknow seat, which he won five times (including 1991-96), said senior journalist Rakesh Dixit.