Cantonment Board Elections 2021: Latest party position

Check out the latest party position in cantonment board elections

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PTI supporters dance to the beat of drums in Karachi after Cantonment Board Election results are announced. Photo: Screengrab from PTI Twitter account
PTI supporters dance to the beat of drums in Karachi after Cantonment Board Election results are announced. Photo: Screengrab from PTI Twitter account

  • PTI emerges biggest winner from cantonment board elections. 
  • PML-N bags 59 seats, party claims huge victory. 
  • Independents win 52 seats while PPP manages to secure 17 seats. 


According to the unofficial and unverified results of the cantonment board elections, the PTI has emerged as the biggest winner throughout the country while the PML-N came close at number two. 

The PTI managed to secure 63 seats while the PML-N won 59 seats from across the country. 

Contestants who won the elections as independent candidates secured 52 seats in total. 

Among other Opposition parties, the PPP won 17, the Jamaat-e-Islami seven and the Awami National Party two.

Of the allied parties, MQM won 10, whereas Balochistan Awami Party secured two.

PARTY

SEATS

PTI63
PML-N59
Independent candidates52
PPP17
JI7
ANP2
MQM10
BAP2

Province wise results

PTI won the most number of seats in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa — 18 — followed by 28 in Punjab, 14 in Sindh and three in Balochistan.

PML-N won big in Punjab, bagging 51 seats, managing only five in KP, three in Sindh and none in Balochistan.

PPP was surprisingly unable to defeat PTI in Sindh, instead tying with them for 14 seats. The remaining three seats were won in KP, meaning none were won in either Punjab or Balochistan.

Independent candidates scored big in Punjab, bagging 32 seats. They secured nine in KP, seven in Sindh and four in Balochistan.

MQM won all of its 10 seats in Sindh, whereas JI won five in Sindh and two in Punjab.

ANP won two seats in KP, whereas BAP won two in Balochistan.

The polls in numbers

In Sunday's polls, 684 independent candidates from across the country were in the fray while 876 candidates from political parties were contesting.

The highest number of candidates — 183 — were fielded by the PTI, while 144 were from the PML-N, 113 from the PPP, 104 from the Jamaat-e-Islami, 42 from the Muttahida Qaumi Movement, 35 from the Pak Sarzamin Party, 34 from the PML-Q and 25 candidates from the JUI-F.

Furthermore, 83 candidates of the banned Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan also contested the polls.

Of the candidates vying for the total 219 wards across 42 cantonment boards, seven candidates were already elected unopposed. Therefore, the race was held for 212 seats.

In addition, there was no competition in four wards of Kamra, none in one ward of Rawalpindi and none in one ward of Pano Aqil.

The polling process started at 8am and continued till 5pm. Voters inside the polling station were able to cast their votes despite polling time ending. The gates were closed for those queued outside.