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MP Assembly declares Datia seat vacant after Rajendra Bharti's conviction in cheating case

By IANS | Updated: April 3, 2026 15:10 IST

Bhopal, April 3 The Madhya Pradesh State Assembly has officially declared the Datia seat vacant consequent to Rajendra ...

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Bhopal, April 3 The Madhya Pradesh State Assembly has officially declared the Datia seat vacant consequent to Rajendra Bharti’s conviction for an offence as established by an April 2 judgment passed by a court in Delhi.

The verdict, passed by the Special Judge, Digvijay Singh (PC Act), of the Rouse Avenue District Court, New Delhi, sentenced Bharti to three years of imprisonment and a fine of Rs one lakh.

Rajendra Bharti, the elected member from Constituency No. 22 (Datia) of the 16th Legislative Assembly of Madhya Pradesh, stands disqualified from the membership of the Legislative Assembly with effect from April 2, 2026, a press release on Friday said.

This action has been taken in compliance with the order of the Supreme Court dated July 10, 2013, and pursuant to Article 191(1)(e) of the Constitution of India, read with Section 8 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951.

Consequently, a seat in the Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly has fallen vacant, it said.

In consonance with the judgment passed by the court, an order regarding this vacancy was issued by the Speaker of the Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly. A notification was published in the “Madhya Pradesh Gazette” on April 2, formally declaring the Datia Assembly seat vacant. This was communicated to the Election Commission of India for further necessary action, including the conduct of a by-election.

Rajendra Bharti was convicted by the Rouse Avenue Court in Delhi in a 28-year-old cooperative bank fraud case. The case relates to serious financial irregularities involving a Rs 10 lakh fixed deposit at the District Cooperative Agriculture and Rural Development Bank in Datia in 1998.

Bharti and co-accused Raghuvir Sharan Prajapati were found guilty of criminal conspiracy, cheating, forgery, and using forged documents.

The court sentenced both to three years’ rigorous imprisonment and imposed fines of Rs one lakh on Bharti and Rs 2.5 lakh on Prajapati.

Although the court granted a two-month window to file an appeal and suspended the sentence during this period, the conviction triggered immediate disqualification under constitutional provisions and the Supreme Court’s landmark 'Lily Thomas' judgment of 2013, which removed the earlier protection available to sitting legislators.

Bharti, a three-time MLA, won the Datia seat in the 2023 Assembly elections by defeating senior BJP leader Narottam Mishra.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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