Skip to content
Your MP

Darshan Singh Choudhary

Bharatiya Janata Party Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh

Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha

Updated: today

Hoshangabad

Performance

Official record

Not enough official data yet to score performance.

How well they do their official job — attendance, questions, funds. From government records.

How is this worked out?

Public rating

People's opinion

No ratings yet

How would you rate this leader?

PoorGreat

One rating per person. You can change it later. · Ratings are people's opinion, shown separately from official facts.

How people ratedConfidence: No ratings yet

No ratings yet

About

Darshan Singh Choudhary is the Member of Parliament for the Hoshangabad constituency in Madhya Pradesh, in the 18th Lok Sabha (elected in the 2024 Indian general election). Current party affiliation: Bharatiya Janata Party.

Source: Election Commission of India — 2024 general election results (18th Lok Sabha members list)· Updated Jul 13, 2026

What they are accountable for

As your representative, here is the full list of what a citizen can hold them to account for.

Member of Parliament (MP) — Lok Sabha

Your Lok Sabha MP is the person you elect from your area to make national laws, approve the country's money, and question the central government on your behalf.

You can hold them accountable for

  • Attendance and taking part — regularly attending sittings of the House, signing the attendance register, joining debates, and voting on Bills and the Budget instead of staying away.
  • Using their vote and voice responsibly — on national laws, taxes and spending — keeping the interests of their constituents and the whole country in mind.
  • Questioning and checking the government — asking questions in Question Hour, raising local and national issues in Zero Hour, and taking part in motions and debates that hold ministers to account.
  • Honest, transparent use of MPLAD funds (about ₹5 crore a year) — recommending genuine public-good works, following the rules (including the shares earmarked for Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe areas), avoiding diversion or favouritism, and getting recommended works actually finished.
  • Being open about themselves — filing a truthful election affidavit of assets, liabilities and pending criminal cases with the Election Commission, and declaring assets and interests as the House requires.
  • Being reachable and responsive — running a constituency office, meeting people, and helping with grievances and access to central government schemes and services.
  • Following the law and the Rules of Procedure of the House — keeping decorum, respecting the Speaker's rulings, not disrupting proceedings, and avoiding unparliamentary or violent conduct.
  • Ethical conduct — no bribery or 'cash-for-questions', declaring any personal or financial interest in a matter before the House, and not misusing official facilities, travel or housing.
  • Following the anti-defection rules (Tenth Schedule) — not switching parties or defying the party whip in ways that can lead to disqualification.
  • Doing committee work — attending and contributing to the parliamentary committees they belong to, where much of the detailed scrutiny of laws and spending happens.
  • If the MP is also a Union Minister — being answerable to Parliament for that ministry's decisions, performance and spending.
  • Not misusing parliamentary privilege and immunity (Article 105) — free speech in the House is protection for doing the job, not a shield for wrongdoing outside it.
  • Keeping their oath (Article 99) — representing all constituents fairly whoever they voted for, and upholding constitutional values rather than spreading hatred or falsehoods.
  • Being honest about their record — how they voted, what they raised, their attendance and how their MPLAD money was used, all of which are public information.
What this role covers — and what it does not

What they do

  • Debating and voting on central laws and Bills on Union List and Concurrent List subjects (for example defence, foreign affairs, railways, telecom, citizenship, criminal law).
  • Approving the Union Budget, taxes and government spending — including Money Bills, which can be introduced only in the Lok Sabha (Articles 109–110), and voting the government's Demands for Grants.
  • Questioning the government — Question Hour, Zero Hour, Calling Attention notices and Short Duration Discussions to get answers from ministers.
  • Moving and voting on motions — including the no-confidence motion, which only the Lok Sabha can use to remove the Council of Ministers, plus adjournment and censure motions.
  • Recommending local development works under the MPLAD Scheme (about ₹5 crore a year) — such as community buildings, roads, and water and sanitation assets — for execution by the district administration.
  • Serving on parliamentary committees (standing, select and joint committees) that examine Bills, budgets and government performance in detail.
  • Introducing Private Members' Bills and Resolutions to propose new laws or raise policy issues.
  • Representing the constituency — raising local problems, projects and grievances with central ministries and pressing for central schemes.
  • Helping pass Constitutional Amendment Bills, which need a special majority of Parliament (Article 368).
  • Approving or ending proclamations of National Emergency, President's Rule in a State, and Financial Emergency, which must be approved by Parliament to continue (Articles 352, 356 and 360).
  • Taking part in electing the President and Vice-President, and in the removal of Supreme Court and High Court judges and the impeachment of the President.
  • Raising matters of public importance and presenting petitions on behalf of citizens.

Not their job — ask instead

  • Everyday civic services — city roads, water supply, garbage collection, streetlights, drainage and building approvals. Ask your municipal corporator/councillor and the urban local body (Municipal Commissioner); in villages, the Gram Panchayat and Sarpanch.
  • Police, crime and law-and-order — in the States this is a State subject, so ask the State Government (State Home Department) and the local police/SP; in Union Territories such as Delhi and Chandigarh the police come under the central government. Either way, an MP has no command over the police.
  • State laws, state welfare schemes, land and most day-to-day governance where you live — these belong to your MLA and the State Government (in some Union Territories, such as Delhi, land is with the central government), not to a Union MP.
  • Court cases and verdicts — the judiciary is independent; an MP cannot decide, speed up or interfere in cases.
  • Running schools and hospitals or appointing teachers or doctors — public health is mainly a State subject and education is a Concurrent subject, handled largely by State Government departments.
  • Physically building MPLAD works or choosing contractors — the District Authority (Collector/DM) sanctions and carries out the works; the MP only recommends them.
  • Day-to-day running of a ministry — unless the MP is themselves the Minister in charge, this is run by the Union Minister concerned and civil servants, not by an ordinary MP.

Sources: Constitution of India — Articles 75(3), 79, 81, 83, 84, 99, 100, 102, 105, 107–110, 330, 352, 356, 360, 368 and the Tenth Schedule (India Code, https://www.indiacode.nic.in/handle/123456789/15240 ; legislative.gov.in) · Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha, and Lok Sabha official portal (https://sansad.in/ls ; https://loksabha.nic.in) · MPLAD Scheme Guidelines 2023, Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation — official MPLADS portal (https://mplads.gov.in/) · Salary, Allowances and Pension of Members of Parliament Act, 1954 (India Code / legislative.gov.in) · Representation of the People Act, 1951 and Election Commission of India rules on candidate affidavits (https://www.eci.gov.in/)

Who does what?

Their record

Every fact links to its official source and shows when we checked it.

Declared to the Election Commission

₹93,49,061
Declared wealth
₹0
Declared loans
0
Declared court cases

These figures are declared by the leader in their official election form. A declared case means a trial is pending — it is not a conviction.

Education

Not available yet

Work

politician

Age

Not available yet

See all sources
Work
politician Wikidata· Updated Jul 14, 2026
Declared wealth
₹93,49,061 (~93 Lacs) MyNeta / ADR — 2024 election affidavit· Updated Jul 14, 2026· as of 2024 election affidavit
Declared loans
₹0 MyNeta / ADR — 2024 election affidavit· Updated Jul 14, 2026· as of 2024 election affidavit
Declared court cases
0 MyNeta / ADR — 2024 election affidavit· Updated Jul 14, 2026· as of 2024 election affidavit

Areas represented

Are you this leader, or spotted a mistake?

We publish only sourced facts and offer a right to reply. Tell us and we will check.

Request a correction