I Love Jaipur

Jaipur Sarpanch Survey: 59 Leaders in Top 10, Six Tie for First

A Dainik Bhaskar app survey on village civic work placed 59 Jaipur district sarpanches in the top 10 positions, with six sharing first place on 4.5 points.
Editorial illustration of village leaders outside a Rajasthan panchayat building

Editorial illustration of village leaders outside a Rajasthan panchayat building

By ILJC Team|

Jaipur district has produced a tightly packed leaderboard in a sarpanch performance survey run through the Dainik Bhaskar app. Results released from the statewide exercise show 59 sarpanches from Jaipur placed within the top 10 positions after residents rated local work on a five-point scale.

The survey focused on day-to-day village issues that directly affect rural households. Participants could score their sarpanch on roads, drains, streetlights, toilets and water supply, turning the result into a practical snapshot of how people are judging basic local governance.

Quick Highlights

  • Fifty-nine Jaipur district sarpanches were placed within the survey's top 10 positions.
  • Six sarpanches shared first place with a score of 4.5 out of 5.
  • Residents rated work on roads, drains, streetlights, toilets and water supply.
  • More than 8 lakh people across Rajasthan took part in the survey.

The crowded top bracket suggests that several gram panchayats finished on very similar scores, leaving little distance between first place and the rest of the leading group.

Six sarpanches shared first place in Jaipur

The highest score in Jaipur district was 4.5 out of 5, and it was shared by six sarpanches: Harbakhsh of Maindwas, Shyojiram of Sawaijaisinghpura, Meera Yadav of Nangal Koju, Bajranglal Sharma of Itawa, Suraj Narayan Yadav of Gohandi and Asha Bunkar of Mundota.

That tie at the top explains why Jaipur's ranking table became unusually crowded. A large number of sarpanches ended up packed into the top 10 band, showing how close the competition was across the district.

What the survey shows for Jaipur villages

According to the survey format, users could award between 1 and 5 points on five service areas: roads, drains, road lighting, toilets and water. More than 8 lakh people across Rajasthan took part before the results were released.

Because the exercise was built around everyday infrastructure issues, the Jaipur result offers a useful read on what residents notice most at village level. It also shows that visible service delivery remains central to how sarpanches are being judged in public surveys.

Share