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The 1946 Punjab Elections

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

I. A. Talbot
Affiliation:
Royal Holloway College, University of London

Extract

On August 21st 1945 the viceroy announced that elections would be held that Winter to the Central and Provincial Legislative Assemblies. They were to precede the convention of a constitution-making body for British India. The Muslim League had to succeed in this crucial test if its popular support of its demand for Pakistan was to be credible. In particular it had to succeed in the Punjab as there could be no Pakistan without that province. But in the Punjab's last elections held in 1937 the League had fared disastrously. It had put forward a mere seven candidates for the 85 Muslim seats and only two had been successful. In the 1946 elections the League won 75 of the total Muslim seats. This improvement in its performance which had momentous implications for the future for the subcontinent requires explanation.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980

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References

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30 Many of the Punjab landlords who had been defeated by the PPP in 1970 joined it during the period to 1977.Google Scholar

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32 The Eastern Times (Lahore), 2 08 1945.Google Scholar

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36 Over 800,000 Punjabis served in the British Army during the war.Google Scholar

37 The price of cotton sold in Rohtak, for example, had fallen from 7 seers to the rupee in March 1931 to 10 seers to the rupee by that October. The retail price of gur ranged between 9 and 10 seers to the rupee in March 1931 before the worst impact of the agricultural depression was felt. By March 1933 it had so fallen that the price of 25 seers to the rupee was recorded in Rohtak.Google Scholar Note by Asiz, K. B. Mian, Commissioner Ambala Division, on the present Economic Situation in the Ambala Division. Punjab Government Proceedings, Vol. 12017. Development Dept. Proceedings August 1933 No. 22, pp. 72ff, IOR.Google Scholar

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65 Such practice on one occasion in the Khanewal Tehsil in the Multan District almost proved detrimental to the League, when the Parliamentary Board in an endeavour to maintain its authority rode roughshod over the religious susceptibilities of the local electorate, and elected Pir Budhan Shah as candidate for the constituency—despite the fact that he had written a promise on the first page of the Quran to stand down as candidate in favour of someone else. Hussain Bakhash Propaganda Secretary Anjuman Islah-ul-Muslemeen, Miancharri, Multan District to Jinnah, 21 January 1946, Shamsul Hasan Collection, Punjab Vol. 1, General Correspondence.Google Scholar

66 Immediately after the results were known the Punjab Provincial Muslim League issued a statement praising the students' crucial role in its success. The Eastern Times (Lahore), 17 03 1946.Google Scholar

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68 Ibid.; see fn. 51.

69 The Unionist Party employed Mirasis to work on its behalf during the elections. The Eastern Times (Lahore), 30 12 1945.Google Scholar

70 It never in fact kept this promise. The Punjab League ran into financial difficulties during the campaigning and had to resort to a 3 lac rupee loan from its parent body's Central Election Fund. In such circumstances the question of the payment of the student workers became a vexed issue. At one point, because of difficulties over funds, the Aligarh students were able to stay only ten days at a time in the Punjab. Jinnah handed over 30,000 rupees in all from the Central Election Fund to the Aligarh Election committee. See Shamsul Hasan Collection U.P. Vol. 3.Google Scholar

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96 Pir Makhad had always been traditionally factionally aligned against the Khan of Makhad who in 1946 was supporting the League.Google Scholar

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101 Nawa-e-Waqt (Lahore), 18 01 1946.Google Scholar

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111 Calculated from 1941 Census, Punjab, Pt 1, Table XIII, p. 42 (Lahore, 1941).Google Scholar

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