1946 Indian provincial elections
Provincial elections were held in British India in January 1946 to elect members of the legislative councils of the Indian provinces.[1] The consummation of British rule in India were the 1945/1946 elections. As minor political parties were eliminated, the political scene became restricted to the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League who were more antagonised than ever. The Congress, in a repeat of the 1937 elections, won (90%) of the general non-Muslim seats while the Muslim League won the majority of Muslim seats (87%) in the provinces. The All India Muslim League verified its claim to be the sole representative of Muslim India, even though later on, after August 1947, 28 of its members joined the Constituent Assembly of India .[2][3] The election laid the path to Pakistan.[4][3][5]
Background[edit]
On 19 September 1945, following negotiations between Indian leaders and members of the 1946 Cabinet Mission to India from the United Kingdom, the Viceroy Lord Wavell announced that elections to the provincial and central legislatures would be held in December 1945 to January 1946. It was also announced that an executive council would be formed and a constitution-making body would be convened after these elections.[1][6] These elections were important as the provincial assemblies thus formed were to then elect a new Constituent Assembly which would begin formulating a Constitution for an independent India. All contesting parties began campaigning. The Indian national congress represented almost the entire Indian population while the Muslim League professed to speak for the whole Muslim population.[7] The dominant issue of the election campaign became the issue of Pakistan.[4][8][9]
Originally, the Muslim League had been a party which received most of its support from the Muslim-minority provinces, where manufactured fear of Hindu ‘domination’ was greater, as was a sort of a sense of ‘loss of privilege’, and to showcase its argument for Muslim nationhood the League needed support from both Muslim-majority as well as Muslim-minority provinces. In the election campaign, the League resorted to establishing networks with traditional power bases, such as landowners and the religious elite, in the Muslim-majority provinces to win support. Religious slogans were utilized and the term ‘Pakistan’ was put forward. Some scholars state that the meaning of Pakistan was kept vague so that it meant different things to different people.[10] On the other hand, Venkat Dhulipala observes that, rather than being vague, the proposals for Pakistan were vigorously debated in public, maps printed, economic foundations analysed and Pakistan was envisioned as a modern Islamic state.[11][12]
In contrast to earlier elections, the religious commitment was intertwined with a declaration of Muslim communal unity. Casting the vote became an Islamic act.[13] Consequently, for the Muslim electorate, Pakistan represented both a nation-state for India's Muslims, but one which surpassed the common state structure, and an awakening of an Islamic polity where Islam would be blended with the state's functioning.[14]
Unlike previous elections under British raj where voting was restricted by property and educational qualifications,the elections of 1946, which would further elect representatives to the Constituent Assembly of India, saw the voting franchise extended to a much greater portion of the Indian adult population.[15][16][17]