1967 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election explained

Election Name:1967 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election
Country:India
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:1962 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election
Previous Year:1962
Election Date:21 February 1967
Next Election:1972 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election
Next Year:1972
Seats For Election:all 75 seats in Legislative Assembly
Majority Seats:38
Turnout:58.8%
Party1:Indian National Congress
Leader1:Ghulam Mohammed Sadiq
Leaders Seat1:Amirakadal
Last Election1:New
Seats1: 61
Seat Change1:New
Party2:Jammu & Kashmir National Conference
Leader2:Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad
Leaders Seat2:Safakadal
Last Election2:70
Seats2:8
Seat Change2: 62
Party4:Bharatiya Jana Sangh
Last Election4:New
Seats4:3
Seat Change4:New
Chief Minister
Before Election:Ghulam Mohammed Sadiq
Before Party:Indian National Congress
After Election:Ghulam Mohammed Sadiq
After Party:Indian National Congress

Elections for the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir were held in February 1967.[1] [2] Ghulam Mohammed Sadiq was appointed Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir.

Background

In 1965, the working committee of the Jammu & Kashmir National Conference announced that it would dissolve itself and merge with the Indian National Congress. A rival faction led by Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad refused to go along and contested the elections under the National Conference banner.

Prior to that, in 1963, the Jammu Praja Parishad also merged into the national party Bharatiya Jana Sangh.These mergers are seen by analysts as a major "centralizing strategy" and a victory for the Hindu nationalist agenda of the Praja Parishad and its allies.

There were reports that Bakshi was planning to forge an electoral alliance with the Jana Sangh, despite their differences on the Article 370, but the alliance did not materialize. The Jana Sangh, whose main base was in the Jammu Division, planned to contest in the Kashmir Valley taking advantage of the rivalry between the Congress and the National Conference.

The election

Of the 75 seats, 42 seats were allocated to the Kashmir Valley, 31 to Jammu, and 2 to Ladakh.

The National Conference contested 73 seats overall. The Jana Sangh contested all 31 seats of Jammu and several seats in the Valley. The Plebiscite Front officially boycotted the election, but several members contested as independent candidates, including the General Secretary Ali Mohammad Naik, who contested from Tral, and Ghulam Mohammed Bhat, contesting from Habbakadal in Srinagar. The Awami Action Committee also boycotted the election. Other parties that contested included the rump group of the National Conference under the leadership of Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad, the rump group of the Democratic National Conference under the leadership of Ram Piara Saraf, and the national parties Communist Party of India, Praja Socialist Party and the Hindu Mahasabha.

The nomination papers of 118 candidates were rejected on technical grounds, 55 of them because the candidates had failed to take the obligatory oath of allegiance to the Constitution. As a result, 22 seats in the Valley were unopposed, resulting in a win for the Congress candidates.

Simultaneously, elections were also held for the Lok Sabha (the Lower House of the Indian Parliament) in the 6 Lok Sabha constituencies of the State.

Results

The Indian National Congress won 61 seats in the state assembly, emerging as the winning party. Bakshi's National Conference won 8 seats and the Jana Sangh 3 seats. Three other seats were won by independent candidates, one of them by Ali Mohammed Naik of the Plebiscite Front.[2]

In the elections for the Lok Sabha, 5 of the 6 seats were won by the Congress, of which 2 were unopposed. The remaining seat was won by Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad of the National Conference, contesting from Srinagar. Scholar Sumantra Bose remarks that Bakshi might never have won a free election "at any point during his ten years in office", but he did so now holding the banner of Kashmiri regionalist resistance to New Delhi.

Elected members

ConstituencyReserved for
(SC/None)
MemberParty
Karnah None Mohammed Yunis Khan
Kupwara None M. S. Tantray
Lolab None
Bandipora None M. A. Khan
Handwara None
Harli None
Refiabad None Ghulam Rasul Kar
Baramulla None Shamas-ud-din
Sopore None Gulam Nabi Mircha
Pattan None G. R. Dar
Sonawari None Abdul Aziz Parray
Gulmarg None Surinder Singh
Uri None M. M. Khan
Kangan None M. B. Ahmad
Ganderbal None Muhammad Maqbool Bhat
Amirakadal None
Habakadal None S. K. Kaul
Tankipora None N. Mohamad
Khanyar None G. Ahmed
Safakadal None B. G. Mohamad
Zadibal None
Hazaratbal None Mohammad Yahya Sidiqi
Beerwa None A. Quddus
Khan Sahib None A. G. Namthali
Badgam None H. S. Mehdi
Charari Sharief None Abdul Qayum
Chadura None
Rajpura None G. M. Rajpori
Pulwama None Master Sanaullah Sheikh
Pampore None P. M. Shah
Tral None
Shopian None S. A. Shamim
Noorabad None A. Aziy
Devsar None
Kulgam None Mohammed Yaqub Bhat
Nandi None A. Rehman
Pahalgam None M. Lal
Bijibehara None
Anantnag None Shamasuddin
Kothar None Mohammad Ashraf Khan
Verinag None
Naubug None Hassan-ud-din
Leh None
Kargil None Kacho Muhammad Ali Khan
Kishtwar None Ghulam Mustafa
Inderwal None Abdul Gani Goni
Bhaderwah SC J. Ram
Doda None Lassa Wani
Ramban None H. Raj
Banehal None M. Akhtar
Gulabgarh None Mohammed Ayub Khan
Reasi None B. L. Kohstani
Tikri None
Udhampur None
Ramnagar SC Chandu Lal
Basohli None
Billawar None B. Singh
Kathua SC Panjaboo Ram
Jasmargarh None
Samba SC Parma Nand
Ramgarh None D. Nath
Bishnah SC Bhagat Chhaju Ram
Ranbirsinghpura None K. Singh
Jandrah Gharota None Rangil Singh
Marh SC Guranditta Mal
Jammu Cantonment None P. T. Dutta
Jammu South None R. Nath
Jammu North None
Akhnoor None Dharm Paul
Chamb None Chhaju Ram
Nowshera None Beli Ram
Darhal None M. Hussain
Rajouri None A. Rashid
Mendhar None Chaudhary Muhammad Aslam
Poonch None Ghulam Mir Mohamad

Government formation

On 17 March, a 14-member ministry headed by G. M. Sadiq was sworn in. The Cabinet ministers included Girdhari Lal Dogra, D. P. Dhar, Mohammed Ayub Khan, Peer Giasuddin and Kanwar Ranjit Singh. Abdul Gani Lone was among the Ministers of State, and Mufti Mohammed Sayeed was among the Deputy Ministers.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.elections.in/jammu-and-kashmir/assembly-constituencies/1967-election-results.html 1967 J&K elections
  2. http://eci.nic.in/eci_main/SR_KeyHighLights/SE_1967/Statistical_Report_Jk_1967.pdf Statistical Report on General Election, 1967