Mizoram People's Conference Explained

Party Name:Mizoram People's Conference
Colorcode:Green
Leader:Brig Thenphunga
President:Pu Lalhmangaiha Sailo
Headquarters:Treasury Square, Aizawl, Mizoram
Eci:Unrecognised[1]
Alliance:Mizoram Secular Alliance
Indian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance (2023-)
Ideology:Regionalism

The Mizoram People's Conference is a regional political party in Mizoram, India. It was formed by Brig Thenphunga Sailo on 17 April 1975.[2] Ṭhenphunga was the party chairman and Chief Minister of Mizoram from 1979 to 1984, and an army officer and then a human rights activist before starting his political party.

Following the MPC's defeat in 1984, it was the main opposition party for the next two decades. In the 1998 assembly elections, the party formed a pre-poll coalition with the Mizo National Front. the Mizoram People's Conference won 12 seats and the Mizo National Front won 21 seats, enabling the two parties to formed a coalition government. The coalition fell on December 1999 after a secret agreement between the People's Conference and the Indian National Congress to fite the elections to the Village Council together.[3]

However, in the 2003 elections, the party won only three seats, a number which fell to two in the 2008 elections and one in 2013. It ultimately won four seats in the 2018 election and their MLA quit to join Zoram People's Movement (ZPM).[4] MPC was the third largest party in Mizoram for three decades. It merged with the People's Representation for Identity and Status of Mizoram (PRISM) party as the People’s Conference Party.

In June 2019, MPC left ZPM.In 2023,the party joined Mizoram Secular Alliance and subsequently Indian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance.

List of chief ministers

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Withdrawal of recognition of status of state party status of Mizoram People's Conference in Mizoram . 2023-04-10 . NDTV.com.
  2. News: T Sailo's Mizoram People's Conference to merge with PRISM . 28 February 2021 . The New Indian Express . 21 September 2020.
  3. Mahapatra, Padmalaya, and Lalngaihmawia Zote. “POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT IN MIZORAM : FOCUS ON THE POST-ACCORD SCENARIO.” The Indian Journal of Political Science, vol. 69, no. 3, 2008, pp. 643–60. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/41856452. Accessed 12 Mar. 2024.
  4. Web site: Mizoram Assembly Election Results 2018. NDTV.com. en. 2019-07-30.