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Title: | JINNAH AND ORGANIZATIONAL POLITICS OF ALL INDIA MUSLIM LEAGUE |
Authors: | QAISAR, SHAHZAD |
Keywords: | History |
Issue Date: | 2018 |
Publisher: | Quaid i Azam University |
Abstract: | The study is based on pure library research from an historian's perspective and attempts to cover at length the role of Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah in Organizational Politics of All India Muslim League. League was neither a mass party nor it had effective presence in all provinces of the British India before 1936. It was Jinnah who tried to pair League and Indian National Congress in the second decade of 1900. But soon he realised futility of that alliance due to increasing extremist tendencies in Congress. In 1920's, Jinnah tried to make settlement with Congress over communal issue but neither Congress was willing to take another initiative nor the League leaders was willing to move forward. Jinnah returned to India after his brief stay in England and resumed League's leadership with aim to re-organise the party to popularise it among the masses. He restructured the party at the Lucknow Session (1937) and kept on reforming, expanding and popularizing the party in the coming years. The effective handling of organisational affairs along with the slogan of "Pakistan" led to landslide victory of League in the 1946 elections. The victory was outcome of various tactics, new organs of League, strong organizational base and effective propaganda by the party organs. Jinnah's unmatched handling of League made it all India party which was representative of the aspirations of the Indian Muslims. The study examines Jinnah's role in organizational politics of League, his efforts to deal with issues inside party, his struggle to expand the party and his rise to the principal person of League with authorisation to take all necessary steps on behalf of the party. The major question discussed in this research is whether Jinnah remained within his constitutional limits or he exceeded from his designated role as the president of the party. The sources consulted during this research made it clear that Jinnah mostly remained within the ambit of his constitutional powers granted by the Working Committee of All India Muslim League. Sometimes, he went beyond his constitutional role which had some explainable reasons behind it. Jinnah was trusted by the League leaders but he never used his authorisation without consultation of the Working Committee. At some points, Jinnah played role of mediator between provincial Leaguers due to his stature as Quaid-i-Azam which drew respect for him from all circles. Moreover, he handled organizational politics by either acting formally under constitutional umbrella or he used his informal and personal influence for betterment of the party. Jinnah's effective and influential handling of League at provincial and central level united the fragmented and less popular party into a united and popular party which could claim itself sole representative of the Muslims of Indian Subcontinent The victory in the 1946 elections testified organizational strength of League and Jinnah's leadership ability to handle party affairs in systematic way. The last phase of freedom movement testified Jinnah's sagacious handling of the situation and formidable mobilization of party organs in a single direction with a single chain of command. The goal of Pakistan could not be achieved without strong, influential and sheer handling of organizational politics of League which Jinnah did marvelously. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/14914 |
Appears in Collections: | Ph.D |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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HIS 323.pdf | HIS 323 | 2.16 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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