1937 Sind Legislative Assembly election

Elections to the Legislative Assembly of Sind were held in January and February 1937.[1] These were the first elections in the province after its creation in 1936. The Communal Award of 1932 had allocated sixty assembly seats to Sind, based on which it now formed an assembly of its own.[2]

1937 Sind provincial elections

1937

All 60 seats in the Sind Legislative Assembly
Registered639,043[1]
  First party Second party Third party
 
Party SUP ABHM INC
Seats won 22 11 8

The seats were divided amongst the following electoral colleges; Muslims Rural 31 seats, Muslims Urban 2 seats, Women Muslim Urban 1 seat, General Rural 15 seats, General Urban 3 seats, Women General Urban 1 seat, Europeans 2 seats, Landowners 2 seats, Commerce and Industry 2 seats and Labour 1 seat.[2] In total, there were 639,043 eligible voters.[1]

The Sind United Party won twenty-two of the Muslim seats, the Sind Muslim Political Party won four seats 4 whilst the Sind Azad Party won three seats. The party identity of one Muslim delegate was unclear. Independent candidates won the remaining nine seats from the Muslim constituencies.[1]

In the General constituencies, the Sind Hindu Mahasabha won eleven seats, the Congress Party eight seats, Independent Hindus two seats and Independent Labour Party one seat. From the European and Commercial and Industry constituencies, non-party candidates were elected.[1]

However, whilst the Sind United Party had emerged as the winner of the election its two most prominent leaders (Haji Abdullah Haroon and Shah Nawaz Bhutto) had failed to win the seats they contested.[2] Haroon had contested the Lyari constituency, in northern Karachi. The Lyari seat was won by Sardar Allah Baksh Gabol. The Larkana seat, which Bhutto had contested, was won by Sheikh Abdul Majid Sindhi.[1]

After the election the governor of Sind asked the leader of the Sind Muslim Political Party to form a cabinet. Largescale defections took place from the ranks of the Sind United Party and the Sind Azad Party in the assembly.[2]

United Party senior leader Allah Bux Soomro later served as Premier of Sindh from March 23, 1938 – April 18, 1940 until a no-confidence motion was passed against him by the Indian National Congress and Muslim League.[3] He was briefly elected back to power and served briefly from March 27, 1942 – October 14, 1942, but was dismissed by the Governor due to his support for the Quit India Movement.[3]

Winning members

# Name Constituency
1Abdul Majid Lilram ShaikhLarkana
2Abdul Sattar Abdul Rahman PirzadaSukkur
3Akhji Ratansing SodhoTharparkar
4Khan Sahab Allah Bux Khudadad Khan GabolKarachi
5Khan Bahadur Allah Bux Muhammad Umar Soomro, O.B.E.Sukkur
6Sian Bahadur Mir Allahdad Khan Imam Bux Khan TalpurTharparkar
7Khan Bahadur Haji Amir Ali Tharo Khan LahoriLarkana
8Arbab Togachi Mir MuhammadTharparkar
9Bhojsing Gurdinomal PahalajaniSukkur
10Dialmal DoulatramLandlord - seat
11Doulatram MohandasSukkur
12Ghanshyam Jethanand ShivdasaniHyderabad
13Ghanumal TarachandHyderabad
14Mir Ghulam Ali Bandehali TalpurHyderabad
15Mir Ghulam Allah Khan Mir Haji Hussain Bux KhanHyderabad
16Makhdoom Ghulam Haider Makhdoom ZaheeruddinHyderabad
17Pir Ghulam Haider Shah Sahib Dino ShahTharparkar
18Khan Bahadur Ghulam Muhammad Abdullah Khan IsranLarkana
19Ghulam Murtaza Shah Muhammad Shah, SyedDadu
20Khan Bhahdur Ghulam Nabi Shah Moujali Shah, M.B.ETharparkar
21R.S GokaldasMewaldasLarkana
22Hassaram Sunderdas PamnaniSukkur
23Dr. Hemandas Rupchand Wadhwani Upper Sindh Frontier District
24Hotchand Hiranand Rai Bahadur Nawabshah
25Pir Illahi Bux Nawaz AliDadu
26Issardas VarindmalCommerce & Industry
27Khan Sahab Jaffer Khan Gul Muhammad Khan BurdiJacobadad
28Jamshed Nusserwanji MehtaKarachi
29Jam Jan Muhammad Khan Muhammad Sharif JunejoSanghar
30Mrs. Jenubai Ghulam Ali AllanaKarachi
31Miss. Jethibai Tulsidas SipahimalaniHyderabad
32Khan Bhahadur Kaisar Khan Ghulam Mohammad  Khan BozdarSukkur
33Khair Shah Imam Ali Shah, Syed (Oath on 3rd August 1937)Nawabshah
34Col. H.J. MahonEuropean Sindh
35Miran Muhammad Shah Zainul-ab-din ShahHyderabad
36Muhammad Ali Shah Allahando Shah, SyedNawabshah
37K.B Muhammad Ayub Shah Muhammad Khan KhuhroLarkana
38Muhammad Hashim Faiz Mohammad Alias GazdarKarachi
39Mir Muhammad Khan Nawab Ghaibi Khan ChandioLarkana
40Muhammad Usman Muhammad Khan Soomro Thatta
41Muhammad Yousif Khan Bahadur Khair Mohammad Khan ChandioThatta 
42Naraindas Anandji BecharKarachi
43Newandram VishindasKarachi
44Nichaldas Chatomal VaziraniThatta
45Nur Muhammad Shah Murad Ali Shah, Syed Nawabshah
46Dr. D.N.O Sullivan Karachi
47Partabrai KaisukhdasTharparkar
48Dr. Popatlal A. BhoopatkarKarachi
49G.H RaschenKarachi
50Rasool Bux Khan Muhammad Bux Khan UnarNawabshah
51Khan Sahab Rasool Bux Shah Mahboob Shah, SyedSukkur
52Rustomji Khurshedji Sidhwa Karachi
53Mir. Bandehali Khan Mir Haji Mohammad Hussain Khan TalpurHyderabad
54Shamsuddin Khan Abdul Kabir Khan Barikzai (Durani) Sukkur
55Sitaldas PerumalTharparkar
56Mir Zain-ul-din Khan Mir Sunder Khan SundraniJacababad
57Khan Sahab Sohrab Khan Sahib Dino Khan SarkiJacababad
58Mukhi Gobindram Pritamdas 
59Dewan Bahadur Hiranand KhemsingHyderabad
60Sir Ghulam Hussain Hidayatullah Shaikh, Kt. K.C.S.I.Karachi
Source:[4]

References

  1. Afzal, Nasreen. Role of Sir Abdullah Haroon in Politics of Sindh (1872-1942) Archived 2012-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Ansari, Sarah F. D. Sufi Saints and State Power: The Pirs of Sind, 1843-1947. Cambridge South Asian studies, 50. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. pp. 115-116
  3. K. R. Malkani (1988). The Sindh Story, Chapter 11: Thrown to the wolves. Allied Publishers. Archived from the original on 2012-06-21. Retrieved 2018-01-09.
  4. "Legislative Assembly of Sind under Government of India Act 1935. (First Assembly - 27 April, 1937 To 1945)". Archived from the original on 2010-08-27. Retrieved 2010-06-19.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.