CMP(11) - Congress's opposition to compulsory grouping - Sardar Patel, Gandhi and Maulana Azad in May 1946.

Documents included
  •  Simla Conference meeting on 6  May 1946(excerpts)
  • V.P. Menon in 'The Transfer of Power in India', 1957 (short excerpt)
  •  Letter from Mr Gandhi to Lord Pethick-Lawrence 19 May 1946(full text)
  • Mr Turnbull to Lord Pethick-Lawrence on 19 May 1946(full text)
  • Record of Meeting between Lord Pethick-Lawrence and Sir S. Cripps and Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan, Nawab Mohammed Ismail Khan and Sardar Abdur Rab Nishtar on 16 May 1946(excerpts)
  • Letter from Maulana Azad to Lord Pethick-Lawrence on 20 May 1946(excerpts)
  • Letter from Lord Pethick Lawrence to Maulana Azad on 22 May 1946(excerpts)
  • Mr Gandhi's article in Harijan 26 May 1946(full text)

[Reference unless otherwise specified: The Transfer of Power, Vol VII The Cabinet Mission, Eds. Nicholas Mansergh and Penderel Moon, 1977].

Comment
The Congress consistently opposed the Cabinet Mission scheme of compulsory grouping of provinces into sections and separate constitution-making bodies for each section because the scheme seemed nothing other than awarding Jinnah a larger Pakistan at the time of his choosing and a veto on India until then.

Before the Cabinet Mission Plan was issued on 16 May 1946, in the 6 May meeting of the Simla Conference, clear differences between the Congress and Jinnah on the grouping question could be seen. Jawaharlal Nehru said while the Congress would pay a big price to preserve the Union of India, there were limits to what the Congress would agree to. M.A. Jinnah said that grouping was the only way to avoid complete partition and that separate sovereign Group Constitution-making bodies should write  Group  constitutions and decide on all matters except the three assigned to the Union. Jinnah also said that the Union should in the first instance be for a period of five years only. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel said this suggestion clearly indicated the reality behind the grouping proposal.


203 page 440(excerpts)
Record of the fourth Meeting of Second Simla Conference held on 6 May 1946 at 4 p.m.

..[Pandit Nehru said]As regards functions, the  Congress contemplated that the All-India Constitution-making Body would decide the Union constitution and would also decide the main lines of Provincial constitutions. They would prefer the maximum possible uniformity in Provincial constitutions but details would have to be filled in by some Provincial authority. They thought that Provincial Legislatures as at present constituted might undertake this. For example, the Congress as a matter of principle were opposed to two Chambers and desired joint electorates. But these matters should be decided by the Constitution-making Body which might leave a latitude to Provinces in regard to them where uniformity was not possible. It was not contemplated that the All-India Constitution-making Body would frame constitutions for the States.

Sir S. Cripps asked whether the Congress contemplated the representatives of a group of Provinces in the All-India Constitution-making Body meeting separately for group purposes. Pandit Nehru said that the question of grouping would arise after the constitution had been formed. The first question to decide was the character of the Union. After that Provinces might exercise their autonomy subject to the Union constitution and Provincial representatives might bring up on the All-India Constitution-making Body proposals for grouping. It was not possible to say how the All-India Constitution-making Body would decide on these matters. New forces would be operating when India received its independence and even the old political parties could not guarantee what action it would take.

Sir S. Cripps said that the only way to secure that there was a grouping arrangement if that were desired would be to allow Provinces to meet as a section of the Constitution-making Body and form a group. They might decide to do so either by vote of the Provincial Legislature or by vote of their representatives in the Constitution-making Body. Pandit Nehru said that while the Congress contemplated autonomy for the Provinces that meant internal autonomy, it was quite another thing for autonomy to be used to create the new piece of constitutional machinery going beyond the boundaries of the Province. Some Provinces might wish to group themselves and others might not. Others might be divided up almost equally on the subject. But Sikhs and Hindus in the Punjab who were a large minority might be adverse to the Punjab being grouped with the North-Western Provinces.

The Viceroy said that it looked as if a Constitution-making Body with all Parties co-operating in it would be impossible unless there were agreement beforehand that Provinces should be accorded the right to group themselves. It was a choice of difficulties and unless grouping were agreed to there might be no constitution-making machinery based on agreement and the consequences would be grave. Pandit Nehru said that if any Province declined to come into the Constitution-making Body, the Constitution-making Body should proceed without it. He thought this was unlikely to happen but Provinces and States which did stay out would be under great pressure to come in. The same applied to the States who would have come in subject to considerable internal changes.

The Viceroy pointed out that if Provinces stayed out the Union of India would be lost. Pandit Nehru said that the Congress would pay a big price to avoid that but there were limits. They believed that if the British Government decided to quit India not merely at some future date but now, a Constituent Assembly could be formed and would meet in a realistic situation in which the Parties would come to terms. They would then have to face the consequences of their actions.

The Viceroy said that the psychologies of the situation were realities and it seemed the path of prudence to make some compromise in advance of the Constitution-making Body which would avoid the risk of a disastrous conflict. Maulana Azad said that there could be no guarantee that the recommendations of Congress would be accepted by the Constitution-making Body, but Pandit Nehru accepted the suggestion of Sir S. Cripps that an agreement between the two main parties to use their influence to procure certain decisions by the Constitution-making Body would be of real value.

Mr.Jinnah said that it was more than mere psychology or a vague feeling of sentiment that was in question. He was proceeding on the basis of the formula of invitation. The only way to prevent complete partition was that Provinces should group themselves together by choice. They should set up constitution-making machinery which de facto  would be sovereign though not de jure. These group constitution-making bodies would deal with all matters including the Provincial constitutions and excepting only the three subjects given to the Union. These bodies might be formed by election by the Provincial Legislatures of a proportion of their number. Those eligible for election would not be confined to the members of the Provincial Legislatures. The States should set up their own constitution-making machery in their own way on a proportionate basis.

The two Constitution-making Bodies and the States representatives would meet together to decide the constitution of the Union in respect of the three subjects. All other matters would be decided in the Group Constitution-making Body both matters of common concern to the Group and other matters not of common concern. There could at the outset be a joint meeting of the three bodies to decide the agenda and procedures but thereafter they would meet separately except for the determination of the Union Constitution. Mr. Jinnah rejected the suggestion that there should be one Constitution-making Body in which decisions on major questions could not be reached without majority of vote of both Groups and with freedom to withdraw from it.
...
The Secretary of State asked Mr. Jinnah whether he would like to deal now with the question of a right of secession. Mr. Jinnah said that his view was that the Union should not be for more than a period of five years in the first instance. The First Lord of Admiralty said that this was too short. 15 years would be more appropriate. Sardar Patel said that this suggestion clearly indicated the reality behind the grouping proposal. The Secretary of State said that the constitution could not be incapable of revision but that such a provision could not apply only in one particular. Mr. Jinnah said he was not in any way for breaking down the Union but thought there should be a constitutional means for bringing it to an end if it proved impossible in the light of experience. Sir S. Cripps pointed out that a similar provision would be required in regard to the Groups..
(end excerpts)

[Also see CMP(8A) Simla Conference meetings on 5 May 1946 on the powers of the Union  and CMP(8) Simla Conference meeting on 11 May 1946 in which Jinnah insisted that the sovereignty of the 'Pakistan'  group had  to be fundamental to any constitutional scheme and could not be a subject for arbitration].

Comment
After the Cabinet Mission Plan was issued on 16 May 1946, the Congress consistently expressed its point of view against compulsory grouping as the Plan specified it, but was willing to agree to other versions of grouping. The Cabinet Mission members and the Viceroy however continued to insist that the Congress should accept the grouping scheme exactly as the Mission had specified it. They also tried to ensure that no change or difference in interpretation in the scheme would be discussed in the Constituent Assembly.

V.P.Menon, later to be a major player in the accession of the Princely States, was a senior civil servant in the British Indian government who held the post of Reforms Commissioner and was privy to Cabinet Mission discussions.

In his book 'The Transfer of Power in India', 1957, V. P Menon wrote

"This rigid attitude of the Viceroy was based on one important consideration. While in Simla, the Cabinet Mission had given an assurance to the Muslim League-an assurance that had not however been made known to the Congress at the time- that decisions in the sections would be by a majority vote of the representatives of the provinces within the section; also that the constitutions for the provinces would definitely be framed by the sections. The Viceroy felt that that His Majesty's Government was in honour bound to respect this assurance. But there were great practical difficulties in the way of implementing an assurance which had been given at the time without full consideration. If, as a result, the League came in and the Congress withdrew, the position would certainly not be bettered.."


On 19 May 1946 Gandhiji sought explicit clarification on the grouping scheme-

327 p 622(full text)
Mr Gandhi to Lord Pethick-Lawrence
"Valmiki Mandir" Reading Road, New Delhi 19 May 1946

Dear Lord,

In order to enable me the better to advise such of those who seek my advice, I venture to put before you my difficulty as follows:

You say in your answer to a question: "If they do come together on that basis[the Mission Plan], it will mean that they will have accepted that basis, but they can still change it if by a majority of each party they desire to do so." You can omit the last portion of the sentence as being superfluous for my purpose.

Even the basis in para 15 of the State paper is a recommendation. Do you regard a recommendation as obligatory on any member of the contemplated Constituent Assembly? There is such a ring about the quotation. Can those who enthusiastically welcome the Paper but are discerning enough to repudiate, for instance, grouping honourably seek to educate the country and the Constituent Assembly against the grouping clause? If your answer is "yes", does it not follow that the Frontier and Assam province delegates would be free to abstain from joining the sections to which they are arbitrarily assigned?

I know the legal position. My question has reference to the honourableness of opposition to grouping.
Yours sincerely,
M.K. Gandhi


On 19 May 1946, on receipt of Gandhiji's letter, the following letter was sent.

328 p 622-23
Mr Turnbull to Lord Pethick-Lawrence
Office of the Cabinet Delegation, The Viceroy's House, New Delhi 19 May 1946

Gandhi's letter
With reference to the last part of paragraph three, it is important to bear in mind that the Muslim League were told(see flag para 2) that if N.W.F.P and Assam refused to come to the Section C.M.B[Constitution-making Body] the Section would presumably proceed without their representatives, and also that representatives of the Muslim League part of N.W.F.P legislature could attend. It seems important not to say anything inconsistent with this to Mr. Gandhi.
F.F.T

Comment
Turnbull and probably V.P. Menon too (quoted above) were  referring to a 16th May 1946 meeting of the Mission with Muslim League Leaders, relevant portions of which are quoted here.

301 page 577(excerpts)
Record of Meeting between Lord Pethick-Lawrence and Sir S. Cripps and Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan, Nawab Mohammed Ismail Khan and Sardar Abdur Rab Nishtar on 16 May 1946

"The Secretary of State said that the Delegation thought it might be helpful to have this meeting so that they could elucidate any points on which the Muslim League representatives found difficulty in understanding the Statement which was being published in the evening.

Nawab Ismail Khan asked at what stage and how Groups would be formed. The Secretary of State and Sir S. Cripps explained that the sections of the Constitution-making Body would meet to decide the character of the Provincial constitutions within the Group, and the Group constitution. The decision would be taken by majority vote of the representatives of the Provinces within the section.

Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan asked what would happen if a Province, for example, the North-West Frontier, refused to come to the meetings of the section of the Constituent Assembly of which it was a part. Sir S. Cripps said that the section would presumably proceed without those representatives. The Secretary of State said that under the table in paragraph 19, the North-West Frontier Province had three representatives and their Legislature would be asked to elect three by proportional representation. Those who were willing to elect would be supposed to elect their proportion and they would be entitled to attend even if the residue declined to elect.

Sardar Rab Nishtar asked whether he correctly understood that each section of the Constitution-making Body would be entitled to frame the constitution for the Provinces within it irrespective of whether they attended or not, and also to determine whether there should be a Group and what the Group subjects should be, subject only to the right of a Province to opt out after the constitution had been framed. Sir S. Cripps said that this was in accordance with the document. The option would be exercisable after the whole picture including the Union Constitution had been completed.

Sardar Nishtar asked whether it was open to representatives of two Groups to decide to sit together and act in common. Sir S. Cripps said there was no provision for Groups to sit together but that, unless the Union Constitution contained any provision which would prevent it, there was nothing to prevent two Groups coming together at a later stage by agreement.

Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan asked whether a Province which opted out of a Group could join another group. The Secretary of State said that he saw no reason why a Province should not be able to opt into another Group provided that the other Group was willing to accept it, but this was a matter outside the present document since a Province could not opt out until the Constitution-making Body had completed its work. Option from one Group to another would therefore only take place by negotiation after the constitution had been completed.
...
Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan asked whether it was the Governor-General- in-Council or the Viceroy, who would convene the Constitution-making Body and whether after it had been set up it would be within the authority of any member of the Government of India to decide matters in regard to it. The Secretary of State and Sir S. Cripps said that the Viceroy was the convening authority and that the Constitution-making Body would not in their opinion be within the authority of the Government of India or any member of it.

Sir S. Cripps said that the Delegation would like it to be understood that this Statement was not to be the subject of negotiation and that it was intended to go ahead with convening the Constituent Assembly on the basis of it. The only alterations which could be considered would be those agreed upon by the two main parties.

Sardar Nishtar asked what was contemplated as regards the States. Sir S. Cripps explained that the States could be represented at the opening formal meeting of the Constitution-making Body by a Negotiating Committee. While the  Group and Provincial constitutions were being settled the actual method of representation of the States could be decided by negotiation.

Nawab Mohammed Ismail asked who would interpet the Statement. Sir S. Cripps said that if any question arose he presumed that the Viceroy would be the deciding authority. He would act in consultation with His Majesty's Government when necessary.

The Muslim League representatives asked whether they could have a copy of the note of the explanations which had been given. The Secretary of State said that the document was intended to be self-explanatory and he thought that when it had been studied it would be found that the questions raised were all covered. He would not like it to be thought that he and Sir S. Cripps had been enlarging upon it. They were very familiar with the document and were able to point in it to the answer to various questions which might be raised. It was agreed that Sardar Nishtar might see the note of the meeting and take notes from it but that these would not have the status of an official record.

(Nawabzada Liaqat Ali Khan asked whether the words in paragraph 15 "recommend that the constitution should take the following basic form" meant that the Constitution-making Body was not free to alter these basic provisions. The Secretary of State pointed out that it would require a majority of each of the major communities in the Constitution-making Body to depart from the basic form. Nawab Ismail Khan asked what would happen if the Constituent Assembly did not comply with these basic conditions. Could His Excellency the Viceroy dissolve it?

Sir S. Cripps said that it would be open to the Muslim representatives to cease to participate. Nawab Ismail Khan asked how this could be done if sovereignty had been given to the Constitution-making Body. There would then be no safeguard. Sir S. Cripps said that sovereignty would not be given until the constitution had been framed, and in reply to Sardar Nishtar said that an Act of Parliament to set up the new constitution would not be appropriate. He was inclined to think that all that would be necessary was an act of cession by the Crown to the Constitution-making Body or to the new Government.)

(end excerpts)


In his capacity as Congress President, Maulana Azad wrote to the Mission on 20th May, also seeking clarification on the grouping scheme.

340 page 639(excerpts)
Maulana Azad to Lord Pethick-Lawrence
20 Akbar Road, New Delhi, 20 May 1946

Dear Lord Pethick-Lawrence,

My Committee have carefully considered the statement issued by the Cabinet Delegation on May 16th, and they have seen Gandhiji after the interviews he had with you and Sir Stafford Cripps. There are certain matters about which I have been asked to write to you.
..
In your recommendations for the basic form of the constitution..you state that the provinces should be free to form groups with executives and legislatures and each group could determine the provincial subjects to be taken in common. Just previous to this you state that all subjects other than union subjects and all residuary powers should vest in the provinces.

Later on the statement however on page 5 you state that the provincial representatives to the Constituent Assembly will divide up into three sections and "these sections shall proceed to settle the provincial constitutions for the provinces in each section and also decide whether any group constitution shall be set up for these provinces."

There appears to us to be a marked discrepancy in these two separate provisions. The basic provision gives full autonomy to a province to do what it likes and subsequently there appears to be a certain compulsion in the matter which clearly infringes that autonomy.

It is true that at a later stage the provinces can opt out of any group. In any event it is not clear how a province or its representatives can be compelled to do something which they do not want to do.

A provincial Assembly may give a mandate to its representatives not to enter any group or a particular group or section. As Sections B and C have been formed it is obvious that one province will play a dominating role in the section, the Punjab in section B and Bengal in Section C. It is conceivable that this dominating province may frame a provincial Constitution entirely against the wishes of Sind or the North-West Frontier Province or Assam. It may even conceivably lay down rules, for elections and otherwise, thereby nullifying the provision for a province to opt out of a group. Such could never be the intention as it would be repugnant to the basic principles and policy of the Scheme itself..."

(end excerpts)

Lord Pethick Lawrence replied to Maulana Azad on 22 May answering his and Gandhi's queries(355 page 659, relevant portion)

"The Delegation have considered your letter of 20th May and feel that the best way to answer it is that they should make their general position quite clear to you[blogger's comment: unlike to the Muslim League, btw, to whom very explicit answers were given as seen above]. Since the Indian leaders after prolonged discussion failed to arrive at an agreement, the Delegation have put forward their recommendations as the nearest approach to reconciling the views of the two main parties. The scheme therefore stands as a whole and can only succeed if it is accepted and worked in a spirit of compromise and co-operation.

You are aware of the reasons for the grouping of the Provinces and this is an essential feature of the scheme which can only be modified by agreement between the two parties.."

(end excerpt)

Comment

And that remained the Mission's and Viceroy's position all along in subsequent months. They tried to shame the Congress for its refusal to submit to the Mission's(and Viceroy's) rigidity on the grouping scheme by accusing Congressmen of many things- of excessive legal hairsplitting, of aiming to grab power and force a solution on the Muslims, of lack of generosity and statemanship.

It is hard to understand, with Jinnah and the Muslim League proclaiming at every turn their determination to achieve a separate sovereign Pakistan, why the British and the League expected that after decades of espousing the creed of Indian unity, the Congress would be stupid enough to agree to the compulsory grouping scheme and thereby make possible a larger separate sovereign Pakistan comprising sections B and C encompassing the whole of Bengal, Punjab and Assam provinces ?

And as V.P. Menon said, if the British sincerely felt that the compulsory grouping scheme was mandatory because it brought the Muslim League in, well,  it kept the Congress out, so what was the use, finally?

Gandhiji made his point of view clear in a Harijan article on the subject on 26th May.


Mr Gandhi's article in Harijan 26 May 1946
346 page 646(full text)
1. AN ANALYSIS
After four days of searching examination of the State Paper  issued by the Cabinet Mission and the Viceroy on behalf of the British Government, my conviction abides that it is the best document the British Government could have produced in the circumstances. It reflects our weakness, if we would be good enough to see it. The Congress and the Muslim League did not, could not agree. We would grievously err if at this time we foolishly satisfy ourselves that the differences are a British creation. The Mission have not come all the way from England to exploit them. They have come to devise the easiest and quickest method of ending British rule. We must be brave enough to believe their declaration until the contrary is proved. Bravery thrives upon the deceit of the deceiver.

My compliment, however, does not mean that what is best from the British standpoint is also best or even good from the Indian. Their best may possibly be harmful. My meaning will, I hope, be clear from what follows. The authors of the document have endeavoured to say fully what they mean. They have gathered from their talks the minimum they thought would bring the parties together for framing India’s charter of freedom. Their one purpose is to end British rule as early as may be. They would do so, if they could, by their effort, leave united India not torn asunder by internecine quarrel bordering on civil war. They would leave in any case.

Since in Simla the two parties, though the Mission suceeded in bringing them together at the Conference table (with what patience and skill they could do so, they alone could tell), could not come to an agreement, nothing daunted, they descended to the plains of India, and devised a worthy document for the purpose of setting up the Constituent Assembly which should frame India’s charter of independence, free of any British control or influence. It is an appeal and an advice. It has no compulsion in it. Thus the Provincial Assemblies may or may not elect the delegates. The delegates, having been elected, may or may not join the Constituent Assembly. The Assembly having met, may lay down a procedure different from the one laid down in the Statement. Whatever is binding on any person or party arises out of the necessity of the situation. The separate voting is binding on both the major parties, only because it is necessary for the existence of the Assembly and in no otherwise. At the time of writing. I took up the Statement, reread it clause by clause, and came to the conclusion that there was nothing in it binding in law. Honour and necessity alone are the two binding forces.

What is binding is that part of it which commits the British Government. Hence, I suppose, the four members of the British mission took the precaution of receiving full approval of the British Government and the two Houses of Parliament. The Mission are entitled to warm congratulations for the first step in the act of renunciation which the Statement is. Since other steps are necessary for full renunciation, I have called this one a promissory note.

Though the response to be made by India is to be voluntary the authors have naturally assumed that the Indian parties are well-organized and responsible bodies capable of doing voluntary acts as fully as, if not more fully than, compulsory acts. Therefore, when Lord Pethick-Lawrence said to a Press correspondent,“If they do come together on that basis, it will mean that they will have accepted that basis, but they can still change it, if a majority of each party they desire to do so, ” he was right in the sense that those who became delegates, well knowing the contents of the Statement, were expected by the authors to abide by the basis, unless it was duly altered by the major parties. When two or more rival parties meet together, they do so under some understanding. A self-chosen umpire (in the absence of the one chosen by the parties, the authors constitute themselves one) fancies that the parties will come together only if he presents them with a proposal containing a certain minimum, and he makes his proposal, leaving them free to add to, subtract from or altogether change it by joint agreement.

This is perfect so far. But what about the units? Are the Sikhs, for whom the Punjab is the only home in India, to consider themselves against their will, as part of the section which takes in Sindh, Baluchistan and the Frontier Province? Or is the Frontier Province also against its will to belong to the Punjab, called “B” in the Statement, or Assam to“C” although it is a predominantly non-Muslim province? In my opinion, the voluntary character of the Statement demands that the liberty of the individual unit should be unimpaired. Any member of the sections is free to join it. The freedom to opt out is an additional safeguard. It can never be a substitute for the freedom retained in paragraph 15(5) which reads: Provinces should be free to form groups with executives and legislatures and each group could determine the Provincial subject to be taken in common.

It is clear that this freedom was taken away by the authors by section 19 which “proposes” (does not order) what should be done. It presupposes that the Chairman of the Constituent Assembly at its first meeting will ask the delegates of the Provinces whether they would accept the group principle and if they do, whether they [would] accept the assignment given to their Province. This freedom inherent in every Province and that given by 15(5) will remain intact. There appears to me to be no other way of avoiding the apparent conflict between the two paragraphs as also charge of compulsion which would immediately alter the noble character of the document. I would, therefore, ask all those who are perturbed by the group proposal and the arbitrary assignment, that, if my interpretation is valid there is not the slightest cause for perturbation.

There are other things in the document which would puzzle any hasty reader who forgets that it is simply an appeal and an advice to the nation showing how to achieve independence in the shortest time possible. The reason is clear. In the new world that is to emerge out of the present chaos, India in bondage will cease to be ‘the brightest jewel’ in the British crown it will become the blackest spot in that crown, so black that it will be fit only for the dustbin. Let me ask the reader to hope and pray with me that the British crown has a better use for Britain and the world. The ‘brightest jewel’ is an arrogation. When the promissory note is fully honoured, the British crown will have a unique jewel as of right flowing from due performance of duty.

There are other matters outside the Statement which are required to back the promissory note. But I must defer that examination to the next issue of Harijan.
 


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Secondary sources on Page 3

CMP(1) - From Ayesha Jalal's 'The Sole Spokesman'<

CMP(2) - The Congress League positions on 12 May 11946

CMP(3) - The Cabinet Mission Plan 16 May 1946<

CMP(4) - Jinnah's and Muslim League's responses too the Cabinet Mission Plan 22 May  and June 6 1946

CMP(5) - Jinnah's meeting with Mission Delegation on 4 April 1946

CMP(6) -  Jinnah's meeting with Mission Deleggation on 16 April 1946


CMP(7A) -  Maulana Azad's meeting with Missionn Delegation on 17 April 1946

CMP(7) - The Congress unease with parity- it's excchanges with the Mission  8-9 May 1946

CMP(7B) Jinnah and Azad's responses to the Cabinet Mission's preliminary proposals 8-9 May 1946

CMP(8A) Simla Conference meetings on 5 May 1946 on the powers of the Union

CMP(8) - More exchanges on parity during Simla Connference meeting  11 May 1946

CMP(9)- Jinnah's Conversations with Major Wyatt(1) on Pakistan and the Cabinet Mission Plan , 8 January and 25 May 1946

CMP(10) - Jinnah's Conversations with Major Wyatt(22) on the interim government, 11 June 1946


CMP(12)- Congress Working Committe resolutions, May-June 1946


CMP(12A) Congress and the Cabinet Mission's arguments over inclusion of a Congress Muslim in the Interim Government June 12 and June 23 1946


CMP(13)- Jawaharlal Nehru's press conference on the Plan, 10 July 1946

CMP(14) - League withdrew from Plan, called Direct Action, Viceroy Wavell talked to Nehru, July-August 1946

CMP(15) - The Viceroy tried to strong-arm Nehru andd Gandhi on compulsory grouping, Pethick Lawrence to Attlee, August-September 1946

CMP(16)- Intelligence assessment on Jinnah's options and threat of civil war, September 1946

CMP(17)- The League's boycott of the Constituent Assembly, Jinnah and Wavell, Mission insisting on compulsory grouping, etc October 1946-January 1947
 
CMP(17A) Congress "climbdown" on grouping and Jinnah's rejection, January 1947

CMP (A1) - Additional material - Some Plain speaking from Sir Khizr Hayat, Abell on the Breakdown plan, Viceroy to Jinnah

CMP(A2) North West Frontier Province, October-November 1946 and February-March 1947

CMP(A3) Bengal and Bihar, August - November 1946

CMP(A4) Punjab, February - March 1947


CMP (18) - My take

CMP (19) - What did parity and communal veto mean in numbers?

CMP(20) Another summary /take on the Cabinet Mission Plan-with links to the above reference material

CMP(21) Mountbatten discusses the Cabinet Mission Plan with Sardar Patel and M. A. Jinnah, 24-26 April 1947

CMP(22) A reply on the Cabinet Mission Plan


Extra(1) - Speech by Jinnah in March 1941 outlining the case for an independent sovereign Pakistan 

Extra(1A) Jinnah's Speeches and Statements from 1941-1942

Extra(1B) Jinnah's Speeches and Statements from 1938-1940

Extra(1C) Jinnah's speeches and Statements from 1943-45

Extra(2) -  Jinnah's letter to Gandhi during Gaandhi-Jinnah talks in 1944 on defining Pakistan

Extra(3)- B.R. Ambedkar quoted from his book 'Pakistan or the Partition of India'


Extra(4) Congress and Muslim parties' positions on the Communal question 1927-1931

Extra(4A) Excerpts of Motilal Nehru Committee Report 1928

Extra(4B) Nehru, Bose, Jinnah Correspondence 1937-38


Extra(6) Gandhiji's scheme of offering the Prime Ministership to Jinnah in 1947

Extra(6A) Jinnah on Congress's offers of Prime Ministership 1940-43 and Gandhi's 1943 letter to Jinnah from jail

Extra (6B) April-July 1947  Negotiations on Pakistan between Mountbatten and Jinnah

Extra(7) M.A.Jinnah and Maulana Azad on two nation theory

Extra(8) Comments on Separate electorates, Joint electorates and Reserved constituencies

Extra(9) Links to a selection of cartoons on Indian constitutional parleys published in the Daily Mail, UK, in 1942 and 1946-1947, by L.G. Illingworth, from National Library of Wales' online Illingworth exhibition

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