Rai Bahadur Ganga Saran was an Indian trade unionist and politician from Punjab.[1] He was a member of the Punjab Provincial Assembly (British India) and both the Constituent Assembly of India and the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan.

In the 1946 Punjab Provincial Assembly election, Saran won as an independent candidate from a non-constituency seat reserved for Punjab Trade and Labour Unions.[2][a] He was a member of the National Liberal Federation of India.[3] Saran intended to stay in Pakistan after Pakistan, and became a member of the Punjab Provincial Assembly.[4][b] On 4 July 1947, he was elected by the non-Muslim members of the (yet-undivided) Punjab Assembly to the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan.[5][c]

A couple of months later, Saran migrated to India and on 1 November 1947, became a member of East Punjab Legislative Assembly.[6] Despite, he did not resign from the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan. In January 1949, the "Committee on Addition and/or Redistribution of Seats", while recommending the dissolution of the two vacant non-Muslim seats in the Assembly,[d] hinted that it was constitutionally suspect whether Saran was entitled to retain his seat.

In 1951, Saran supported Bhim Sen Sachar in a factional feud against then-Chief-Minister Gopi Chand Bhargava.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Securing 552 votes, Saran barely scraped through against R.S. Ramjawaya Kapur, another independent candidate. The incumbent legislator Lala Sita Ram managed a paltry 51 votes.[2]
  2. ^ All members of the '46 legislature, who won from what was now Pakistan's share of Punjab, were appointed to the assembly until re-elections were held in January, 1949.
  3. ^ He won as an independent; his fellow victors were Avtar Narain Gujral and Bhim Sen Sachar from the Congress.
  4. ^ Both Sachar and Gujral had resigned, before migrating to India. The population of Hindus, as of May 1948, was deemed insufficient by the Committee to secure representation in the Assembly.

References edit

  1. ^ Bangash, Yaqoob Khan (2022-07-04). "Anglo-Indians and the Punjab Partition: Identity, Politics, and the Creation of Pakistan". The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 51: 124–155. doi:10.1080/03086534.2022.2086202. ISSN 0308-6534.
  2. ^ a b "Press Infromation [sic] Bureau's Morgue and Ref Series: (1) Analysis of the Results of General Elections to the Central and Provincial Legislatures Held In 1945-46 (2) Indian Political Parties, and (3) Provincial Minstries 1937-45". Home Political, ID: HOME_POLITICAL_I_1945_NA_F-79-46. National Archive of India.
  3. ^ Report of The Proceedings of the Twenty-Fifth Session of the National Liberal Federation of India (PDF) (Report). March 1945.
  4. ^ Government of Punjab. "First Legislative Assembly of Punjab (August 15, 1947 to January 25, 1949)".
  5. ^ "Punjab Speaker Defeated: Pakistan Assembly". Times of India. 5 July 1947. p. 8. ProQuest 347195954.
  6. ^ East Punjab Legislative Assembly Official Debates: 1st November 1947 (PDF) (Report). Vol. 1. East Punjab Government Press. 1947.