Lucknow Session Of The Indian National Congress (1916)
Readmission of Extremists to Congress
- The Lucknow Session of the Indian National Congress presided over by a Moderate, Ambika Charan Majumdar, finally readmitted the Extremists led by Tilak to the Congress fold.
Various factors facilitated the reunion of Moderates and Extremist:
- Old controversies had become meaningless now.
- Both the Moderates and the Extremists realised that the split had led to political inactivity.
- Annie Besant and Tilak had made vigorous efforts for the reunion. To allay Moderate suspicions, Tilak had
- Declared that he supported a reform of administration and not an overthrow of the government. He also denounced acts of violence.
- The death of two Moderates, Gokhale and Pherozshah Mehta, who had led the Moderate opposition to the Extremists, facilitated the reunion.
Lucknow Pact between Congress and Muslim League
- Another significant development to take place at Lucknow was the coming together of the Muslim League and the Congress and the presentation of common demands by them to the government.
- This happened at a time when the Muslim League, now dominated by the younger militant nationalists, was coming closer to the Congress objectives and turning increasingly anti-imperialist.
The Nature of the Pact
- The Lucknow Pact between the Congress and the Muslim League could be considered an important event in the course of the nationalistic struggle for freedom.
- While the League agreed to present joint constitutional demands with the Congress to the government, the Congress accepted the Muslim League’s position on separate electorates which would continue till any one community demanded joint electorates.
- The Muslims were also granted a fixed proportion of seats in the legislatures at all-India and provincial levels.
The joint demands were—
- Government should declare that it would confer self-government on Indians at an early date.
- The representative assemblies at the central as well as provincial-level should be further expanded with an elected majority and more powers given to them.
- The term of the legislative council should be five years.
- The salaries of the Secretary of State for India should be paid by the British treasury and not drawn from Indian funds.
- Half the members of the viceroy’s and provincial governors’ executive councils should be Indians.