Swatantra Party | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | SWA |
Founder | C. Rajagopalachari |
Founded | 4 June 1959 |
Dissolved | 4 August 1974[1] |
Split from | Indian National Congress |
Merged into | Bharatiya Lok Dal |
Ideology | Conservatism (Indian)[2] Classical liberalism[3] Liberal conservatism[4] Secularism[5] Anti-Sovietism[7] |
Political position | Centre-right[8][9][note 1] |
Colours | Blue |
Election symbol | |
The Swatantra Party was an Indian classical liberal political party that existed from 1959 to 1974. It was founded by C. Rajagopalachari[13] in reaction to what he felt was the Jawaharlal Nehru-dominated Indian National Congress's increasingly socialist and statist outlook.[2]
The party had a number of distinguished leaders, most of them old Congressmen, like C. Rajagopalachari, Minoo Masani, N.G. Ranga, Darshan Singh Pheruman,[14][15] Udham Singh Nagoke[16] and K.M. Munshi. The provocation for the formation of the party was the left turn that the Congress took at Avadi[17] and the Nagpur Resolutions.
Swatantra stood for a market-based economy and the dismantling of the "Licence Raj" although it opposed laissez-faire policies. Swatantra was not a religion-based party, unlike the Hindu nationalism of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh. In 1960, Rajagopalachari and his colleagues drafted a 21-point manifesto detailing why Swatantra had to be formed even though they had been Congressmen and associates of Nehru during the struggle for independence.[18][better source needed] Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru was highly critical of Swatantra and dubbed it as belonging to "the middle ages of lords, castles and zamindars".[19]
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