Poona Pact
The Poona Pact was an agreement signed on 24 September 1932 in Poona (now Pune), India, between B. R. Ambedkar, representing the Depressed Classes (later termed Scheduled Castes), and representatives of Mahatma Gandhi and other caste Hindu leaders, which replaced the British government's Communal Award by granting reserved seats for the Depressed Classes within joint electorates rather than separate electorates.[1] This pact emerged amid intense negotiations triggered by Gandhi's fast unto death, begun on 20 September 1932 while imprisoned in Yerwada Central Jail, protesting the Communal Award announced in August 1932 by British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, which had allocated separate electorates to the Depressed Classes alongside those for Muslims, Sikhs, and other minorities.[2][1] The agreement substantially increased political representation for the Depressed Classes, raising reserved seats in provincial legislatures from 71 under the Communal Award to 148, drawn from the general electorate seats allotted to Hindus, with elections conducted via a two-stage process involving primary polls among Depressed Class voters to nominate candidates followed by voting by the broader Hindu electorate.[1] It also reserved approximately 18 percent of seats for them in the central legislature, alongside provisions for non-discrimination in public services and earmarked educational funding.[1] Gandhi ended his fast on 26 September 1932 after the pact's ratification, and the British government accepted it, incorporating its framework into the Government of India Act 1935, which shaped electoral arrangements until independence.[1] While the Poona Pact enhanced numerical representation and integrated Depressed Classes into the Hindu electoral fold—averting what Gandhi viewed as a permanent communal schism—it has been controversial for arguably subordinating Dalit political autonomy to majority Hindu preferences through joint electorates, a mechanism Ambedkar later described as yielding only illusory gains amid persistent caste dominance.[1] This tension underscored deeper causal divides: the pact prioritized Hindu unity for the independence struggle over structural separation for marginalized groups, influencing post-1935 elections where reserved seats often favored Congress-aligned candidates rather than independent Dalit voices, and fueling enduring debates on whether it advanced or constrained substantive empowerment.[3]Historical Context
The Communal Award of 1932
The Communal Award was announced by British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald on August 16, 1932, following the failure of the Second Round Table Conference to reach consensus on electoral representation for India's diverse communities.[4][5] This unilateral decision by the British government outlined a framework for communal electorates in provincial and central legislatures, extending the principle—previously applied to Muslims since the 1909 Morley-Minto Reforms—to additional groups including Sikhs, Indian Christians, Anglo-Indians, Europeans, and the Depressed Classes (a term then used for what are now known as Scheduled Castes).[6][7] Under the Award's provisions for the Depressed Classes, 71 seats were reserved in the provincial legislatures, to be filled through elections from designated special constituencies where only voters from these classes could participate.[8] These reserved seats were carved out of the general non-Mohammedan electorates, effectively excluding Depressed Classes members from voting in broader Hindu constituencies and creating distinct communal voting blocs.[9] In the central legislature, approximately 19% of seats were similarly allocated with separate electorates, based on recommendations from the Indian Franchise Committee, which had assessed population proportions and representation needs.[10] The Award's rationale stemmed from the British imperative to address competing minority claims amid escalating Hindu-Muslim tensions and the Round Table Conferences' deadlock, where unified agreement proved elusive.[5] By institutionalizing separate electorates, the policy sought to preempt potential unrest from underrepresented groups, aligning with longstanding colonial strategies of recognizing communal identities to fragment opposition to British rule and ensure administrative stability until further constitutional progress.[11] This approach, rooted in consultations with minority leaders and franchise data, reflected a pragmatic response to demographic realities but reinforced divisions by prioritizing group-specific safeguards over a consolidated national electorate.[12]Preceding Debates on Representation
The debates on political representation for minorities, including the depressed classes (also known as untouchables), formed a central tension during the First and Second Round Table Conferences held in London from November 1930 to January 1931 and September to December 1931, respectively. These discussions sought to devise constitutional safeguards amid competing demands from communal groups, with the depressed classes pressing for mechanisms to counter systemic exclusion from power structures under British rule. Participants, including representatives from princely states, Muslims, Sikhs, and Indian nationalists, grappled with federalism, provincial autonomy, and minority protections, but the depressed classes' claims highlighted empirical disparities in access to legislative influence.[13][14] B.R. Ambedkar, representing the depressed classes at the Second Round Table Conference, advocated for separate electorates to enable genuine political agency, arguing that joint electorates under higher-caste Hindu dominance would perpetuate historical marginalization. He emphasized that without such safeguards, the approximately 50 million depressed classes—constituting about 14 percent of India's total population and roughly 20 percent of the Hindu population per the 1931 census—would remain voiceless despite their numerical weight. This demand stemmed from observable underrepresentation: prior to the conferences, depressed classes held negligible seats in provincial legislatures under the Government of India Act 1919, where franchise restrictions and caste-based voting patterns favored landed elites and upper castes, rendering general electorates ineffective for their interests. Ambedkar's position, supported by bodies like the All-India Depressed Classes Conference, prioritized electoral isolation to foster independent leadership, viewing it as a pragmatic response to entrenched social hierarchies rather than an ideological preference.[15][16][17] In opposition, Mahatma Gandhi, attending the Second Conference as the Congress's sole representative, rejected separate electorates for the depressed classes, insisting they were integral to Hindu society and that fragmentation would undermine national unity and constitutional progress. Gandhi contended that political separation would entrench untouchability as a permanent stigma, advocating instead for its moral and social eradication through Hindu self-reform, education, and temple entry to achieve organic integration. He argued that safeguards should preserve Hindu wholeness, warning that electoral divisions risked British divide-and-rule tactics and delayed self-rule, a view rooted in his broader philosophy of non-violent unity over compartmentalized representation. This stance clashed with Ambedkar's data-driven case for safeguards, as Gandhi prioritized ethical transformation over institutional mechanisms, though both acknowledged the depressed classes' exclusion from existing bodies like district boards and councils.[18][19][20]Positions of Gandhi and Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar, representing the Depressed Classes through organizations such as the Depressed Classes Congress and Federation, argued that separate electorates were indispensable for enabling authentic leadership among the untouchables, as joint electorates with upper-caste Hindus would inevitably allow caste Hindus to dominate and subvert representation due to entrenched social hierarchies and historical exclusion from political power.[21][22] He contended that without separation, depressed class candidates in general electorates would depend on upper-caste votes, perpetuating dependency and rendering elected representatives beholden to orthodox Hindu interests rather than their own community's needs, a dynamic rooted in centuries of ritual untouchability and economic subjugation that barred Dalits from temples, wells, and education.[23] In contrast, Mahatma Gandhi, who positioned himself as the advocate for the depressed classes through the Harijan Sevak Sangh established in 1932 to promote their social integration without political fragmentation, vehemently opposed separate electorates, describing them as a "vivisection of the Hindu body" that would deepen divisions within the Hindu community and play into British colonial strategies of divide-and-rule.[24][20] Gandhi insisted that true upliftment required maintaining joint electorates with reserved seats to foster national unity against imperialism, arguing that separation would institutionalize caste antagonisms and hinder the moral reform necessary for eradicating untouchability from within Hinduism itself, prioritizing cohesive Hindu solidarity over isolated protections that he believed could be achieved through ethical persuasion and reserved quotas in unified voting.[25][26]The Negotiation Process
Gandhi's Fast Unto Death
On September 20, 1932, Mahatma Gandhi initiated a fast unto death from his cell in Yerwada Central Jail in Pune, directly challenging the British government's Communal Award provision for separate electorates granted to the Depressed Classes.[2][27] Gandhi explicitly stated that he would abstain from food until the separate electorates were withdrawn or until his death, framing the action as a moral imperative to preserve Hindu unity against what he viewed as a divisive concession.[1] The fast rapidly intensified public and political pressure across India, as Gandhi's immense stature amplified fears that his demise would trigger widespread Hindu mourning and potential communal riots between castes.[19] Appeals poured in from Hindu leaders and organizations urging Depressed Classes representatives to reconsider their stance, while daily health bulletins dominated newspapers, heightening the urgency and portraying the fast as a pivotal crisis for national cohesion.[28] Gandhi's physical condition deteriorated noticeably within days, with visitors reporting a marked decline in vitality after the initial 24 hours, underscoring the fast's severity and its capacity to compel immediate action from adversaries who prioritized averting his death over prolonged deadlock.[29] The episode, lasting approximately 149 hours until September 26, 1932, exemplified the fast's coercive leverage, as opponents faced the stark alternative of Gandhi's survival tied to revoking the electorates or risking the fallout of his passing.[19]Key Meetings and Compromises
Following the initiation of Mahatma Gandhi's fast on September 20, 1932, against the separate electorates provision of the Communal Award, urgent negotiations commenced in Poona to avert his death and resolve the representation dispute for the Depressed Classes.[28] B.R. Ambedkar, representing the Depressed Classes, met with Gandhi directly at Yerwada Central Jail on September 22, amid intensifying pressure from Gandhi's weakening condition, which galvanized Hindu leaders to seek compromise.[30] These talks involved key intermediaries such as Madan Mohan Malaviya and Tej Bahadur Sapru, who advocated for joint electorates while pressing for enhanced safeguards for the Depressed Classes. Ambedkar initially resisted concessions, prioritizing separate electorates as essential for independent Depressed Classes representation, but the fast's urgency—coupled with appeals from caste Hindu leaders and the risk of communal unrest—prompted a shift toward accepting joint electorates with substantially increased reserved seats.[31] Over September 20–24, multiple sessions hammered out terms, elevating reserved legislative seats for the Depressed Classes from 71 under the Communal Award to 148, a doubling-plus that Ambedkar viewed as a pragmatic fallback despite his preference for electoral autonomy.[32] This adjustment reflected the time-constrained bargaining, where Depressed Classes demands were weighed against Gandhi's insistence on Hindu unity to preserve national cohesion.[30] The agreement was finalized and signed on September 24, 1932, at 5 p.m. in Poona, by 23 participants, including Malaviya on behalf of Hindu leaders and Gandhi, and Ambedkar for the Depressed Classes, marking the culmination of the high-stakes deliberations.[28] Gandhi, satisfied with the outcome, broke his fast on September 26, 1932, after medical confirmation of the pact's terms, averting immediate crisis but leaving underlying tensions between integrationist and separatist visions unresolved.[30]Role of Intermediaries and British Authorities
The negotiations leading to the Poona Pact were facilitated by intermediaries who bridged the divide between Gandhi's insistence on joint electorates and Ambedkar's advocacy for separate representation. Palwankar Baloo, a prominent Dalit leader and cricketer from Maharashtra, intervened as a mediator to encourage compromise among depressed classes representatives and Hindu leaders during the discussions in Poona on September 23-24, 1932.[33] Other non-principal actors, including moderate depressed classes figures aligned with upliftment campaigns, contributed to the momentum by emphasizing practical safeguards over ideological purity, thereby making a settlement more feasible amid Gandhi's fast.[34] British authorities exerted indirect but crucial influence by signaling their readiness to modify the Communal Award of August 16, 1932, contingent on an Indian-brokered accord. Viceroy Willingdon, through official channels, conveyed that the government would endorse the pact as a substantive amendment, aligning with the award's provisional framework established by British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, who had invited self-adjustment by affected communities.[35][36] This assurance, formalized by the government's acceptance of the pact on September 25, 1932, provided causal leverage, as it guaranteed legal enforceability without requiring further London approval, thus incentivizing rapid resolution.[1] At the provincial level, the Governor of Bombay, Sir Frederick Sykes, enabled the process by authorizing access to Gandhi, then detained in Yerwada Central Jail, Poona, for the pivotal meetings under controlled conditions.[37] Concurrent pressures from bodies like the All-India Depressed Classes Conference, which had convened earlier in 1932 to debate representation, alongside widespread public petitions from Hindu and depressed classes groups, amplified the urgency for intermediaries to forge consensus, averting prolonged deadlock.[23][38]Core Provisions
Electoral Reforms and Reserved Seats
The Poona Pact significantly expanded reserved seats for the Depressed Classes in provincial legislatures from 71 under the Communal Award to 148, allocated across provinces as follows: Madras Presidency (30 seats), Bombay Presidency including Sind (15 seats), Bengal (30 seats), Punjab (8 seats), Central Provinces (6 seats), Bihar and Orissa (10 seats), United Provinces (20 seats), and Assam (7 seats).[1][39][25] This increase aimed to enhance proportional representation without fragmenting the Hindu electorate. In the Central Legislature, the Pact reserved approximately 18% of seats for the Depressed Classes, replacing the separate electorate provisions of the Communal Award with a unified framework.[25][40] These reserved seats operated within joint electorates, where Depressed Classes voters participated alongside the general Hindu electorate to select representatives for the designated constituencies, thereby maintaining electoral unity while guaranteeing minimum outcomes for the Depressed Classes.[1][41] To mitigate risks of dominance by non-Depressed Class voters, the Pact mandated primary elections exclusively among Depressed Classes voters: all registered Depressed Classes members in a constituency's general electoral roll formed an electoral college, which nominated a panel of four qualified candidates per reserved seat; the general electorate then voted from this panel to elect the final representative.[38][42] This mechanism sought to balance internal community selection with broader accountability.[43]Primary Elections and Franchise Qualifications
The Poona Pact established a two-stage electoral process for the reserved seats allocated to the Depressed Classes in provincial legislatures, aiming to ensure candidates were selected from within the community while integrating them into joint electorates. In the primary stage, all members of the Depressed Classes registered on the general electoral roll of a constituency formed an electoral college responsible for electing a panel of four candidates per reserved seat using a single transferable vote system; the four candidates receiving the highest number of votes advanced to the subsequent general election.[1][44] This primary mechanism restricted initial candidate selection to Depressed Classes voters, preventing nomination by non-Depressed Classes individuals, before the general electorate—comprising both Depressed Classes and other voters—chose the final representative from the vetted panel in the confirmatory stage.[1][45] Franchise qualifications for Depressed Classes voters mirrored those of the general electorate, as defined by the Lothian Committee recommendations, which included income, property, or residency criteria without imposing additional literacy or property barriers specific to the Depressed Classes.[1] This parity extended voting rights equally, allowing Depressed Classes individuals meeting the standard thresholds to participate fully in both primary and general stages via the shared electoral roll.[45] The primary election system was designated as temporary, set to conclude after ten years unless terminated earlier by mutual consent between Depressed Classes representatives and the broader Hindu community, with reserved seats themselves subject to ongoing review rather than a fixed end.[1][45]Commitments on Education and Non-Discrimination
The Poona Pact stipulated that in every province, an adequate portion of the educational grant be specifically earmarked to provide educational facilities for members of the Depressed Classes, as outlined in Clause 9.[1] This commitment targeted the systemic under-provision of schooling opportunities for these communities, emphasizing actionable resource allocation from state funds to support primary and secondary education in areas predominantly inhabited by Depressed Classes.[1] Complementing electoral safeguards, Clause 8 of the Pact prohibited any disabilities imposed on individuals due to their membership in the Depressed Classes regarding appointments to public services.[1] It further mandated endeavors to ensure fair representation of Depressed Classes in such services, albeit subject to prevailing educational qualifications for eligibility.[1] These provisions sought to address entrenched barriers in civil and administrative roles, promoting merit-based access without caste-based exclusion.[1]Immediate Implementation
Integration into Government of India Act
The Poona Pact received formal ratification from British authorities on September 26, 1932, when the government announced its acceptance of the agreement as an amendment to the Communal Award, thereby replacing separate electorates for depressed classes with reserved seats in joint electorates.[46] This notification, issued under the authority of the Governor-General, ensured the Pact's immediate legal effect in modifying communal representation schemes pending fuller legislative enactment.[47] The Pact's core electoral terms—increased reserved seats from 71 to 148 in provincial legislatures and provisions for primary elections—were incorporated into the Government of India Act 1935, which codified these arrangements for federal and provincial governance.[3][39] Minor modifications were introduced in the Act, such as adjustments to seat durations, but the fundamental supersession of separate electorates for depressed classes persisted as statutory law until India's independence in 1947.[3]Effects on 1937 Provincial Elections
The 1937 provincial elections, held under the Government of India Act 1935 incorporating Poona Pact provisions, allocated 151 reserved seats for depressed classes across the eleven provinces, more than double the 71 seats originally proposed under separate electorates.[32] Primary elections by depressed classes voters selected candidate panels, followed by voting in joint electorates including general Hindu voters, who outnumbered depressed classes participants.[32] Of these seats, the Indian National Congress secured 78, while non-Congress candidates, including independents and those from parties like B.R. Ambedkar's Independent Labour Party, won the remaining 73.[32] In Bombay Presidency, Ambedkar's party captured 10 of 15 reserved seats, with Ambedkar himself elected to the Bombay Legislative Assembly on July 19, 1937, demonstrating viability for independent Dalit leadership in select regions.[32] [48] Joint electorates enabled upper-caste Hindu voters' numerical superiority to favor Congress-backed depressed classes candidates in many contests, as general voters could select from primary-shortlisted panels, often consolidating support for party-aligned figures over autonomous ones.[32] Approximately 110 reserved seat winners received sufficient votes from depressed classes alone to secure victory, indicating primary mechanisms preserved some community agency, yet broader dependence on cross-caste ballots amplified Congress influence.[32] Depressed classes achieved numerical gains in legislative presence compared to prior arrangements, with reserved seats yielding substantive policy outputs like anti-untouchability measures under Congress ministries, yet leaders expressed mixed satisfaction due to perceived erosion of independent mobilization.[32] Ambedkar critiqued the system for fostering reliance on upper-caste patronage, while others noted improved access to education and appointments quotas as offsetting benefits.[32] [49]Initial Responses from Depressed Classes Leaders
B. R. Ambedkar, representing the Depressed Classes in the negotiations, signed the Poona Pact on September 24, 1932, under the immediate pressure of Mahatma Gandhi's fast-unto-death, which he later described as a coercive tactic that forced acceptance to avert Gandhi's death and potential communal violence. The following day, on September 25, 1932, Ambedkar voiced apprehensions during a public meeting of upper-caste Hindus in Bombay, warning that the pact's joint electorates would fail to secure genuine representation without accompanying social and religious reforms to end untouchability, emphasizing the risk of Depressed Classes candidates being beholden to Hindu voters rather than their own communities.[50][51] While Ambedkar's signature marked a qualified political concession—increasing reserved seats for Depressed Classes from 71 under the Communal Award to 148 in provincial legislatures—many Depressed Classes leaders and organizations expressed dissatisfaction, viewing the abandonment of separate electorates as a dilution of autonomy and a reinforcement of dependence on caste Hindus. Organizations like the Depressed Classes Federation, aligned with Ambedkar, criticized the pact for stripping constitutional safeguards won through the Communal Award, arguing it prioritized Hindu unity over substantive empowerment for the untouchables.[1] A minority of Depressed Classes voices welcomed the expanded seat reservations as a pragmatic gain, though this support was overshadowed by broader fears that joint electorates would expose candidates to Hindu majoritarian influence, potentially undermining independent political mobilization. These contemporaneous divisions highlighted internal tensions within Depressed Classes leadership, with some prioritizing numerical gains and others autonomy, setting the stage for Ambedkar's formation of the Independent Labour Party in 1936 to contest elections under the pact's framework and advance labor and untouchable interests independently.Long-Term Political Impact
Evolution of Reservations in Independent India
The Poona Pact's framework of reserved seats for Depressed Classes within joint electorates directly informed the reservation system enshrined in the Indian Constitution of 1950, rejecting separate electorates in favor of proportional representation integrated into the general Hindu electorate.[52] Articles 330 and 332 mandate reservations of seats for Scheduled Castes (SCs) in the Lok Sabha and state legislative assemblies, respectively, with the number determined by their population proportion but without segregating voters by caste.[53] This approach extended the Pact's compromise into independent India's political structure, prioritizing electoral unity while allocating safeguards against underrepresentation, as evidenced by the absence of provisions for SC-specific voter rolls in these articles.[54] In the Constituent Assembly debates, B.R. Ambedkar, a signatory to the Poona Pact, advocated for retaining joint electorates augmented by reserved seats, arguing that separate electorates would exacerbate communal divisions without guaranteeing effective SC empowerment.[55] He emphasized that reservations in general constituencies compelled broader electoral alliances, fostering accountability to non-SC voters while securing legislative presence, a position that prevailed over proposals for fragmentation akin to pre-Pact demands.[56] Articles 334 through 342 further operationalized this by providing for periodic reviews, service claims under Article 335, and oversight commissions under Article 338, ensuring the system's adaptability without reverting to electoral separation. Empirically, this continuity has sustained Dalit representation, with 84 seats reserved for SCs in the 543-member Lok Sabha since the post-2000 delimitation, enabling consistent parliamentary participation from the first general elections in 1952 onward.[57] Periodic extensions of these reservations under Article 334—initially for 10 years, renewed through constitutional amendments up to 2030—have maintained fixed quotas tied to census data, preventing dilution despite population shifts. This structure has yielded measurable outcomes, such as SC candidates winning all reserved seats in multiple elections, thereby institutionalizing influence without the isolation of separate electorates.[54]Influence on Dalit Political Mobilization
The Poona Pact's joint electorate framework, by requiring Dalit candidates in reserved seats to secure support from non-Dalit voters, spurred the creation of dedicated Dalit political organizations to consolidate community votes and counter potential dominance by larger parties like the Indian National Congress. B.R. Ambedkar established the Scheduled Castes Federation (SCF) in July 1942 specifically to mobilize Dalits independently, viewing the Pact's provisions as insufficient to prevent Congress from capturing reserved seats through broader Hindu alliances.[58] In the 1946 provincial elections under this system, the SCF contested multiple reserved constituencies but won only 2 seats, underscoring the challenges of independent mobilization without separate electorates.[32] Post-independence, the continuation of joint electorates in the 1950 Constitution reinforced these patterns, as SCF candidates in reserved Lok Sabha seats from 1952 onward struggled to outperform Congress-backed rivals, achieving limited wins despite targeted Dalit outreach. Ambedkar's dissolution of the SCF and formation of the Republican Party of India (RPI) in October 1956 aimed to revitalize Dalit-specific mobilization, yet the party's fragmented factions in the 1957, 1962, and 1967 general elections yielded few seats, with vote shares remaining under 3% nationally.[59] This electoral constraint under joint electorates compelled RPI leaders to pursue pragmatic coalitions, such as temporary alignments with Congress in select states for ministerial berths or with opposition fronts to challenge Congress hegemony, rather than sustaining isolated opposition.[32] Historical analyses indicate that the Pact's structure thus channeled Dalit political energy toward alliance-building over pure separatism, fostering adaptive strategies like joint candidacies and issue-based pacts in the 1950s-1970s, which secured incremental representation gains but often at the cost of diluting party autonomy. For example, Congress's absorption of SCF/RPI defectors in reserved constituencies during this period reflected the system's incentive for Dalit leaders to leverage majority-party machinery for viability.[32][60]Comparative Outcomes Versus Separate Electorates
Under the Poona Pact of September 24, 1932, depressed classes secured 148 reserved seats in provincial legislatures through joint electorates, compared to the 71 seats allocated under the British Communal Award of August 16, 1932, which had envisioned separate electorates limited to depressed classes voters.[32] This doubled the numerical representation, with candidates required to garner support from the broader Hindu electorate, including primary elections in some constituencies to filter preferred depressed classes nominees.[32] In contrast, separate electorates would have confined voting to depressed classes alone for those fewer seats, ensuring candidates were selected exclusively by community members but potentially isolating them from general electorates and reinforcing communal divisions akin to those for Muslims and Sikhs.[61] The 1937 provincial elections under the Government of India Act 1935 tested these arrangements, with 151 reserved seats contested across provinces.[32] The Indian National Congress captured 78 of these, often fielding depressed classes candidates who relied on non-depressed classes votes, while B.R. Ambedkar's Independent Labour Party secured 10-13 seats, primarily in Bombay Presidency where it won 11 of 15 reserved seats.[32] [62] Independents and other non-Congress groups took the remainder, but Ambedkar contended that joint electorates enabled majority Hindu influence, yielding representatives more loyal to Congress than to depressed classes interests, as evidenced by his 1945 assessment that the system "enabled the majority to influence the election of the representatives of the dalits."[63] Under hypothetical separate electorates, all 71 seats would likely have gone uncontested by non-depressed classes candidates, guaranteeing community-chosen holders but with reduced overall legislative presence.[32] By the 1945-46 elections, outcomes highlighted further consolidation, with Congress winning 142 of 151 reserved seats amid primary elections in 43 constituencies that still favored party-backed nominees.[32] Ambedkar's All-India Scheduled Castes Federation managed only 2 seats, underscoring how joint voting diluted independent depressed classes mobilization against dominant parties.[32] Ambedkar later described this as a betrayal, stating the Congress "sucked the juice out of the Poona Pact and threw the rind in the face of the Untouchables," arguing separate electorates would have preserved autonomy absent such capture.[64] Yet, joint mechanisms arguably curbed permanent communal silos by necessitating cross-caste alliances, diminishing British opportunities for divide-and-rule tactics that exacerbated Muslim separatism, and aligning with Ambedkar's eventual 1947 endorsement of reserved seats in joint electorates for independent India's constitution to foster broader political integration.[32]| Election Year | Total Reserved Seats | Congress Wins | Ambedkar-Affiliated Wins | Other/Independents |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1937 | 151 | 78 | 10-13 | ~60 |
| 1945-46 | 151 | 142 | 2 | 7 |