Nehru Report (1928)

Reasons

  • In response to Indians’ resistance to the Simon Commission, Lord Birkenhead (Secretary of State for India) issued a challenge to Indian nationalists to band together and present an agreed-upon proposal of constitutional reforms.
  • As a response to this, an All Parties Conference appointed a sub committee with Motilal Nehru as its chairman to draft a constitution.

Provisions

  • India should have Dominion status with self-governing powers, similar to other dominions.
  • Joint electorates with reserved seats for Muslims where they are a minority, rejecting separate electorates.
  • Linguistic provinces and nineteen fundamental rights, including equal rights for women, union rights, and universal adult suffrage.
  • The Indian Parliament should include a 500-member House of Representatives (5-year term) elected by adult suffrage and a 200-member Senate (7-year term) elected by provincial councils.
  • Federal government structure with residuary powers vested in the Centre.
  • No separate electorates for minorities to avoid communal division.
  • Full protection of cultural and religious rights for Muslims and state separation from religion.

Reactions

  1. Muslim League
    • The league’s leaders rejected the Nehru proposal.
    • In reaction, Mohammad Ali Jinnah drafted his Fourteen Points in 1929.
  2. Younger Section of Congress
    • The younger section of the Congress led by Jawaharlal Nehru and Subhash Bose protested and demanded full independence.
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