Pakistani general election, 1970

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The first General elections were held in Pakistan in 1970 during the Military regime of Yahya Khan. The polls in East Pakistan, originally scheduled for October, were delayed by disastrous floods and rescheduled for December, and in some cases, January 1971.

Contents

[edit] Parties and Candidates

Twenty-four political parties ran in the elections. A total of 1,957 candidates filed nomination papers for 300 National Assembly seats. After scrutiny and withdrawals, 1,579 eventually contested the elections. The Awami League ran 170 candidates, of which 162 were for constituencies in East Pakistan. Jamaat-e-Islami had the second-highest number of candidates with 151. The Pakistan Peoples Party ran only 120 candidates, of which 103 were from constituencies in the Punjab and Sindh, and none in East Pakistan. The PML (Convention) ran 124 candidates, the PML (Council) 119 and the PML (Qayyum) 133.

The government claimed a high level of public participation and a voter turnout of almost 63%. The total number of registered voters in the country was 56,941,500 out of which 31,211,220 were from the Eastern Wing, while 25,730,280 from the Western Wing.

[edit] Results

Party Overall % of votes Total seats
Awami League 38.3% 160
Pakistan Peoples Party 19.5% 81
PML (Qayyum) 4.5% 9
PML (Convention) 3.3% 7
Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam 4.0% 7
Markazi Jamiat-Ulema-Pakistan 4.0% 7
National Awami Party (Wali) 2.3% 6
Jamaat-e-Islami 6.0% 4
PML (Council) 6.0% 2
PDP 2.9% 1
Independents 7.1% 16
Total 100% 300

[edit] By province

Party Punjab Sind NWFP Balochistan West Pakistan East Pakistan
Awami League 0 (0.07%) 0 (0.07%) 0 (0.2%) 0 (1.0%) 0 160 (74.9%)
Pakistan Peoples Party 62(41.6%) 18(44.9%) 1(14.2%) 0 (2.3%) 81 0
PML (Qayyum) 1(5.4%) 1(10.7%) 7(22.6%) 0(10.9%) 9 0(1.0%)
PML (Convention) 7(5.1%) 0(1.7%) 0 0 7 0(2.8%)
Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam 0(5.2%) 0(4.3%) 6(25.4%) 1(20.0%) 7 0(0.9%)
Markazi Jamiat-Ulema-Pakistan 4(9.8%) 3(7.4%) 0(0%) 0 7 0
National Awami Party (Wali) 0 0(0.3%) 3(18.4%) 3(45.1%) 6 0(1.8%)
Jamaat-e-Islami 1(4.7%) 2(10.3%) 1(7.2%) 0(1.1%) 4 0(6.0%)
PML (Council) 2(12.6%) 0(6.8%) 0(4.0%) 0(10.9%) 2 0(1.6%)
PDP 0(2.2%) 0(0.04%) 0(0.3%) 0(0.3%) 0 1(2.2%)
Independents 5(11.8%) 3(10.7%) 7(6.0%) 0(6.8%) 15 1(3.4%)
Total seats 82 27 25 4 138 162

The Awami League emerged as the single largest party in the National Assembly by winning a majority with 160 seats, and also won 288 of the 300 East Pakistan Assembly seats. The Pakistan Peoples Party dominated in West Pakistan, winning 81 of 138 the seats there.

The more conservative parties performed poorly, possibly due to the number of conservative candidates competing with each other in most constituencies. In total the PML (Qayyum), PML (Council), PML (Convention), Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, Jamiyat Ulema-e-Pakistan and Jamaat-e-Islami won only 37 National Assembly seats.

[edit] Provincial election results

In the provincial elections, the Awami League won 288 of the 300 seats in the East Pakistan Assembly, but none in any of the four West Pakistan assemblies. The Pakistan Peoples Party did well the Punjab and Sindh Assembles but failed to win any seats in East Pakistan. The Assembles of the North West Frontier Province and Balochistan were dominated by the more conservative National Awami Party (Wali) and the PML (Qayyum).

Party Punjab Sind NWFP Balochistan West Pakistan East Pakistan Total
Awami League 0 0 0 0 0 288 288
Pakistan Peoples Party 113 28 3 0 144 0 144
PML (Qayyum) 6 5 10 3 24 0 24
PML (Convention) 15 4 1 0 21 1 22
Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam 2 0 4 2 8 0 8
Markazi Jamiat-Ulema-Pakistan 4 7 0 0 11 0 11
National Awami Party (Wali) 0 0 13 8 21 1 22
Jamaat-e-Islami 1 1 1 0 3 1 4
PML (Council) 6 0 2 0 8 0 8
PDP 4 0 0 0 4 2 6
Other parties 1 1 0 2 4 1 5
Independents 28 14 6 5 53 7 60
Total seats 180 60 40 20 300 300 600

[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ (Source G.W.Choudhury (1974) The last days of United Pakistan p128-129)