Swatantra Party
Swatantra Party | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | SWA |
| Founder | C. Rajagopalachari |
| Founded | 4 June 1959 |
| Dissolved | 4 August 1974 |
| Split from | Indian National Congress |
| Merged into | Bharatiya Lok Dal |
| Ideology | Conservatism (Indian) Classical liberalism Liberal conservatism Secularism Anti-Sovietism |
| Political position | Centre-right |
| 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 in reaction to what he felt was the Jawaharlal Nehru-dominated Indian National Congress's increasingly socialist and statist outlook.
The party had a number of distinguished leaders, most of them old Congressmen, like C. Rajagopalachari, Minoo Masani, N. G. Ranga, Darshan Singh Pheruman, Udham Singh Nagoke and K. M. Munshi. The provocation for the formation of the party was the left turn that the Congress took at Avadi 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. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru was highly critical of Swatantra and dubbed it as belonging to "the middle ages of lords, castles and zamindars".