Political parties: India

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This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Contents

Number of Political parties

In 1951

NATIONAL PARTIES

1. BJS: ALL INDIA BHARTIYA JAN SANGH

2. BPI: BOLSHEVIK PARTY OF INDIA

3. CPI: COMMUNIST PARTY OF INDIA

4. FBL(MG): FORWARD BLOC (MARXIST GROUP)

5. FBL(RG): FORWARD BLOC (RUIKAR GROUP)

6. HMS: AKHIL BHARATIYA HINDU MAHASABHA

7. INC: INDIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS

8. KLP: KRISHIKAR LOK PARTY

9. KMPP: KISAN MAZDOOR PRAJA PARTY

10. RCPI: REVOLUTIONARY COMMUNIST PARTY OF INDIA

11. RRP: AKHIL BHARATIYA RAM RAJYA PARISHAD

12. RSP: REVOLUTIONARY SOCIALIST PARTY

13. SCF:All INDIA SCHEDULED CASTE FEDERATION

14. SP: SOCIALIST PARTY


OTHER STATE PARTIES

15. AMN: ALL MANIPUR NATIONAL UNION

16. APP: ALL PEOPLES PARTY

17. CNSPJP: CHOTA NAGPUR SANTHAL PARGANAS JANTA PARTY

18. CP: COCHIN PARTY

19. CWL: COMMON WEAL PARTY

20. DCL: PUNJAB DEPRESSED CLASS LEAGUE

21. GP: ALL INDIA GANTANTRA PARISHAD

22. GSS: GANDHI SEBAK SEVA

23. HPP: HILL PEOPLE PARTY

24. HR: HISTORICAL RESEARCH

25. HSPP: HYDERABAD STATE PRAJA PARTY

26. JHP: JHARKHAND PARTY

27. JUSP: JUSTICE PARTY

28. KJD: KHASI-JAINTIA DURBAR

29. KJSP: KISAN JANTA SANYUKTA PARTY

30. KKP: KAMGAR KISAN PAKSHA

31. KMM: KISAN MAZDOOR MANDAL

32. KNA: KUKI NATIONAL ASSOCIATION

33. KSP: KERALA SOCIALIST PARTY

34. LSS: LOK SEWAK SANGH

35. ML: MADRAS STATE MUSLIM LEAGUE PARTY

36. NAT: NATIONAL PARTY OF INDIA

37. PDF: PEOPLES DEMOCRATIC FRONT

38. PP: PRAJA PARTY

39. PURP: PURSHARATHI PANCHAYAT

40. PWP: PEASANTS & WORKERS PARTY

41. REP: All INDIA REPUBLICAN PARTY

42. RPP: All INDIA REPUBLICAN PARTY

43. RSP(UP): U.P. REVOLUTIONARY SOCIALIST PARTY

44. SAD: SHIROMANI AKALI DAL

45. SKP: S.K. PAKSHA

46. SKS: SAURASHTRA KHEDUT SANGH

47. TNT: THE TAMIL NAD TOILERS PARTY

48. TP: TAMIL NAD CONGRESS PARTY

49. TS: TRIBAL SANGHA

50. TTC: TRAVANCORE TAMIL NAD CONGRESS PARTY

51. UKS: ALL INDIA UNITED KISAN SABHA

52. UPPP: U.P. PRAJA PARTY

53. ZP: ZAMINDAR PARTY

In 2016

Over 1,900 parties in India, 400 never fought polls: EC, Dec 8, 2016: The Times of India

They Could Be Conduits For Black Money

Politics seems to be ingrained in Indians as the country has the largest number of political parties in the world, over 1,900 according to chief election commissioner Nasim Zaidi, but over 400 of them have never contested any election. Zaidi suspected that these could be conduits for turning black money into white.

However, the Election Commission (EC) has started an exercise to strike off such parties from its list. “Striking off their names will disentitle them from income tax exemptions on contributions and donations,“ Zaidi said. Asked why the EC was not deregistering them, the CEC said deregistration was a long-drawn process.“Eventually, we may have to do that, but this is the immediate action taken by the EC on finding the anomaly,“ he said. The EC has asked state CECs to send it a comprehensive report of lists of registered parties which have never contested an election and also the contributions received by them, Zaidi said. He said that from now on, it would be an annual exercise to prune the list of registered parties.

Registering, granting recognition to a party

The process

Why EC takes 5 years to tag a party, February 26, 2018: The Times of India


Another new neta has plunged into politics. Following Tamil actor Kamal Haasan’s high-flying foray into politics, here’s tracking how a party gets launched

Is it necessary to form a party to contest elections?

Any Indian citizen over 25 years old and registered as a voter can contest an election without forming a political party. Associations too can contest elections without being registered by the Election Commission. They, however, will not be identified as a political party and will not be eligible for benefits a party enjoys.

What are the benefits of registering a party?

The People’s Representation Act allows political parties to accept contributions. Every party may accept any amount of contribution voluntarily offered to it by any person or company other than a government organisation. Candidates of registered parties get preference in allotment of election symbols. A registered party gradually can find recognition as a state or national party.

A recognised party gets exclusive allotment of reserved symbols for state and national elections. All recognised national and state parties can use state-owned electronic media, ie: AIR and Doordarshan for their campaigns during elections. The state and national parties need only one proposer (elector from the constituency) to file nominations and are also entitled to two free sets of electoral rolls. An Independent candidate needs 10 proposers.

What are the criteria for recognition?

For starters, the party must be politically active for five continuous years. It should also have at least one Lok Sabha MP for every 25 MPs elected from the state in the last election to be recognised as a national party. An MP or MLA who becomes a party member after his election is not considered. A party functional for five continuous years that has returned at least one MLA for every 30 MLAs elected in the past assembly poll is recognised as a state party. The definition of ‘state’ for this purpose includes Delhi and Puducherry.

A party recognised as a political party in four or more states qualifies as a national party.

If a party polls 6% or more of total valid votes in the last Lok Sabha or state assembly election, it is also granted recognition as a ‘national’ party. The status of parties is reviewed after every two consecutive Lok Sabha polls or state elections.

How is a party registered?

An application along with a non-refundable processing fee and the party’s constitution or rules-regulation is the first step. It should include a minimum of 100 members whose names are on the latest electoral rolls and who aren’t members of any other registered party. All documents must reach EC within 30 days following the date the party was formed, delay in which makes applications time-barred.

1957- 2014

i) 1957- 2014: the number of political parties that contested elections in India;
ii) 1996- 2014: seats won by political parties in Lok Sabha elections
From: February 26, 2018: The Times of India

See graphic:

i) 1957- 2014: the number of political parties that contested elections in India;
ii) 1996- 2014: seats won by political parties in Lok Sabha elections

Small Parties

2017

Ashish Mishra , Small fry a party for everyone “ India Today “ 2/2/2017

Dhananjay Singh was a member of Parliament from the Bahujan Samaj Party for five years, between 2009 and 2014. Before the 2012 assembly elections, Mayawati expelled Singh, an accused in over two dozen criminal cases. This year, when Singh found he was still persona non grata, he turned to the Nishad Party. Vijay Misra, a sitting Samajwadi Pary MLA, was denied a ticket by Akhilesh Yadav because of the number of criminal charges, including murder, that he faces. He too is now a candidate for the Nishad Party. Founded by Sanjay Kumar Nishad, the Nirbal Indian Shoshit Hamara Aam Dal has been carefully named so that its acronym aligns it with the Nishad (boatman) community, a substantial voting bloc.

UP has 472 political parties registered with the Election Commission. These parties play a major role, particularly when the race is as tight as this year's, when every party with votes becomes a potential partner in a cobbled-together government.

In 2012, the Peace Party won three assembly seats and captured 2.35 per cent of the vote, making it the sixth largest party in the state. This year, the Peace Party has formed a coalition with the Nishad Party. The coalition also includes the Krishna Patel-led Apna Dal and former BSP minister Babu Singh Kushwaha's Jan Adhikar Manch. This alliance of small fry will contest all 403 seats in the state. As Sanjay Kumar Nishad explains, "More than 200 constituencies in the state have more than one lakh people belonging to either the Nishad, Kurmi, Kushwaha or 'backward Muslim' communities." With those kinds of numbers, the major parties will be looking over their shoulders.

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