Independent Party (Burma)

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The Independent Party, also known as the Golden Valley Party,[1][2] was a pro-British political party in Burma during the 1920s and 1930s. Its leadership included Joseph Augustus Maung Gyi, U Khin and U May Oung.[2] Oscar de Glanville was also a party leader.

History[edit]

The party was established as the Progressive Party in 1922,[3] evolving from the senior faction of the Young Men's Buddhist Association, whose members were conservative, western-educated and willing to accept the colonial system of government.[2]

Although the 1922 general elections saw the 21 Party emerge as the largest party in the Legislative Council, its leader Ba Pe refused to form a government with the Golden Valley Party, allowing Maung Gyi to head the new government.[4]

In 1925 the party was renamed the Independent Party,[5] also becoming known as the Golden Valley Party (Shwe Taung Gyar) in reference to the upper-class suburbs in which its leaders lived,[1] but was not formally organised, nor had any popular support.[2] The elections later that year (in which it won 20 of the 80 seats)[2] and 1928 elections (12 seats) ended with the same outcome due to favouritism by the British authorities.[4]

The party contested the 1932 elections calling for the separation of Burma from India, but were defeated by the anti-separatists, who won a landslide;[2] Ba Maw of the Maw-Myint-Bye Party became Chief Minister. It failed to win a seat in the 1936 elections.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Maung Maung (2012) Burma's Constitution, Springer Science & Business Media, p29
  2. ^ a b c d e f Haruhiro Fukui (1985) Political parties of Asia and the Pacific, Greenwood Press, pp133−134
  3. ^ Nirmal Chandra Sen (1945) A peep into Burma politics, Kitabistan, p18
  4. ^ a b Here Today, Gone Tomorrow Archived 2015-11-26 at the Wayback Machine The Irrawaddy, 3 November 2009
  5. ^ Sen, p27