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Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election, 1977

Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election, 1977
India
← 1972 17 June 1977 1983 →

all 76 seats in Legislative Assembly
39 seats needed for a majority
Turnout 67.2%
  First party Second party
  JKNC-flag.svg Janata Party Logo (1).svg
Leader Sheikh Abdullah
Party JKN Janata Party
Last election - -
Seats won 47 13
Seat change Increase 47 Increase 13

  Third party Fourth party
  Flag of the Indian National Congress.svg
Party INC Jamaat-e-Islami
Last election 58
Seats won 11 1
Seat change Decrease 46 Decrease 4

Chief Minister before election

Sheikh Abdullah
JKN

Elected Chief Minister

Sheikh Abdullah
JKN


Sheikh Abdullah
JKN

Sheikh Abdullah
JKN

Elections for the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir were held over June 1977, which are generally regarded as the first 'free and fair' elections in the state.Jammu & Kashmir National Conference, newly revived from the former Plebiscite Front, won an overwhelming majority and re-elected Sheikh Abdullah as the Chief Minister.

After reaching the 1974 Indira-Sheikh accord, Sheikh Abdullah was elected as the Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir by the ruling Indian National Congress party in the state legislature (which had in fact been the original National Conference founded by Abdullah in 1930s but merged into Congress prior to the 1967 elections). Abdullah remained in power during the National Emergency imposed by Indira Gandhi in 1975. After the Emergency was lifted, the Janata Party came to power in the Centre in the 1977 general election.

Elections were called for the state Legislative Assembly in June 1977. Sheikh Abudllah now revived the National Conference from the erstwhile Plebiscite Front. The National Conference and Congress met head on as equals, the first time such an electoral contest occurred since the State's Accession in 1947. The Prime Minister Morarji Desai (of the Janata Party) took steps to strengthen security in the state and declared that any rigging would be severely punished. This had a 'salutary effect' in the political atmosphere in the state witnessing its first 'free and fair' election.


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