Janata Dal


Janata Dal was an Indian political party which was formed through the merger of Lok Dal, Jagiivan's Congress, and Jan Morcha on 11 October 1988—the birth anniversary of Jayaprakash Narayan under the leadership of V. P. Singh.

History

V. P. Singh united the entire disparate spectrum of parties ranging from regional parties such as the Telugu Desam Party, the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, and the Asom Gana Parishad, and formed the National Front with N. T. Rama Rao as President and Singh as convenor. The front also included outside support from the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party and the left-wing Left Front, led by the Communist Party of India and Communist Party of India. They defeated Rajiv Gandhi's Congress in the 1989 parliamentary elections.
His government fell after Lalu Prasad Yadav got Advani arrested in Samastipur and stopped his Ram Rath Yatra, which was going to Ayodhya to the site of the Babri Masjid on 23 October 1990, and the Bharatiya Janata Party withdrew support. Singh lost a parliamentary vote of confidence on 7 November 1990. In the 1991 Indian general election the Janata Dal lost power but emerged as the third largest party in the Lok Sabha. The Janata Dal-led United Front formed the government after the 1996 Indian general election with the outside support of the Indian National Congress. However, after this the Janata Dal gradually disintegrated into various smaller factions, which largely became regional parties such as Biju Janata Dal, Rashtriya Janata Dal, Janata Dal and Janata Dal.

Ascent to power

It first came to power in 1989, after cases of corruption, known as the Bofors scandal, caused Rajiv Gandhi's Congress to lose the elections. The National Front coalition that was formed consisted of the Janata Dal and a few smaller parties in the government, and had outside support from the Left Front and the Bharatiya Janata Party. V. P. Singh was the prime minister. In November 1990, this coalition collapsed, and a new government headed by Chandra Shekhar under Samajwadi Janata Party which had the support of the Congress came to power for a short while. Two days before the vote, Chandra Shekhar, an ambitious Janata Dal rival who had been kept out of the National Front government, joined with Devi Lal, a former deputy prime minister under V. P. Singh, to form the Samajwadi Janata Party, with a total of sixty Lok Sabha members. The day after the collapse of the National Front government, Chandra Shekhar informed the president that by gaining the backing of the Congress and its electoral allies he enjoyed the support of 280 members of the Lok Sabha, and he demanded the right to constitute a new government. Even though his rump party accounted for only one-ninth of the members of the Lok Sabha, Chandra Shekhar succeeded in forming a new minority Government and becoming prime minister. However, Chandra Shekhar's government fell less than four months later, after the Congress withdrew its support.
Its second spell of power began in 1996, when the Janata Dal-led United Front coalition came to power, with outside support from the Congress under Sitaram Kesri, choosing H. D. Deve Gowda as their prime minister. The Congress withdrew its support in less than a year, after the Deve Gowda Government restarted probing the corruption cases against a lot of Congress leaders, hoping to gain power with the support of various United Front constituent groups, and I. K. Gujral became the next prime minister. His government too fell in a few months, and in February 1998, the Janata Dal-led coalition lost power to the Bharatiya Janata Party in general elections.

Party presidents

No.PortraitPresidentsYearDuration
1Vishwanath Pratap Singh1989-1997days
2Sharad Yadav1997-1999days

National leadership

Vice president

Prime minister

No.ImagePrime ministersYearDurationConstituency
1Vishwanath Pratap Singh1989 1990343 daysFatehpur
2H. D. Deve Gowda1996 1997324 days from Karnataka
3Inder Kumar Gujral1997 1998332 days from Bihar

Deputy Prime Minister of India

State leadership

Chief minister

Deputy chief minister

Electoral records

National and state units

Anantram Jaiswal
  • Karnataka

    Presidents

Siddaramaiah
C. Byre Gowda

General secretary

C. Narayanaswamy
  • Tamil Nadu
  • * President
Sivaji Ganesan

Factions

Defunct parties

August 3, 1999: The Election Commission held a final hearing to listen to rival claims from factions led by Sharad Yadav and H.D. Deve Gowda.
August 4, 1999: The Election Commission issued an order freezing the original "Chakra " symbol of the Janata Dal. To resolve the immediate need for election identities for the upcoming general election, the ECI granted "ad-hoc recognition" to the two splinter groups:
The Sharad Yadav-led faction was designated as Janata Dal.
The H.D. Deve Gowda-led faction was designated as Janata Dal.
Context of the Formation
The split actually began on July 21, 1999, when those opposed to the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance expelled Sharad Yadav from the presidency and elected Deve Gowda in his place. The August 4th ruling effectively legalized the existence of the JD as a distinct political entity for the 1999 elections.
While the designation Janata Dal appeared in August 1999, the party was reconstituted on its most widely recognized foundation date, October 30, 2003, through a formal merger with the Samata Party and Lok Shakti. See also
  • Samata Party