National People's Party (India)

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National People's Party
AbbreviationNPP
President Conrad Sangma
Rajya Sabha  Leader Wanweiroy Kharlukhi
Founder P. A. Sangma
Founded6 January 2013(12 years ago) (2013-01-06)
Headquarters Shillong, Meghalaya
Student wing National People's Students Union-NPSU
Youth wing National People’s Youth Front
Women's wing National People's Women Committee
Ideology
Political position Centre-right [5]
ECI Status National Party
Alliance NDA (National)
NEDA
(Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh)

MDA (Meghalaya)
None (Manipur) [6]
Seats in  Lok Sabha
0 / 543
Seats in  Rajya Sabha
1 / 245
Seats in  State Legislative Assembly
49 / 4,036
List
32 / 60
Meghalaya
7 / 60
Manipur
Number of states and union territories in government
3 / 31
Election symbol
Indian Election Symbol Book.svg
Party flag
National People's Party flag (1).svg
Website
www.nppindia.in

The National People's Party is a national political party in India. It is mostly concentrated in Meghalaya. Founded by P. A. Sangma after his expulsion from the NCP in July 2012, it was accorded national party status on 7 June 2019. It is the first political party from North-Eastern India to have attained this status. [7]

Contents

History

On 6 January 2013, P. A. Sangma launched the party at the national level. He announced an alliance with the National Democratic Alliance led by Bharatiya Janta Party. Sangma also reiterated that though the membership of the party is open to all, it shall be a tribal centric party. [8]

Sangma is a nine-time Member of Parliament. In July 2012, he refused to accept the party's decision to quit the 2012 Indian presidential election.

NPP contested the assembly election of Rajasthan in December 2013, under the leadership of Kirodi Lal Meena, a former BJP member and MP (Independent from Dausa) at the time of election and won four seats. [9]

Currently, it is a part of North-East Democratic Alliance consisting of political parties of the northeast which has supported the National Democratic Alliance.

In 2015, in a rare move election commission suspended NPP for its failure to provide the party's expenditure during the Lok Sabha Elections held in 2014. NPP became first party to get suspended by EC. [10]

In September 2015, the leaders of six parties — Samajwadi Party, Nationalist Congress Party, Jan Adhikar Party, Samras Samaj Party, National People's Party and Samajwadi Janata Party – announced the formation of a third front known as the Socialist Secular Morcha ahead of the 2015 Bihar Legislative Assembly election. [11] [12] [13] The National People's Party fought on three seats as part of the alliances, [11] and lost in all.

In May 2016, after the Bharatiya Janata Party led National Democratic Alliance formed its first government in Assam, and formed a new alliance called the North-East Democratic Alliance (NEDA) with Himanta Biswa Sarma as its convener. The chief ministers of the northeastern states of Sikkim, Assam, and Nagaland too belong to this alliance. Thus, the National People's Party joined the NEDA. [14]

The NPP contested nine candidates in the 2017 Manipur Legislative Assembly election and won four seats.

[15] They won 19 seats in the 2018 Meghalaya Legislative Assembly election, although the ruling Indian National Congress emerged as the single largest party, [16] [17] NEDA did well in 2023 assembly elections without any pre-poll alliances. The party won 26 seats, and formed a government supported by BJP and other NEDA members. [18]

On 6 May 2023, the People's Democratic Front party merged with the National People's Party.

National People's Party, West Bengal, is the state unit of the National People's Party in the Indian state of West Bengal. The party's headquarters is located in Kolkata, the capital of the state. Anish Kumar Singh is currently appointed as the State President of NPP West Bengal. [19]

Election symbol

Its election symbol is a book. [20] The significance for the same is that the party believes that only literacy and education can empower the weaker sections. [8]

Key Leaders

MemberPortraitCurrent/ Previous PositionParty Position
Conrad Sangma The Chief Minister of Meghalaya, Shri Conrad Sangma.JPG National president
Prestone Tynsong A delegation from North Eastern States led by the Minister General Administration Home (Civil Defence And Home Guards) Public Health Engineering Relief And Rehabilitation (cropped).jpg National Vice President
James Sangma National spokesperson,
National General Secretary (I/C), Finance
Thomas A. Sangma
  • Speaker - Meghalaya Legislative Assembly (2023–present)
  • MLA - North Tura (2018–present)
  • Former MP, Rajya Sabha (2008–2014)
National general secretary (I/C), Organisation
Agatha Sangma National general secretary

Electoral performance

The party won a seat in 2014 Loksabha elections from Tura and Sangma became MP ones again. After the death of P. A. Sangma in 2016, his son Conrad Sangma won a by-election held in May 2016 fo fill this seat. The party had proposed to contest election and expand its base in tribal constituencies of Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, northern West Bengal and the Northeast India. [8]

In March 2018, the party won 19 out of 60 assembly seats in the Meghalaya Legislative Assembly election 2018 and formed government in the state in coalition with BJP and other parties and party president Conrad Sangma sworn in as Chief Minister of the state. In May 2018, the party won Williamnagar Assembly seat in a by-election making its tally to 20 out of 60 assembly seats in Meghalaya Legislative Assembly. [21] [22]

General election results

ElectionLok sabhaParty leaderSeats contestedSeats won+/- in seatsOverall vote %Vote swingRef.
2014 16th Conrad Sangma 8
1 / 543
Increase2.svg 10.10Increase2.svg 0.10
2019 17th 11
1 / 543
Steady2.svg0.07Decrease2.svg 0.03
2024 18th 2
0 / 543
Decrease2.svg1Decrease2.svg

State Assembly elections

Election YearLeaderseats contestedseats won+/- in seatsOverall votes % of overall votes+/- in vote shareSitting side
Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly
2019 Conrad Sangma 30
5 / 60
Decrease2.svg290,34714.56Increase2.svg14.56Government

(BJP coalition)

2024 Conrad Sangma 60
5 / 60
-98,25416.11Increase2.svg1.55Government

(BJP coalition)

Assam Legislative Assembly
2021 Conrad Sangma 11
0 / 126
Steady2.svg18,0870.09Increase2.svg0.09Steady2.svg
Bihar Legislative Assembly
2020 1
0 / 243
Steady2.svg6490.00Steady2.svg
Jharkhand Legislative Assembly
2019 1
0 / 81
Steady2.svg9870.01Increase2.svg0.01Steady2.svg
Karnataka Legislative Assembly
2023 2
0 / 224
Steady2.svg4890.00Steady2.svg
Manipur Legislative Assembly
2012 5
0 / 60
Decrease2.svg317,3011.2%Steady2.svg
2017 Conrad Sangma
4 / 60
Increase2.svg483,7445.1Increase2.svg3.9Government

(BJP coalition)

2022 Yumnam Joykumar Singh 38
7 / 60
Increase2.svg3321,30217.3Increase2.svg12.2Government

(BJP coalition)

Meghalaya Legislative Assembly
2013 Conrad Sangma
2 / 60
Increase2.svg21,16,2518.8Increase2.svg8.8Opposition
2018 52
19 / 60
Increase2.svg172,33,74520.60Increase2.svg11.8Government

(NEDA coal

2023 57
26 / 60
Increase2.svg75,84,33831.49Increase2.svg10.89Government

(NEDA coalition)

Mizoram Legislative Assembly
2018 10
0 / 40
Steady2.svg37480.59Increase2.svg0.59Steady2.svg
Nagaland Legislative Assembly
2018 Conrad Sangma 25
2 / 60
Increase2.svg271,5037.12Increase2.svg7.12Government

(NDPP coalition)

2023 Andrew Ahoto12
5 / 60
Increase2.svg365,9205.76Decrease2.svg1.36Government

(NDPP coalition)

Rajasthan Legislative Assembly
2013 Kirodi Lal Meena 134
4 / 200
Increase2.svg413,12,4024.25Increase2.svg4.25Steady2.svg
Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly
2021 3
0 / 234
Steady2.svg11870.00Steady2.svg
West Bengal Legislative Assembly
2021 3
0 / 294
Steady2.svg38800.01Increase2.svg0.01Steady2.svg

List of MPs from NPP

Lok Sabha

No.Lok sabhaConstituencyNameElection
1 16th Tura (ST) Purno Agitok Sangma 2014
2 Conrad Sangma 2016 (by election)
3 17th Agatha Sangma 2019

Rajya Sabha

Sr. NoNameDate of

Appointment

Date of

Retirement

1 Wanweiroy Kharlukhi 22-Jun-202021-Jun-2026


State Committees

State/UTCommitteePresidentIn-charge
State Committees of the National People's Party
Arunachal Pradesh NPP Arunachal PradeshTBD
Assam NPP AssamDilip Kumar Borah
Nagaland NPP Nagaland
Manipur NPP Manipur
Mizoram NPP Mizoram
Tripura NPP Tripura
Sikkim NPP Sikkim
Meghalaya NPP Meghalaya

List of NPP State Governments

Meghalaya

AssemblyChief MinisterCabinetDeputy Chief Minister/sTenureElection
10th Conrad Sangma Sangma I Prestone Tynsong -6 March 20187 March 20236 years, 337 days 2018
11th Sangma II Sniawbhalang Dhar 7 March 2023Incumbent 2023

See also

References

  1. Parashar, Utpal (4 May 2018). "Beyond BJP's rise, NPP emerges as biggest regional outfit in Northeast". Hindustan Times .
  2. "Don't forget your roots & identity, Conrad tells youth | Highland Post". 25 November 2023.
  3. Singh, Bikash (8 June 2019). "National People's Party to further strengthen party base in the region". The Economic Times .
  4. Parashar, Utpal (4 May 2018). "Beyond BJP's rise, NPP emerges as biggest regional outfit in Northeast". Hindustan Times .
  5. "NPP President Likha calls party 'secular'". 9 July 2023.
  6. https://www.news18.com/india/manipur-unrest-conrad-sangmas-npp-withdraws-support-from-biren-singhs-government-9123477.html
  7. "NPP Becomes First Political Outfit from the Northeast to get Status of National Party". News18. 7 June 2019. Retrieved 13 June 2019.
  8. 1 2 3 "Sangma launches National People's Party, forms alliance with NDA". India Today. PTI. 5 January 2013.
  9. Parihar, Rohit (19 December 2013). "Rajasthan: BJP's win is the biggest ever for any party, Congress's loss is the worst". India Today . Retrieved 20 March 2024.
  10. "EC suspends National People's Party for not providing expense report". mint. 17 June 2015.
  11. 1 2 "Samajwadi Party teams up with Pappu Yadav, NCP, 3 others to form third front". Times of India. 19 September 2015.
  12. "Mulayam front suffers big blow, NCP to go it alone - Times of India". The Times of India. 16 October 2015.
  13. "Bihar polls: NCP quits Third Front, cites Mulayam Singh's 'pro-BJP statement'". The Economic Times. 15 October 2015.
  14. "Amit Shah holds meeting with northeast CMs, forms alliance". Hindustan Times. 25 May 2016.
  15. "Hung Assembly in Meghalaya, Congress single largest party". The Hindu. 3 March 2018. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  16. "Meghalaya assembly elections 2018: NPP-led alliance all set to form govt". Mint. 5 March 2018. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  17. "Congress outsmarted in Meghalaya, Conrad Sangma to be sworn in March 6". The Hindu. Press Trust of India. 4 March 2018. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  18. "More support arrives for Conrad Sangma's NPP to form government in Meghalaya". The Hindu . 5 March 2023. Retrieved 26 March 2024.
  19. "PDF merges with NPP". The Shillong Times. 6 May 2023. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  20. "Political Parties And Election Symbols as on 08-03-2011" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 January 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  21. "Williamnagar By-Election: NPP Candidate Marcuise Marak Wins Meghalaya Assembly Bypolls". News18. 1 May 2018.
  22. "NPP wins Williamnagar Assembly seat in Meghalaya". The Hindu. 1 May 2018.