ABSTRACT

The parties which represented the Muslims and their demands at the Round Table Conferences were organizationally hollow shells. The League turned to childish behavior, the conference was there to discharge the duty of representing the Muslims in a dignified manner, although some thought it was a "yes-group" to the authorities. In Quaid-i-Azam Jinnah absence only one League session was meaningful, the 1930 meeting in which Iqbal gave his noted presidential address. There was an objection from some that those who had run away from the appointed meeting place and had adopted these resolutions did not represent the All-India Muslim League. The barrister contacted a number of League Councilors who were opposed to dissolution. Among those he met was Raja Ghazanfar Ali Khan. A few people would call themselves a provincial League and one or the other of the central Leagues would affiliate them as the "official group."