In the
1937 Indian provincial elections, the Unionist Party soundly defeated the Muslim League in Punjab. Unionist Party won 98 seats (out of 175 total), including 78 of the 89 Muslim seats, while the Muslim League won only two. Muslim elements of the Unionists shared many common points with the Muslim League and followed a rather similar policy and agenda for national interests and issues. However, the Unionist Party was virtually an independent political party in the 1920s and 1930s, when the Muslim League was unpopular and divided into feuding factions. The links improved after
Muhammad Ali Jinnah became the League's president in the mid-1930s and by October 1937, he was able to convince
Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan to come to terms with him via the famous Sikandar-Jinnah Pact. The rule of Unionist leader Sir Sikandar remained undisputed in the Punjab and he remained the Punjab's Premier (Chief Minister) from 1937 to 1942, in alliance with the
Indian National Congress and the
Shiromani Akali Dal despite Jinnah's opposition to both parties. Sir Sikandar thus remained the most popular and influential politician in Punjab during his lifetime, preventing both Jinnah and
Sir Muhammad Iqbal from gaining the support of a majority of Punjabi Muslims. In the
1946 elections, the Muslim League won 73 of the 89 Muslim seats in Punjab, while the Unionist Party under
Khizar Hayat Tiwana won only 13. Overall, the Muslim League failed to win any non-Muslim seat and fell short of the halfway mark of 88 required to form the government, while the Unionist Party won 19 seats in total and formed a short-lived
coalition government with Congress (which had won 51 seats) and the Shiromani Akali Dal (which had won 21). ==Decline==