Top 15+ Cabinet Mission (1946) MCQs with Answers for CSS & PMS
1. The Cabinet Mission was sent to India in _____.
Correct Answer: C. 1946
Explanation: The Cabinet Mission arrived in India in March 1946. It was a three-member British Cabinet ministerial delegation sent to negotiate a settlement for India’s independence and try to prevent partition.
2. The Cabinet Mission consisted of _____.
Correct Answer: B. Lord Pethick-Lawrence (Secretary of State for India), Sir Stafford Cripps, and A.V. Alexander
Explanation: The Cabinet Mission comprised three senior British Cabinet ministers: Lord Pethick-Lawrence (Secretary of State for India), Sir Stafford Cripps (President of the Board of Trade), and A.V. Alexander (First Lord of the Admiralty). Viceroy Lord Wavell assisted them in their negotiations.
3. The Cabinet Mission Plan proposed to keep India _____.
Correct Answer: C. United but with a three-tier federal structure (Union, Autonomous Groups of provinces, and individual provinces)
Explanation: The Cabinet Mission Plan proposed keeping India united under a three-tier system: (1) A weak central Union handling only defence, foreign affairs, and communications; (2) Autonomous “Groups” of provinces (Group A: Hindu-majority, Group B: Muslim-majority NW, Group C: Muslim majoritiy NE+Bengal); (3) Individual provinces with maximum autonomy.
4. The Cabinet Mission Plan rejected the creation of Pakistan because _____.
Correct Answer: A. It would produce a weak Pakistan (with large non-Muslim minorities) and a weak India, and make defence impossible
Explanation: The Cabinet Mission gave detailed reasons why Pakistan was impractical: a “large Pakistan” (based on full provinces) would still have a 38% non-Muslim population; a “small Pakistan” (based on Muslim-majority districts only) would be so truncated as to be economically unviable; and partition would create defence difficulties for both states.
5. The Muslim League initially accepted the Cabinet Mission Plan because _____.
Correct Answer: C. The Grouping scheme would give Muslim-majority provinces (Groups B and C) effective self-government resembling Pakistan within a loose union
Explanation: The Muslim League accepted the Cabinet Mission Plan in June 1946 because Groups B and C (Muslim-majority provinces) were compulsory groupings that would give Muslims effective self-governance in their regions – described as “Pakistan in all but name.” If provincial autonomy was maximized and the union was loose, it was a reasonable alternative to formal partition.
6. The Cabinet Mission Plan failed primarily because _____.
Correct Answer: C. Nehru’s statement that Congress was not bound by the compulsory Grouping scheme killed Muslim League confidence in the plan
Explanation: The plan collapsed in July 1946 when Nehru (just elected Congress President) stated at a press conference that Congress had accepted the Cabinet Mission “only” in general terms and reserved the right to change the Grouping arrangements. This statement – which effectively meant Congress could prevent the compulsory grouping of Muslim provinces – made the plan unacceptable to the League.
7. The Cabinet Mission Plan’s “Groups” of provinces included _____.
Correct Answer: B. Group A (Hindu-majority provinces); Group B (Muslim-majority NW: Punjab, Sindh, NWFP, Balochistan); Group C (Muslim-majority NE: Bengal and Assam)
Explanation: The three groups under the Cabinet Mission Plan: Group A comprised Madras, Bombay, United Provinces, Bihar, Central Provinces, and Orissa (Hindu-majority); Group B comprised Punjab, North-West Frontier Province, Sind, and Baluchistan (Muslim-majority, northwest); Group C comprised Bengal and Assam (Muslim-majority, northeast).
8. The Constituent Assembly proposed under the Cabinet Mission Plan was to frame _____.
Correct Answer: B. India’s constitution (with separate Group-level and province-level constitutions possible)
Explanation: The Cabinet Mission Plan proposed a Constituent Assembly for all of India, which would frame both Group-level constitutions (for the Muslim groups B and C, and the Hindu group A) and the Union-level constitution. This complex process was designed to ensure Muslim provinces could have autonomy while India remained united.
9. The Cabinet Mission’s rejection of Pakistan was a blow to Jinnah, but he accepted the plan because _____.
Correct Answer: C. The grouping arrangement in the plan was seen as an effective alternative that would give Muslims near-full autonomy in their regions
Explanation: Jinnah’s acceptance of the Cabinet Mission Plan (despite its rejection of his Pakistan demand) showed his pragmatism – Groups B and C would give Muslim-majority provinces effective self-determination within a loose united India framework, which he calculated was an acceptable outcome if Congress truly honored the compulsory grouping.
10. The Cabinet Mission Plan’s most important legacy was _____.
Correct Answer: C. Its failure made partition and violence inevitable by showing that Hindu-Muslim cooperation within one state was impossible on any terms
Explanation: The Cabinet Mission Plan was the last serious attempt to keep India united. Its failure after both parties had initially accepted it demonstrated that no arrangement – however cleverly devised – could bridge the Congress-Muslim League gap. After this failure, partition became the only recognized solution, leading to the 3rd June Plan and the tragedies of 1947.
11. After rejecting the Cabinet Mission Plan, Jinnah called for “Direct Action” on _____.
Correct Answer: C. 16 August 1946
Explanation: After withdrawing the Muslim League’s acceptance of the Cabinet Mission Plan, Jinnah declared 16 August 1946 as “Direct Action Day” – when Muslims across India would demonstrate their seriousness about Pakistan through strikes, protests, and civil disobedience. The day tragically resulted in the Calcutta Killings.
12. The Cabinet Mission Plan was Britain’s last attempt to avoid _____.
Correct Answer: C. The partition of India and its attendant communal violence and geopolitical problems
Explanation: The British government sent the Cabinet Mission specifically to find a constitutional formula that would allow transfer of power to a united India, thereby avoiding partition. British policymakers feared that partition would weaken both successor states militarily and economically, create refugee crises, and destabilize South Asia. The Mission’s failure made them ultimately accept partition.
13. The Cabinet Mission Plan’s central government (Union) would handle only _____.
Correct Answer: C. Defence, foreign affairs, communications, and the finances required for these
Explanation: The Cabinet Mission Plan’s central Union government was deliberately made weak – it would only handle defence, foreign affairs, communications, and the finances needed for these. All other subjects would be handled by the Groups or individual provinces, giving the Muslim provinces near-autonomy.
14. The Simla Conference (1945) that preceded the Cabinet Mission was convened by Viceroy _____.
Correct Answer: A. Lord Wavell
Explanation: The Simla Conference of June-July 1945, convened by Viceroy Lord Wavell, was the immediate predecessor to the Cabinet Mission. It had tried to form a joint executive council of Indian politicians but failed when Jinnah insisted on the Muslim League’s exclusive right to nominate all Muslim members – which Congress rejected.
15. The legacy of the Cabinet Mission Plan for Pakistan is that _____.
Correct Answer: C. Its failure confirmed that partition was the only solution, making Pakistan’s creation inevitable and demonstrating that Muslim League demands were non-negotiable without their own state
Explanation: The Cabinet Mission Plan’s collapse sealed India’s partition. After this last attempt at a united India failed, the 3rd June Plan (which accepted partition) was the only remaining option. The failure confirmed Jinnah’s argument that Muslims needed their own state – no formula for sharing power in a united India was acceptable to both Congress and the League simultaneously.
