Practice Quaid-e-Azam Jinnah MCQs for ANF Inspector / Sub Inspector (BS-14) Pakistan Affairs — topic-wise sets with solved answers.
Q1. What was Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah's date of birth?
Answer: 25 December 1876
Explanation: Quaid-e-Azam Jinnah was born on 25 December 1876 in Karachi. His birth on Christmas Day is a well-known fact; do not confuse the year with 1880 or the date with his death date of 11 September.
Q2. Where was Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah born?
Answer: Karachi
Explanation: Quaid-e-Azam Jinnah was born in Karachi on 25 December 1876. Pakistan Studies MCQs for LAT, CSS and educator exams use this fact.
Q3. Quaid-e-Azam Jinnah died on which date?
Answer: 11 September 1948
Explanation: Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah died on 11 September 1948 in Karachi, having served as Pakistan's first Governor-General for over a year. His death date (11 September) is sometimes confused with his birth date (25 December).
Q4. Who played the key role in negotiating the Lucknow Pact of 1916 on behalf of the Muslim League?
Answer: Muhammad Ali Jinnah
Explanation: Muhammad Ali Jinnah played the crucial role in negotiating the Lucknow Pact of 1916, earning him the title "Ambassador of Hindu-Muslim Unity." He had joined the Muslim League in 1913.
Q5. In what year did Jinnah join the All India Muslim League?
Answer: 1913
Explanation: Jinnah joined the All India Muslim League in 1913, several years after its founding in 1906. He remained a member of the Indian National Congress simultaneously until 1920.
Q6. Jinnah's 14 Points of 1929 were formulated as a response to which document?
Answer: Nehru Report 1928
Explanation: Jinnah's 14 Points of 1929 were a direct response to the Nehru Report of 1928, which had rejected separate Muslim electorates. The 14 Points outlined Muslim constitutional demands as a counter-proposal.
Q7. Quaid-e-Azam Jinnah died in which city?
Answer: Karachi
Explanation: Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah died on 11 September 1948 in Karachi, the same city where he was born. He was returning from Ziarat when his health deteriorated fatally.
Q8. In which year did Jinnah resign from the Indian National Congress over his disagreement with Gandhi's mass movement approach?
Answer: 1920
Explanation: Jinnah resigned from the Indian National Congress in 1920, disagreeing with Gandhi's non-cooperation and civil disobedience approach. He believed constitutional methods were the proper path to self-governance.
Q9. The Round Table Conference in which Jinnah meaningfully participated was held in which year?
Answer: 1931
Explanation: Jinnah participated in the Second Round Table Conference in London in 1931, presenting Muslim constitutional demands. Disillusioned by its failure, he temporarily settled in England.
Q10. Who served as the first Governor-General of Pakistan?
Answer: Quaid-e-Azam Jinnah
Explanation: Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah was the first Governor-General of Pakistan, serving from 14 August 1947 until his death on 11 September 1948. Liaquat Ali Khan was the first Prime Minister, not Governor-General.
Q11. The "Two-Nation Theory" central to the Pakistan Movement held that Hindus and Muslims were:
Answer: Two separate nations with distinct identities
Explanation: The Two-Nation Theory held that Hindus and Muslims were two separate nations with distinct religious, cultural, social, and economic identities who could not coexist in a single Hindu-majority democratic state.
Q12. Pakistan's first Constituent Assembly elected Jinnah as its first President on 11 August 1947. On the same day, Jinnah delivered a historic speech emphasising which principle?
Answer: Equal citizenship regardless of religion, caste, or creed
Explanation: In his 11 August 1947 speech to the Constituent Assembly, Jinnah emphasised that all citizens of Pakistan - regardless of religion, caste, or creed - would be equal before the law. This secular-leaning speech is frequently cited in exams.
Q13. In the Simon Commission boycott drive, Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s fourteenth point mainly pressed for safeguards on which electoral rule that Muslim leaders saw as foundational?
Answer: Separate Muslim electorates with weightage where needed
Explanation: Jinnah's Fourteen Points (1929) insisted on separate electorates with weightage for Muslims in Muslim-minority provinces as an essential safeguard against Hindu-majority dominance.
Q14. You compare Muslim League prominence in federal bargaining. Round Table phases often highlight which leader consolidating Muslim demands at London committees?
Answer: Muhammad Ali Jinnah on safeguards and federation items
Explanation: Muhammad Ali Jinnah represented the All India Muslim League at the Round Table Conferences in London (1930-32), where he argued forcefully for constitutional safeguards and federal arrangements protecting Muslim political rights.
Q15. Two students confuse presiding roles. Who officially presided such that his address framed Muslim political destiny around separate nation hood before this resolution wording passed?
Answer: Mohammad Ali Jinnah chaired as Muslim League president
Explanation: Mohammad Ali Jinnah presided over the All India Muslim League session at Lahore in March 1940 in his capacity as League President, delivering the presidential address that framed the Pakistan demand.
Q16. The first Governor-General of Pakistan was also president of the Muslim League in the transfer moment. Who held that office?
Answer: Muhammad Ali Jinnah
Explanation: Muhammad Ali Jinnah was simultaneously the president of the All-India Muslim League and became Pakistan's first Governor-General upon independence on 14 August 1947. He held this position until his death on 11 September 1948, guiding the new state through its most critical formative months.
Q17. In a classroom debate a student claims that as Governor-General after independence Jinnah formally held executive powers compatible with a British-style constitutional head. Which pairing best supports that claim?
Answer: Pakistan adopted the Government of India Act 1935 framework at the start while drafting a new constitution
Explanation: At independence, Pakistan adopted the Government of India Act 1935 (with modifications) as its interim constitutional framework, which provided the legal structure for the Governor-General's executive powers. This made Jinnah's role as Governor-General compatible with inherited colonial executive authority while the constituent assembly worked on a new constitution.
Q18. A timeline card asks you to place four career moments of Muhammad Ali Jinnah in strict chronological order. Which sequence is correct?
Answer: Called to the Bar at Lincoln's Inn, joined Indian National Congress, elected to Imperial Legislative Council, became President of the Muslim League
Explanation: Jinnah was called to the Bar at Lincoln's Inn (1896), joined the Indian National Congress (1906), was elected to the Imperial Legislative Council (1909), and became President of the Muslim League (1913) - this is the correct chronological order.
Q19. A student pairs each leader with a 1940 milestone. Which pairing is accurate for Jinnah that year?
Answer: Jinnah and the Lahore Resolution demand for independent Muslim-majority states in the north-west and north-east of India
Explanation: On March 23, 1940, Muhammad Ali Jinnah presided over the All-India Muslim League session in Lahore where the landmark Lahore Resolution was passed, demanding independent Muslim-majority states in the northwestern and northeastern zones of British India - the foundational political demand that evolved into the Pakistan movement.
Q20. Two friends dispute whether Jinnah's famous 11 August 1947 address to the Constituent Assembly chiefly stressed minority safeguards or war with India. Which concluding practical instruction in that speech best matches the safeguards theme?
Answer: Old rivalries must be forgotten and the first duty is to maintain peace and protect life and property
Explanation: In his 11 August 1947 address to Pakistan's Constituent Assembly, Jinnah declared that old enmities must be buried and that the state's first duty was to maintain order and protect the lives and property of all citizens regardless of religion.
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