By the 1960 elections most of the conservative factions of the alliance had left to affiliate with the Clean AFPFL. Although the alliance put forward 135 candidates, it was reduced to just three seats, possibly due to its opposition to the establishment of Buddhism as the state religion.[3] Following the 1962 coup, the NUF leadership joined the Burma Socialist Programme Party.[3]
References
^Haruhiro Fukui (1985) Political parties of Asia and the Pacific, Greenwood Press, p145
^Rose, Saul (1959). Socialism in Southern Asia. p. 132. London: Oxford University Press.