Deccan Chronicle

Nawaz is done. Even if he doesn’t know this himself

- Cyril Almeida

IN another week of numbing stupidity and vileness, maybe it’s time to stop pretending that there isn’t a solution: a straight fight between Shahbaz and Imran in an August election. May the better — least worst? — man win and may we all be allowed to get back to our miserable-ish lives in this miserable-ish land. Because this is just exhausting.

Nawaz is done. Maybe he doesn’t know it yet, but we don’t have to pretend he knows what he’s doing. His problem is the court.

He’s already disqualifi­ed and he’s on track to be convicted. There’s only one way to reverse the disqualifi­cation: strip Article 62(1)(f) out of the Constituti­on, the honest and trustworth­y business.

To do that, Nawaz’s only shot is after half the Senate is changed in March. (Senate elections may be held earlier by the provincial assemblies, possibly as early as January).

OK, great. But the Senate is equally divided between the four provinces and N-League only dominates one, Punjab, and is the lead player in another, Balochista­n.

To change the Constituti­on, you need a separate twothirds majority in both houses of parliament. There’s no way that Nawaz is getting that in the Senate.

Let’s play along. Nawaz has the Constituti­on amended for himself. The amendment will immediatel­y be challenged in the Supreme Court. The same court that in the 21st Amendment gave itself the right to decide if constituti­onal amendments are constituti­onal.

The same court in which the current CJP has had to recuse himself from the Nawaz case and the next two CJPs were part of the five-member bench that disqualifi­ed Nawaz. Who are we kidding?

But let’s keep playing along. Nawaz gets the Constituti­on amended for himself and the amendment survives the court’s scrutiny. There’s then the matter of the accountabi­lity trial and an actual conviction. For the sake of fantasy, assume he won’t be convicted. That still leaves him with the disqualifi­cation problem.

For the sake of reality, let’s assume he’s convicted. Worst case scenario: he’s convicted and sent to jail. That means the PML-N fighting the election with Nawaz in jail; meaning he’ll have to nominate someone else as the PM candidate. Think about what it would mean if the candidate isn’t Shahbaz.

After Nawaz, there’s no one in the party with a profile like Shahbaz. So Shahbaz is going to campaign on behalf of a Nawaz surrogate to whom Nawaz will be junior if NLeague wins?

Yeah, that would work. (Hold on if you’re thinking Maryam or Hamza.) Best case scenario for Nawaz in the accountabi­lity trial: he’s convicted but not sent to jail or something exotic like a presidenti­al pardon comes to his rescue. That still leaves every returning officer rejecting his nomination papers because of the conviction. A rejection Nawaz can appeal all the way to the — Supreme Court. Uhoh. So what the hell are we doing? Nawaz is done.

Let’s skip out of the legal realm and get political a bit. Nawaz’s problem is himself. A fourth-term Nawaz will try something different and succeed at that something different after three unsuccessf­ul stints? And immediatel­y after his third failure? You may as well write to Santa for a pot of gold. Aha, but there’s Maryam. She’s ambitious; she has Nawaz’s support; the mother, Kulsum, is a major booster; a mother’s wish from the sickbed is hard for a family to deny; and the PML-N is a party of lemmings.

All well and good, but only within the family soap opera.

Maryam has never held a job. She’s had one by-election campaign in the safest of seats. In nine months, she’ll have to learn how to assemble a national roster of candidates, find her campaign feet, and then prepare to be sworn in as a first-time MNA headed straight for the PM House.

The PML-N has to know that this endless crisis has hurt them. You don’t need to know anything about politics or Pakistan to know that the convulsion­s will have cooled support for the party.

And while the PTI may not have gained — yet — the PML-N falling back has set up a nasty and fierce election. It may be our ugliest yet, barring perhaps ’77. If Nawaz stays ringside, it could be the nastiest ever. The solution is obvious: a straight fight between Shahbaz and Imran in an August election.

Nawaz is done. Let him be an éminence grise or whatever catches his fancy. Just get out of the electoral way already and end this exhaustion for all of us. By arrangemen­t with Dawn

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