Deccan Chronicle

The crisis in Pakistan is real and multifacet­ed

- Cyril Almeida By arrangemen­t with Dawn

It is a conceit of those who come later to imagine that they and the stuff happening around them are more important. That the battles they fight are fiercer, the resistance more noble, the enemy uglier, the tactics used more innovative or baser, the squalor worse. The madness unpreceden­ted.

Of course, the particular history of Pakistan can help temper that conceit. Four great saviours, several robed crusaders, violent ideologues, a humiliatin­g severing less than a quarter century in. And the circumstan­ces of birth itself, the euphoria and cataclysm reduced to a single, awesome word: Partition.

So there’s no need to get carried away just now. But there is need to be concerned.

The wild uncertaint­y, confusion and, yes, fear that has gripped the political process isn’t just a figment of everyone’s imaginatio­n. You don’t need Nawaz to tell you there is a crisis or Imran to deny there’s a crisis or Zardari to be sniffing around for an advantage in the crisis to know there’s a crisis.

The crisis is real and it’s multifacet­ed, and the closer we get to the election, the worse it may get. Because for all the manipulati­on and attempted control of the process, there’s a powerful unknown factor in all of this: the electorate itself.

It’s a story that’s already been told in several forms. The N-League hasn’t splintered, the PTI can’t stop getting in its own way, political intelligen­ce from the field suggests a divided electorate and hung Parliament. Pakistan in 2018 isn’t Pakistan in 2008 and definitely not Pakistan in 1998.

Some of that is good and, in fact, certainty-promoting. Polling-day rigging is harder to pull off than ever, whether by ballot stuffing, suppressin­g turnout or manipulati­ng the results announced.

Because it’s possible to say it now, the most consistent­ly rigged elections in the country have probably been in Karachi. Not because the MQM wouldn’t win a majority of seats anyway, but the old party wanted total control.

Sixty per cent wasn’t good enough when 90 or 100 per cent could be had through brute force. And what a reign it was: organised ballot stuffing; suppressin­g turnout for whatever little opposition there was with violence and intimidati­on; dictating to election officials the final results to be announced.

That formidable machine was built on fear, the certainty of retributio­n and the public knowledge that the MQM would win a majority anyway.

That fear has never really existed at the national level and it is even less so now, even in the midst of the wildest of speculatio­n and conspiraci­es. And then there’s the real change: informatio­n.

Cameras in millions of pockets, social media hungry for scandal, a partisan electronic media — good luck trying to suppress systematic ballot stuffing, turnout suppressio­n or dodgy counting.

The game is really about the preand post-poll process: assembling the right weave of candidates nationally and a working majority — solo if you’re lucky, a coalition if you must — in Parliament after the election.

Far from impossible in normal times that, and not entirely beyond the stretch of imaginatio­n in the election ahead. But that’s also where the problem is: even if the right weave of candidates is assembled nationally, will the electorate necessaril­y bite?

That this isn’t your parents’ electorate is obvious enough. Different worlds to the electorate of the ’70s and substantia­lly different to the one in the ’90s. Age and changes in the country have guaranteed that.

But it may also be a substantia­lly different electorate to the one in ’08. New voters being pumped into the system and previously younger voters turning older don’t have to radically change electoral equations — and manipulati­ons.

But in this time, this decade, the years between 2008 and 2018 something unusual has happened. Democratic continuity, two fullterm civilian-era Parliament­s, three consecutiv­e on-time elections and a second consecutiv­e peaceful transition of power imminent — that everyone knows.

What’s less noticed is the hyper engagement and participat­ion, and in the very places that it matters electorall­y. Turnout was a historic high in 2013, at 55 per cent nationally a distinct outlier from the historic range of 35-45 per cent.

But in Punjab it was 60 per cent in 2013, a full 12 points higher than 2008. There’s plenty of indication that the 2013 levels will be maintained or surpassed in 2018, especially in Punjab. The February byelection in Lodhran was not an anomaly. A six-figure vote count for the winner and similar total votes for winner and loser combined in 2013 suggests a hyperenerg­ised electorate. It makes a kind of sense that 2018 could see a historic or thereabout­s turnout.

Big turnout in a changed electorate after a decade of continuity and with systematic polling-day manipulati­on seemingly foreclosed — even those with the biggest toolbox shouldn’t be sure the electorate will respond as desired.

Turnout may have unleashed a powerful unknown factor: the electorate itself.

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