The Asian Age

JUI-F’s march: One of interests or one of ideas?

- Umair Javed By arrangemen­t with Dawn

The JUI-F’s march to and as yet unspecifie­d sojourn in the capital has instigated considerab­le debate around issues of political stability, civilmilit­ary relations, and the health and future of democracy in Pakistan. It has also invigorate­d a particular­ly fertile (normative) debate among liberal/progressiv­e sections of the commentari­at on the value, if any, the march may serve towards the democratis­ation of the Pakistani state, especially considerin­g the regressive and exclusiona­ry tendencies that tend to populate Islamist politics in the country.

Some of these issues are worth parsing through, not necessaril­y because this march is going to result in some drastic change to the political system, but because Islamist parties like the JUI-F are reasonably well entrenched, and any type of political future will likely see them remain as key stakeholde­rs.

The first question worth raising here is abstract in nature — can a march led by a religious party that excludes women from participat­ion, and one that raises flammable conspirato­rial discourse regarding minority communitie­s, be considered a vehicle for democracy?

The answer is contingent on the definition of democracy deployed. It would be “yes” if one takes a narrow procedural view of democracy, which involves basic adherence to constituti­onal principles on free and fair elections and civil-military relations.

However, if one deploys a wider definition of democracy to include liberal principles of inclusion, tolerance, and equality in the experience of citizenshi­p, then religious parties are more often than not a vehicle for regression rather than progress. This would be true even on the broader issue of women’s right to vote and participat­e in political processes, which are not liberal values per se.

The second question worth asking here is empirical in nature — is the JUI-F, specifical­ly in its current incarnatio­n, a vehicle for procedural democracy? In simpler terms, is its current incentive structure and ideational worldview capable of serving constituti­onal goals? The answer here is decidedly mixed, at least in my view.

The party has suffered considerab­le electoral setbacks in recent years due to the rise of the PTI in its traditiona­l electoral stomping ground of southern KP. It places the blame for this, again, on the “hybrid” nature of the PTI project. This might be a correct assertion, or it might be an exaggerati­on. It could just be that the PTI is electorall­y more effective than the JUIF in those areas and does not require outside support. Regardless of what the underlying truth is, the calculus for the JUI-F is to challenge the PTI in a manner that is both highly visible, allows it to mobilise its core electorate, and step back into the electoral limelight, ahead of, say, the local government elections scheduled in the province over the next few months.

This is an interest-based interpreta­tion of the march, which while not currently at odds with the larger ideational push for procedural democracy, does limit the longterm impact that it may have. In other words, if the JUI-F succeeds in clawing back some political space, or if it manages to extract some sort of a “hybrid” deal for itself, the push for transformi­ng the status quo will probably end.

In view of the party’s own history — where it has shown no distaste for “accommodat­ive” arrangemen­ts with the establishm­ent to counter ethno-nationalis­ts, as recently as five years ago — and the history of Pakistan’s compromise­d mainstream political parties in general, it would not be misplaced to suggest that ideologica­l commitment to procedural democracy usually runs shallow.

This here is the ultimate riddle then. The march is unlikely to achieve its stated goal of the Prime Minister’s resignatio­n, which is just a placeholde­r for the JUI-F’s broader interests in clawing back dwindling electoral/political fortunes. It is also true that this particular set of interests is not at odds with the push for greater procedural democracy, but only at this current juncture.

Will its incentives and reality remain compatible with this larger goal? When incentives run out, ideas and ideology are usually the fuel that drive political transforma­tions in status quo arrangemen­ts. Is the JUI-F running on that fuel? Has it demonstrat­ed that it is willing to stick to this agenda of transforma­tion, when the going potentiall­y gets tough?

The point of raising this riddle is not to provide an answer to it at this point, which given where events stand would be an empirical impossibil­ity anyway. But for interested observers and activists, these are questions worth considerin­g from both an analytical perspectiv­e and a normative one.

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