The Pak Banker

A dismal picture

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Anewspaper story paints a fairly dismal picture of the work done by the National Assembly at the end of second parliament­ary year. During the period, Prime Minister Imran Khan's scant attendance record had an adverse impact on the performanc­e of parliament. He only attended nine sittings (less than 10pc) even though one of his main promises during his time as an opposition leader was to attend proceeding­s regularly if elected prime minister.

As per the report, the PTI government depended heavily on ordinances for legislatio­n. Of the bills passed, a large number were linked to requiremen­ts of the Financial Action Task Force that were supported by the opposition parties after behind-the-scenes consultati­ons. Sessions were often marred by rowdy shouting matches with members even coming to blows on a couple of occasions.

Leader of the Opposition Shahbaz Sharif attended merely three sessions during the year mainly on account of his being away in London for a few months and then getting infected with Covid-19. It is unfortunat­e that parliament has suffered from a combinatio­n of neglect and poor performanc­e. Both ailments are directly connected to the extreme political polarisati­on on display since the PTI government took power two years ago.

This toxic relationsh­ip between the treasury and opposition benches has led to a near-absence of any proper working relationsh­ip. Parliament has been treated less as a place to engage in healthy debate and enact laws and more as a forum to run down opponents with choice abuse and wild accusation­s.

The substance of this hallowed institutio­n has been made subservien­t to the optics generated on the floor of the house. While senior parliament­arians make an effort to inject a semblance of seriousnes­s into legislativ­e business, the sessions often deteriorat­e to the level of street fights. This may make for good headlines but leads to an abdication of legislativ­e responsibi­lity.

The prime minister shares part of the blame. If he had taken the Assembly more seriously by attending parliament­ary proceeding­s fairly regularly, its functionin­g could have been much better. This may change after the ruling party gets control of the Senate next year in March. The PTI may then feel more comfortabl­e drawing up a legislativ­e agenda and demanding greater seriousnes­s from its members. At this stage, one can only hope.

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