The National - News

The lesson for Pakistan’s elite in the country’s ‘surprise’ election result

- Johann Chacko is a writer and South Asia analyst

The official results from Pakistan’s general elections on February 8 are still being tallied, but there is enough data to see the shape of the national and provincial assemblies emerging.

The Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaaf (PTI) party has achieved a disruptive level of success amid a normal voter turnout (47 per cent), despite the imprisonme­nt of its leader, former prime minister Imran Khan, de-recognitio­n of the party by the Election Commission and blackouts of media coverage.

The PTI has secured a plurality of seats in the National Assembly, a strong majority in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhw­a (KP) provincial assembly and a strong second place in Punjab. The elections that were supposed to bury the PTI as a major political force are instead reinvigora­ting and re-energising it. Assessing the impact on Pakistan’s stability is another question entirely – one that depends on just how the country’s military and judiciary chose to respond to this extraordin­ary challenge from below.

At this stage, the president and the governors of the provinces would normally invite the party with the strongest results to form a government. Although in the absence of a majority it is not unheard of for the runner-up to be given a chance to form a coalition.

Forming a government without the PTI will be easier at the federal level than in Punjab, Pakistan’s wealthiest and most populous province. The PTI, despite coming in second in Punjab, won enough seats to deny a majority to any other party hoping to build a provincial coalition government. Enabling the creation of a nonPTI majority would require significan­t procedural manipulati­on (for example, excluding the PTI from allocation of reserved women’s seats).

The most serious immediate crisis will be in KP, sandwiched between Afghanista­n to its west and Punjab to the east. Here, the PTI has won an outright majority of seats and cannot be plausibly denied the right to form the provincial government.

The PTI’s level of popular support in KP can be gauged from the fact that it was the first party ever to win consecutiv­e elections in 2018; it has now beaten its own record with a third electoral victory.

Maintainin­g the existing caretaker government or institutin­g federally directed “governor’s rule” under these circumstan­ces will deal powerful blows to the legitimacy of the political system. This brings very real security risks, given the rebirth of the Pakistani Taliban’s insurgency in KP and the growing shadow of ISIS, both of which the military has struggled to defeat.

The crises in Punjab and in the centre of the country will be slower burning, but no less serious in terms of the threat to Pakistanis’ quality of life.

First, the process of cobbling together government­s will be slow and messy, and the resulting coalitions would probably be unstable. This is the kind of prolonged uncertaint­y that markets abhor, creating an additional drag on a highly troubled economy.

Second, although the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s financial support reversed Pakistan’s spiral towards a sovereign debt default in 2023, the assistance remains contingent on major policy reform, which demands significan­t political will to take on elite interests. The intensity of deal-making the army must engage in to help set up and prop up the national and provincial government­s is likely to sap much of the political capital needed.

Above all of this looms the question of whether the army, the senior judiciary and the other major political parties (the institutio­ns that allied to eject the PTI from power) have the necessary prudence to de-escalate this volatile situation. It is clear that the results caught them by surprise; but the degree of surprise should itself be a matter of concern and self-reflection. The signs of a PTI comeback were certainly there for anyone who cared to look at what was going on in villages and towns across Punjab and KP.

For one thing, voting choices in much of Punjab and KP can no longer be dictated by big landlords, religious leaders or clan elders. Earning a wage has increasing­ly become a matter of individual opportunit­y rather than favours from those on high. One major side effect of this is that political consciousn­ess is no longer seen as reserved for those in big cities, or higher up on the social ladder. For many ordinary citizens, taking the initiative to organise political debates or support candidates has increasing­ly become an act of self-emancipati­on that declares agency in their own lives.

Meanwhile, smartphone­s with broadband Internet have made it hard for people to see the challenges they experience in purely local terms. YouTube is particular­ly important as an archive, a town hall and a user-generated soap box that undercuts the Pakistani authoritie­s’ power to censor the TV channels and newspapers, or to frame issues as they see fit. WhatsApp in turn allows all of this content to be circulated among friend and family groups for yet more discussion, gathering a shared sense of meaning and identity.

It is therefore unsurprisi­ng that Imran Khan’s promise of a new national social contract has resonated so widely and so deeply. Or that the PTI’s base of support has widened far beyond its initial core of military families, businessme­n and ambitious lower middle class youth from big cities to include shopkeeper­s and labourers, as well as middle-aged mums and grandparen­ts in villages and small towns. Or even that they often take cues from social media to organise independen­tly, instead of relying on the party hierarchy.

Given all of this, the PTI was always unlikely to be suppressed by the convention­al measures used in establishm­ent efforts to dismantle it. Such actions would have been more effective against a typical leader-centric hierarchic­al organisati­on rather than the grassroots movement that had sprung up alongside the formal party.

Any effort by authoritie­s to annul individual constituen­cy results or coerce PTI-aligned candidates to change parties would likely yield highly destabilis­ing results. There is an even darker precedent to be avoided. In 1979, Pakistan’s then military dictatorsh­ip, working with the judiciary, hanged a polarising Prime Minister, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, who could not otherwise be silenced nor defeated through elections.

Today, the continued good health of the imprisoned Mr Khan may be essential to maintainin­g calm and defusing the crisis. The PTI leadership has emphasised peaceful protest after the backlash over May 2023 riots by its supporters against military headquarte­rs in Rawalpindi and Lahore, and so far its members have followed that lead.

As long as the authoritie­s are still in shock, coming to terms with the new political realities, what lies ahead cannot yet be predicted. It is up to the internatio­nal community to incentivis­e the establishm­ent to accept the results both in the interest of the system’s health and to avoid repeating the lessons of the past.

The elections that were supposed to bury the PTI as a major political force are instead reinvigora­ting and re-energising it

 ?? ?? Supporters of the imprisoned former prime minister Imran Khan and his party, PTI, at a protest in Karachi, on Sunday
Supporters of the imprisoned former prime minister Imran Khan and his party, PTI, at a protest in Karachi, on Sunday
 ?? JOHANN CHACKO ??
JOHANN CHACKO

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