Deccan Chronicle

It’s good to be Nawaz again

- Cyril Almeida

Centre, seven in Punjab and there’s very little by way of kooky stuff put out there. You only have to glance over to India to know what a crusading right-winger can get up to in double-quick time.

Like much else he’s done this time round, Nawaz in the social realm has been marked more by diffidence than decisivene­ss. So what’s up with this liberal-Pakistan business? Before you get too hopeful, have a look at the speech itself:

“Our democratic and economic journey has not been without setbacks. But the Pakistani nation has once and for all decided that its future lies in a liberal and democratic country, where the private sector thrives and no one is left behind.”

“I can confidentl­y say that our direction is set, and we are now implementi­ng our nation’s economic and democratic agenda. And indeed, driving a democratic Pakistan forward is a labour of love for me.” (emphasis added). Yep, he was talking about a liberal economy, not a liberal society. Y’know, like he always has been and always will be.

Pro-business is not prowhat-you-do-is-your-ownbusines­s. Still, in line with this new version of Nawaz, he didn’t make much of an effort to clarify what he meant.

On to the electoral stuff. The old warning has been reversed — objects in the rear-view mirror may be further than they appear. The PML(N) may not have pulled away, but the PTI has fallen behind.

Now, there’s a new force in between — the independen­ts. Proof of something to everyone. For PTI, the rise of the independen­t is proof that, try as the PML(N) might, the thugs of Punjab can’t N-Leaguers — for whatever reason the party wasn’t able to give them a ticket, so they contested as independen­ts.

The results may say No: 1 and No: 2 are PML(N) and independen­t, but it’s really PML-N(1) and PML-N(2). You’d take it if you could get it.

The bad news is that a breakdown in party discipline can give candidates funny ideas come general election time. You don’t want everyone at the local level to have too much confidence they can win on their own — they may end up bolting for another party — you know which — in 2018.

Still, N-League has some room to manoeuvre. General elections may be about parties, but they’re also two-tiered: provincial and national.

To win at the centre, the N-League needs 80-90 per cent of Punjab, but to win at the provincial level it only needs more than half. Right now, the PML(N) has an eye-watering majority in the Punjab Assembly, a percentage dominance that exceeds the Punjab seat count of the party in the National Assembly.

That leaves the NLeague with room to play — potentiall­y diverting the battles and the fierce independen­t energies towards the provincial tier and keeping the national level insulated.

Which leaves civ-mil. The surrender may be greater than ever, but does it really matter just now?

On the external front, Nawaz was a one-trick pony: India. The foreign policy triumvirat­e may be India-Afghanista­n-US, but what do the other two matter?

On Afghanista­n, Nawaz has no great insight; on the US, there’s no real divergence from the boys. India was the difference externally and India has decided to go a bit loony.

So, even if he controls nothing, it’s not like Nawaz was about to get anything. In which case, may as well act like he’s getting along famously with the boys.

When the world is recoiling at the ugliness in India and India wasn’t about to give you anything, why not beat up on India too?

Internally, Nawaz’s greatest error has been glossed over and, as a bonus, he gets to share in the big, new glow.

Few hold it against Nawaz that he preferred talks over Zarb-i-Azb. Now, with the military hammering away at the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, Nawaz has been able to preside at a time of real calm. Thank you, Raheel Sharif.

Oh what a difference a few weeks can make. It’s good to be Nawaz again. By arrangemen­t with

Dawn

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