PTI supporters during an anti-government protest rally in Islamabad on May 11, 2014
Opposition parties have hindered democracy
in Pakistan by engaging in adversarial politics, instead of offering a credible
alternative and holding the ruling party accountable. This behaviour, however,
must be understood in the light of the wider political context in Pakistan.
The general election in May 2013 marked
the first successful transfer of power from one elected civilian government,
after the completion of its full term, to another elected government.
While the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz
(PMLN) rejoices in the knowledge that its role as a ‘patient’ opposition during
the previous government’s tenure has paid off, some parties in the current
opposition feel that the PMLN won an ill-gotten victory in last year’s
election.
The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) has
launched an anti-rigging campaign, claiming that election results were
manipulated and that the “public mandate has been snatched.”
Leaders of PMLQ and the Pakistan Awami
Tehreek (PAT) met in London earlier in June and agreed on a ten-point agenda
for protests against the government. Both parties claim the government has
failed to deliver good governance or protect the rights of the poor. Sheikh
Rasheed, head of his own Awami Muslim League (AML), has also agreed to support
this alliance.
The unfortunate shooting by the Punjab
Police against PAT workers in Model Town Lahore has added fuel to the fires
already being lit by the opposition parties. The incident has further
encouraged unity amongst unlikely allies.
The aforementioned parties altogether hold
only 37 seats in the National Assembly. This leads one to speculate around the
reaction of the largest opposition party, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP).
Syed Khursheed Ahmed Shah, the Leader of
the Opposition in the National Assembly and a senior PPP leader, has stated
that it is the democratic right of every party to protest government action
which it considers wrong.
But are the opposition parties merely
protesting to hold the government accountable?
Or are they gearing up to topple the government
and derailing democracy by being overly confrontational?
Should we sympathise with Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif when he implores opposition parties to be patient, and let his
government complete its tenure?
This article is an attempt to seek answers
to these questions through a historical examination of the performance of
opposition parties in Pakistan in five phases since 1970: the Bhutto years,
1970-1977; the Zia interlude, 1977-1988; the democratic interregnum, 1988-1999;
the Musharraf era, 1999-2008 and the transition to democracy, 2008 onwards.
I will show that opposition parties have
hindered democracy in Pakistan by engaging in adversarial politics, instead of
offering a credible alternative and holding the ruling party accountable.
This behaviour, however, must be
understood in the light of the wider political context in Pakistan. Unbalanced
civil-military relations, rampant constitutional engineering, and
confrontational relations between the president and the prime minister, have
shaped the incentive structures of individual politicians – be they in the
opposition or the government – to treat their role in parliament as a way to
provide patronage to their constituency instead of shaping national policy.
The lack of issue-based politics coupled
with the inability of the ruling parties to accept the rightful role of the
opposition in parliament has inhibited the development of mature and
responsible opposition forces in Pakistan.
The Bhutto years
After the loss of East Pakistan and
General Yahya Khan’s resignation in 1971, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto emerged as the
president and civilian martial law administrator. His party, PPP, won almost 60
per cent of seats in the constituent assembly.
The traditional political opposition to
Bhutto comprised of powerful elite groups of businessmen, industrialists,
landlords, bureaucrats and army officers. Landed elites from Punjab and Sindh
propelled this opposition and founded the United Democratic Front (UDF) under the
leadership of Pir Pagara.
The UDF represented the Muslim League
factions, (Convention Muslim League, the Pagara Muslim League), the leftist
National Awami Party (NAP), religious parties such as Jamaat-e-Islami (JI),
Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI) and the Pakistan Democratic Party (PDP).
Left to right: Chaudhry Fazal Elahi, Sheikh Mujibur Rehman and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
This was an ideologically disparate group,
united only in its revulsion for Bhutto and his politics. It also had little
strength in parliament, and was rendered ineffective due to its internal
divisions. The opposition, therefore, resorted to making contemptuous
accusations against Bhutto to publically humiliate him.
Bhutto’s political strategy was to keep
this opposition immobilised by exploiting its disunity. He also used
strong-handed tactics to limit the political space available to the opposition
parties to exist. For example, in 1974, he amended the Political Parties Act to
legalise the dissolution of a political party for a treasonable offence. Under
this act, he banned the NAP and imprisoned its leaders.
Not only did Bhutto ensure that he
undermined the mass popularity of the opposition, he used the judiciary to
selectively target their members. White papers issued by the government of
General Ziaul Haq have documented the use of Bhutto’s Federal Security Forces
to harass, abduct and torture opposition leaders.
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Bhutto’s political strategy was to keep
this opposition immobilised by exploiting its disunity.
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Prior to the election in 1977, the
Pakistan National Alliance (PNA) was formed to oppose the PPP. Quite like the UDF,
it consisted of nine political parties holding secular, leftist and Islamist
views.
When eleven PPP candidates were returned
to the National Assembly uncontested, even before the first votes were cast,
the PNA accused the PPP of committing blatant electoral fraud. The alliance
also boycotted the National Assembly election in Balochistan, and those for the
four provincial assemblies.
As a result, the PPP handily won more than
two-thirds majority in both the National Assembly and the provincial assemblies.
Refusing to accept these election results, the PNA launched a countrywide
protest campaign against what it deemed was an illegitimate PPP government.
These protests escalated into intense street violence – brutal confrontations
between protesters and security forces – and resulted in mass arrests of PNA
workers.
The rare display of unity by religious
party workers, students and political activists – financially supported by
shopkeepers and traders – forced Bhutto to enter into talks with the PNA. But failure
to reach consensus in a timely manner led General Ziaul Haq to launch Operation
Fair Play and impose martial law on July 5, 1977.
Head of Functional Muslim League Pir Pagaro talking to media men at the Karachi Press Club in 1977
Military interlude under Zia
General Zia-ul-Haq reneged on his promise
to hold elections twice (in 1977 and 1979) under the pretext that the process
of accountability had to be completed, and Pakistan had to be put on a firm
economic footing before a new National Assembly could be elected. During this
time, he continued to impose martial law, banning all political activity.
The PNA had initially welcomed the
postponement of elections because it was ill-prepared and fearful of Bhutto’s
popularity among the masses. PNA’s own support base had dwindled after it
partnered with Zia’s illegitimate military government. The alliance was also
considerably weakened by internal rifts, resulting in its break-up. Only JI and
Pagara Muslim League continued to collaborate with the Zia regime.
Another realignment of political forces,
however, resulted in an alliance between erstwhile rivals - the PPP and some
PNA parties including the JUI, Tehreek-e-Istiqlal (TI) and NDP. This alliance,
formed in February 1981, came to be known as the Movement for the Restoration
of Democracy (MRD) and saw the military as its principle antagonist.
The MRD aimed at bringing an end to
martial law, restoring the 1973 constitution, and holding parliamentary
elections to transfer power to elected representatives. The MRD clashed
violently, with the Zia regime in the province of Sindh and was suppressed
brutally. Nonetheless, the protests, which had received international
attention, made it difficult for Zia to rescind his promise to hold elections.
A woman activist of the PPP’s student-wing, the PSF, clashes with the police during a rally against Zia’s draconian laws, Lahore, 1981
Finally, in 1985, elections were held on a non-party basis, but not before the constitution had been amended to give the president the power to dissolve the National Assembly under Article 58, Section 2b. Furthermore, Zia waived the conditions that barred MRD politicians from participating in the elections.
In the absence of political parties, local
influence, ability to provide patronage and links with the bureaucracy emerged
as the deciding factors for an electoral win. The prime minister, instead of
serving as the head of the government, emerged as a broker between the Official
Parliamentary Group (OPG) and General Zia-ul-Haq. The party-less foundation for
a weakened parliament meant that there was no real parliamentary opposition
during this time.
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Both Khan and Sharif sought her (Benazir
Bhutto) support on the issue - the latter needed legislative votes to rescind
the amendment and the former needed to ensure the support of the opposition in
case of a confidence vote against him.
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The MRD, which had opposed the Zia regime,
was despondent with this turn of events. Despite incurring huge losses at the
hands of the military regime, it was entirely bypassed in the civilianisation
of the regime. It was further enervated by internal dissension. Many party
cadres defected in order to contest elections.
Disillusionment among its ranks prevented
the opposition from taking any imaginative initiative for having any role in
setting the new rules of the game.
The democratic interregnum
Benazir waves to the crowd from a bogie of a train during her 1988 election campaign
The return of parliamentary politics in
1988, although to be celebrated, was overshadowed by the legacy of 11 years of
military rule and the constitutional changes made by the Zia regime. The “58
2(b) system”, legitmised through the Eighth Amendment, favoured the president
by limiting the powers of the prime minister.
After the 1988 election, the opposition
viewed the Eighth Amendment as a counterweight to the PPP as the largest party
in the National Assembly. The dismissal of the PPP government in 1990 convinced
the then opposition, Islami Jamhoori Ittehad (IJI), that it needed the
president’s support and, therefore, the Eighth Amendment to fulfill its agenda.
Benazir Bhutto, in her role as opposition
leader in 1993, shrewdly exploited the differences between President Ghulam
Ishaq Khan and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on the Eighth Amendment. Both Khan
and Sharif sought her support on the issue - the latter needed legislative
votes to rescind the amendment and the former needed to ensure the support of
the opposition in case of a confidence vote against him.
In 1996, President Farooq Leghari, who
owed his election as the head of state to Benazir Bhutto and had condoned the
corruption and the misrule of her regime, was compelled to act against her to
secure his own authority. Sharif, as the leader of the opposition, assured
Leghari of his support if the president used his powers to dismiss the
government. Hence, Sharif’s election in 1997 owed partially to Leghari’s
presidential powers and administrative support in the electoral campaign.
Any accommodation between PPP and PMLN was
inhibited by two other factors: First, the inability of mainstream parties to
win absolute majorities necessitated the formation of governments in the center
and the provinces with help from political parties that did not necessarily
have the same ideologies or policy programmes as the two big parties.
The federalist framework further
exacerbated this situation by giving the political parties regional identities
– with the PPP seen as a Sindhi party and PMLN as a Punjabi one.
During her first term, Benazir Bhutto
spent a huge amount of state resources to exert authority over the Punjab
provincial government, which was led by Sharif. In return, the Punjab
government played up regional sentiments and glorified Sharif as a proponent of
Punjabi identity and interests against a federal government led by a Sindhi
woman.
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Benazir Bhutto, in her role as opposition
leader in 1993, shrewdly exploited the differences between President Ghulam
Ishaq Khan and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on the Eighth Amendment.
________________________________________________________________
Simultaneously, the mismanagement of
Mohajir-Sindhi tensions undermined PPP’s coalition with the Mohajir Qaumi
Movement (MQM), strengthening the opposition’s call for a no-confidence motion
against Benazir Bhutto.
Although the motion was defeated, those
years were a period of intense rivalry, demonstrated by rampant horse-trading
and the opposition’s launching of Operation Midnight Jackal with the help of
the army and the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to overthrow the PPP
government.
Nawaz Sharif as PM poses for a picture with the Pakistan cricket team that won the 1992 Cricket World Cup.
Secondly, ham-handed attempts to retain
control over the resources of the state by the government gave the opposition
parties enough opportunity to destabilise the government by publicly airing
accusations of corruption, nepotism and horse-trading. In fact, the tussle
between the IJI/PMLN and PPP took on the character of a personal vendetta between
Bhutto and Sharif. Both parties also displayed their intolerance for each other
by boycotting and disrupting National Assembly sessions, and through street
agitation, including train marches and wheel jam strikes.
As ruling parties, both the PPP and the
PMLN used the state apparatus to harass and arrest opposition leaders and
activists and file corruption cases against them.
The skewed institutional division of
powers and the immensely antagonistic nature of party politics during this
decade was especially debilitating because it was exploited by the president
and the army to perpetuate the 58 2(b) system. The president maintained total
authority and the army retained the option to manage political affairs
indirectly.
The Musharraf era
President Musharraf with coalition partners in 2002
General Pervez Musharraf’s imposition of
martial law in 1999 led to the persecution of many senior politicians on
corruption and sedition charges, thereby crushing both PPP and PMLN and
rendering them virtually leaderless.
Sharif was indicted for his role in hijacking
Musharraf’s plane and exiled to Saudi Arabia, while corruption charges forced
Benazir Bhutto to reside in Dubai. Musharraf, therefore, succeeded in removing
any threat of a meaningful opposition to his military rule.
In 2002, he began the process of civilianising
his regime. He promulgated the Legal Framework Order (LFO) in August 2002,
substantially increasing the president’s powers under 58 2(b) and in the
appointment of governors, judges, chiefs of army staff and the election
commission. He also facilitated the creation of PMLQ with the help of the ISI
and the National Accountability Bureau (NAB), which armtwisted politicians from
PPP and PMLN to defect and join PMLQ.
Despite these efforts, the 2002 election
produced a hung parliament with PMLQ unable to win a bare majority. At this
time, the anti-defection clause was temporarily suspended to let members of the
opposition to cross-over to the governing party and add to its strength.
The PPP and the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal
(MMA) formed the opposition in the National Assembly. For nearly a year, both
parties vociferously protested against the LFO, and frustrated the government’s
efforts to make it a part of the constitution.
Musharraf conceded to the opposition’s
demands presented to him by the MMA, that he would relinquish the post of the
Chief of Army Staff (COAS) and seek a vote of confidence for his presidency.
The first concession was shrewdly circumvented by the government as Musharraf
continued to serve as the army chief till December 2007.
Three important factors about
government-opposition relations concern the wider political context at the
time.
First, the legal procedure to ascertain
the leader of the opposition was never followed by the Musharraf government.
Although PPP was the larger party in parliament, the Musharraf government
started to recognise MMA as the main opposition, and Maulana Fazlur Rehman as
the Leader of the Opposition. Political analysts have commented that this was a
deliberate attempt to confirm that radical Islamist groups were gaining
political ground in Pakistan, thus securing American support for a military-led
administration in Pakistan during the War on Terror.
Second, the MMA itself was an alliance of
six religious parties divided by ideological, political and organisational
differences. Their disunity, and therefore, ineffectiveness as opposition
became apparent in Musharraf’s presidential re-election bid in Oct 2007.
While JI legislators were in favour of
resigning and depleting the electoral college, JUI colluded with the ruling
party to undo the impact of JI’s startegy Similarly, PPP also did not protest
to Musharraf’s re-election bid because it was in secret talks with him for the
promulgation of the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO), which would clear
the party leaders from corruption charges.
Third, despite maintaining the façade of
being an opposition through protests, street agitation against the LFO, Women’s
Protection Bill and declaration of Emergency in 2007, Islamist parties were
never ideologically opposed to a military-led government.
For the first time in decades, these
parties had tasted power by forming the provincial governments in Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan and were not going to squander this opportunity by
destabilising Musharraf’s regime.
Also, JI, JUI and the military had shared
interest in maintaining Pakistan’s status as an ideological state and to
emphasise India as an existential threat. All this boiled down to one thing:
while the parliament was reduced to a mere rubber-stamp for approving
presidential orders, there was no real opposition to check the excesses of the
government.
Transition to democracy.
Prime Minister of Pakistan & President PML(N) Muhammad Nawaz Sharif taking Oath as Prime Minister from President Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari.
The 2008 election was held while Musharraf was still the president of Pakistan. It was nevertheless, contested by both PPP and PMLN though parties such as PTI, JI and Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party (PKMAP) boycotted the election.
Both PPP and PMLN returned to the
political forefront after having signed the Charter of Democracy in 2006. Their
cooperation for the good of a democratic Pakistan was viewed as a tremendously
positive step, given the adversarial politics of the previous decade.
In an unexpected turn of events, erstwhile
rivals PPP and PMLN formed a coalition government, united in their effort to
remove Musharraf from power. After accomplishing this goal in August 2008, the
two parted ways over disagreement on how and when to reinstate Chief Justice
Iftikhar Chaudhry.
Being the second largest party in
parliament, PMLN opted to lead the opposition. Later, in 2011, another
realignment of interests occurred, when PMLQ and PPP entered into a coalition
in the federal government, with Chaudhry Pervez Ellahi changing roles from the
Leader of the Opposition to the Deputy Prime Minister of Pakistan; a position
that does not exist constitutionally.
These developments notwithstanding, the
13th National Assembly proved to be an unprecedented forum for cooperation and
political unanimity between the opposition and the treasury benches.
The landmark 18th Amendment changed,
revised, deleted 97 articles of the Constitution (out of a total of 280
articles). Most importantly, it rescinded the 17th Amendment, devolved powers
to the provinces and unanimously restored the parliamentary character of the
constitution. Another important achievement of bipartisan consensus was the
20th amendment which paved the way for a consensus appointment of a caretaker
government in the centre and the provinces to oversee future polls.
To its credit, the ruling party made an
effort to provide the opposition with political space to carry out its
functions. The appointment of the Leader of the Opposition as head of the
Public Accounts Committee for the first time was hailed as a major step towards
deepening the possibility of democratic oversight. Moreover, legislators from
the opposition benches were elected chairpersons of parliamentary standing
committees in accordance with their numerical strength in parliament.
The opposition, in turn, also behaved
constructively in the parliament using appropriate means to scrutinise
government actions. Free and Fair Election Network (FAFEN), an Islamabad-based
independent observer of parliamentary and electoral activities, notes that PMLN
asked 9,903 questions in the National Assembly, which is 62 per cent of the
total questions asked in the house. PMLN’s share of the total Call Attention
Notices moved in the House was 34 per cent. Of the 94 legislators who introduced
different motions under the parliamentary rules, 49 belonged to PMLN.
PMLN remained committed to function as a
government-in-waiting while the PPP government finished its full five-year
term. But an International Crisis Group report (2013) notes that PMLN gave up
the idea of forming a shadow government, claiming that the party’s members felt
insecure over the choice of shadow ministers that could reveal the leadership’s
actual cabinet choices after coming to power.
While PMLN did hold PPP accountable in
parliament, it did not offer any counter-proposals, feeding into the perception
that opposition parties in Pakistan oppose the ruling party for the sake of
opposition, instead of taking legislative work seriously.
Even though the PMLN leadership claims to
have maintained a conciliatory attitude to ensure the “survival of the system”,
Babar Ayaz (writing in his April 1, 2013 column in Daily Times) has noted that
the media described the PMLN negatively as a “loyal” or “friendly” opposition,
cooperating with the treasury benches because of some underhand deal.
This kind of unconstructive critique from
the media reveals that as a people we are unable to recognise the behaviour of
a responsible opposition.
Coalition leaders meeting after Pervez Musharraf resigned in 2008.
The above account of the historical role
of the opposition in Pakistan serves to highlight a number of important trends.
First, opposition forces in Pakistan have
been most active prior to and directly after an election. Before the election,
opposition parties have formed grand alliances such as PNA and IJI, mostly
discounting ideological differences for the short-term goal of dislodging the
ruling party. This is a clear manifestation of expediency trumping ideological
and issue-based discourse.
In the post-election period, opposition
parties have not easily consented to the electoral results. Losing parties have
always taken to the street, protesting the legitimacy of the elections.
Unfortunately, given that elections have taken place under military regimes, or
under caretaker governments formed by the presidents exercising authority under
58 2(b), there is some truth to these charges.
Once elected, opposition parties have set
about to destabilise the government and bring about its downfall as rapidly as
possible, under the pretext that it was illegitimately elected.
This especially holds true for the 1990s,
when instead of holding the government accountable through oversight procedures
or presenting the public with an alternative set of policies, opposition
parties chose to support the president’s initiative, backed by the army, to
dissolve the National Assembly and dismiss the elected government.
This undermined democracy because it
abruptly interrupted the electoral cycle. It also created a perverse set of
incentives that gave opposition parties an anti-incumbency advantage in a
largely two-party system thereby limiting voter choice.
______________________________________________________________
The average politician is motivated by
local issues and is disinterested in legislating on national issues. This
politician also does not join a political party inspired by its programmatic
agenda or ideology, but by its chances of winning an election.
______________________________________________________________
On the floor of the parliament, opposition
parties have derailed government attempts to pass important legislation. This
explains why rescinding the Eighth Amendment has taken more than two decades
since it was enacted.
Instead of using questions, and other
means of debate and deliberation, opposition parties have resorted to fiery
rhetoric that has often degenerated into inappropriate behaviour, unbecoming of
the country’s elected representatives. Outside the parliament, opposition
parties have indulged in street agitation, mobilising mass support through
rallies, long marches, sit-ins, or wheel jam strikes to protest against the
government policies and actions.
In a sense, opposition parties do not
break out of campaign mode. This is an observation made by economist Madiha
Afzal, of the Brookings Institution, in an article (published in The Express
Tribune on December 26, 2013) describing the modus operandi of PTI’s
opposition. Not only are these agitations displays of grassroots support for
the opposition but these also, importantly, show a lack of public support for
the government’s agenda. Moreover, the government’s inability to effectively
quell these protests and instead resort to mass arrests, lathi-charge, use of
tear gas and in some extreme cases straight firing on protestors, only
highlighing its incompetence in maintaining law and order.
While protest and agitation in and of
themselves are not negative, and often have been warranted, I take issue with
the instability they create in a country where law enforcement agencies are
institutionally weak.
They also create the perception of
irreconcilable differences between the government and the opposition that can
only be resolved through drastic action such as regime change.
Finally, mobilising the masses purely
through negative rhetoric and no actual discussion of policy alternatives, only
serves to halt debate and hinder action that could potentially alleviate the
real problems of governance experienced by the citizens.
D-Chowk in Islamabad before Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) rally against alleged rigging in the 2013 general elections, May 2014.
Hence, at first glance opposition parties
have behaved in a way that appears to be detrimental to democratic transition
in Pakistan.
Motivated by expediency and short-term
gain combined with an inability to concede a loss in election, they
purposefully create instability through their protests and agitation.
Are we being unfair in our expectation
that opposition parties be mature and constructive critics of the government
when the roots of democracy in Pakistan are fragile and underdeveloped?
Opposition parties, just like the ruling
parties, do not exist in a vacuum and have been shaped and moulded by the
prevalent exigencies of the political system.
Repeated military intervention and
manipulation of the Constitution, through inclusion of amendments empowering
the president’s office, have reduced the parliament’s institutional supremacy
as an organ of the state that is supposed to check the executive actions, and
legislate.
This has had two detrimental effects:
First, the parties in government have been
tremendously insecure and have entered office on a defensive footing. They have
been unable to insure the rights of an opposition to exist, or provide the
intelligence it needs to function as a watchdog, and criticise government’s
policies and actions without fear of reprisal.
_______________________________________________________________
Opposition parties have behaved in a way
that appears to be detrimental to democratic transition in Pakistan. Motivated
by expediency and short-term gain combined with an inability to concede a loss
in election, they purposefully create instability through their protests and
agitation.
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Past governments have blatantly misused
state resources to undermine opposition forces in Pakistan. The parliament is
ideally supposed to embody the diversity of opinion within society. In order to
safeguard this pluralism, the opposition is an indispensable component of
democracy. It should be allowed to offer voters a credible alternative to the
government in office.
This, however, should be done by offering
counter-proposals on policy instead of directly hindering government action and
placing a gridlock on the political process. Second, clientelism has become
entrenched as an organising principle of political exchange in Pakistan.
My interviews with politicians prior to
the election in 2008 revealed the primary incentive behind contesting an
election was to gain access to state resources in the form of development funds
so that one may deliver patronage to the constituents.
This harks back to the nonpartisan
election in 1985. The then Prime Minister Mohammed Khan Junejo instituted the
five-point programme, which allotted development funds directly to the members
of the National Assembly and the four provincial assemblies.
The popularity of this programme
encouraged subsequent PPP and PML governments to adopt similar programmes such
as the People’s Programme (1988-1990; 1993-1996) and Tameer-e-Watan Programme
(1990-1993).
This policy gave credence to the idea that
legislators are not just elected to represent the interests of the people in a
legislative assembly through deliberation and policymaking and through the
enactment of laws. Rather, the legislators also fulfill the responsibility of
development.
If one takes this argument to its logical
conclusion then being in the opposition means not having access to development
funds, thereby, creating an urgent need to return to power, so that one may
maintain, if not increase, local influence within a constituency.
This further implies that the average
politician is motivated by local issues and is disinterested in legislating on
national issues. This politician also does not join a political party inspired
by its programmatic agenda or ideology, but by its chances of winning an
election. Political parties, in turn, are interested in selecting those
candidates to run on their ticket who have enough political clout to sway the
vote in a given constituency.
As a result of this dynamic, issue-based
politics has never taken root in Pakistan.
Political parties exist as electoral
vehicles to mobilise public opinion through charismatic leadership or by
promising material incentives. Although party manifestos are disseminated,
clientelist politics does not necessitate that political parties actually
follow up on their policy platforms. Therefore, to expect that in the absence
of issue-based politics, opposition parties will serve as government in waiting
and form active shadow governments is unrealistic.
The public and media also need to have a
stake in the evolution of the opposition. Despite what precedent suggests,
cooperation is not always the result of shady political deals made in
smoke-filled rooms.
The relationship between government and
opposition parties in the 13th National Assembly should be lauded; PTI’s
engagement on domestic policy issues should be taken seriously, and the right
of the opposition parties to oversee the government’s performance should be
protected. The formation of grand alliances to topple the government, dharnas,
sit-ins and long marches and mobilising voter sentiments on non-policy issues
needs to be discouraged.
Opposition forces in Pakistan have a long
way to go before they can serve a mature and constructive role in parliamentary
politics. I, however, have argued that the behaviour of the opposition is based
on incentive structures, which have been shaped by a wider political context
that suffers from a deeper and more systemic malaise.
Ruling parties and society, therefore,
also need to be committed in recognising the rights and responsibilities of the
opposition forces in the country.