Tug of war


The tug of war between the government and the opposition is getting more and more intense

And it’s not at all a healthy contest — for either side, or for democracy, or the country and its people

Foul play is rife — evident in both the Daska bye-election on February 19 and the March 3 Senate vote

Standards of political morality have fallen further

Departure from democratic norms is no big deal

Blame-game is pretty customary

Principles are only being followed so long as they make political sense

Legitimacy? Who cares! Victory at all costs is the motto

What matters is the end result

Means are meaningless

The government has to avenge the March 3 shock

And the combined opposition, i

e

the PDM, is aiming to pile on the agony so as to weaken the government further

Senate is the battleground yet again, and the event is the election of chairman, scheduled for March 12

The opposition has once again fielded the tried and tested Yousaf Raza Gillani in its bid to dethrone the incumbent, Sadiq Sanjrani

The joint opposition enjoys a three-member edge over the government and its allies in the 100-strong upper house

If all the members vote on the party line, Gillani should remove Sanjrani from the helm

The equation is as simple as that

But mind you it’s going to be a secret ballot

Who knows it’s time for the PDM to take the shock! Secret ballot has spurred both camps into activity, which may not necessarily stay within the limits of legitimacy and legality

Acrimony has already breached the bounds of decency

Intense debates are tolerable — perhaps verbal salvos too

But the political duel has turned physical

Only recently, a couple of senior PML-N leaders, allegedly attacked by dozens of PTI supporters, had to test their physical strength too, even though democracy is all about numerical strength

And these fights for pure political gains are sold to the voters as holy encounters — between good and bad, vices and virtues, the pious and the sinner

Allegations and counter-allegations have confused the masses, in which the reality has gone missing like a needle in a haystack

Coming back to the approaching Senate chairman election, the result is bound to add to the hostility — and thus the political chaos in the country

No side will accept the other’s victory as legitimate

All efforts will be made to turn it controversial

And then there will be re-polling in Daska bye-election, on March 18, in the same charged-up environment

All this forms the build-up to PDM’s “long march” against the government scheduled to start from March 26

That the country cannot afford such hostility cannot be over-emphasised

The government and the opposition should come to the dialogue table and start off with working on a package of electoral reforms, besides making practical contribution towards its implementation in order to ensure supremacy of the vote in line with the Constitution

Given that the government has a bigger stake in the system, the PM should take the initiative and offer dialogue to the opposition

Published in The Express Tribune, March 11th, 2021

Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces



Date:12-Mar-2021 Reference:View Original Link