Party performance ‘disappoints’ Imran

Senior PTI leaders to convene session to deliberate strategy


Qamar Zaman December 07, 2015
The chairman (Imran Khan) is disappointed and concerned about the party’s performance. PHOTO: FILE

ISLAMABAD:


Still smarting from his party’s woeful showing in the third phase of local government polls that concluded on Saturday, a ‘disappointed’ Imran Khan convened an informal meeting of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leaders on Sunday to review election results.


“The chairman (Imran Khan) is disappointed and concerned about the party’s performance (in the third round of polls),” a PTI official aware of discussions in the meeting told The Express Tribune.

Ruling party, PTI in a close tangle

Imran is reported to have asked the party’s key organisers at a meeting in Bani Gala to present their reports about the local government polls, according to the official.

During Sunday’s session, the chairman discussed the reasons behind PTI’s poor performance in Karachi and Rawalpindi—the latter is a constituency which Imran represents in the National Assembly.

According to unofficial results, PTI’s arch-rivals Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) swept the third phase of local government elections in Punjab, including Rawalpindi. The ruling party had already swept the previous two rounds in addition to gaining a strong position in the Islamabad Capital Territory.

In Karachi, the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) is leading the hotly contested elections in the metropolis ahead of rivals Pakistan Peoples Party. To boost its chances, Imran’s party had allied itself with the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) in the city, but fell well short. Such was the failure of PTI and JI in Karachi that their respective city chiefs, Ali Zaidi of PTI and Hafiz Naeemur Rehman of JI, lost their respective elections.

Ambition aplenty: PTI leaders eye vacant ministerial, adviser slots

Following Sunday’s informal session, the party is expected to convene a formal session of senior leaders on Monday [today] in which several other important decisions would be decided.

“It will be a consultative session with senior leaders of the party,” the official added.

Intra-party polls

The upcoming PTI intra-party election is one of the key topics that is expected to be discussed in Monday’s session.

According to a PTI official, the party is expected to finalise a date for the elections and name an interim setup which will conduct the polls.

The PTI had already dissolved its core committee and key party positions, replacing elected office bearers with organisers, after a report by its election tribunal headed by Justice (retired) Wajihuddin Ahmed.

LG officials demand constitutional power



The PTI official added that after the interim setup is announced, party organisers are expected to relinquish their posts in order for them to partake in the intra-party elections.

Further, the party is expected to embark on a six-month membership drive ahead of the elections.

NA session strategy

As the National Assembly reconvenes for a new session on Monday [today], senior leaders of PTI deliberated upon their strategy in parliament.

Among the issues discussed during Sunday’s meeting, party leaders deliberated moving away from their popular refrain of electoral fraud to issue-based politics. However, the party is not expected to abandon its longstanding demands regarding deficiencies in the electoral process, focussing on incompetence of the Election Commission and provincial election commissioners.

PTI shifts its focus to national issues

Having already established contact with the Pakistan Peoples Party, the PTI will be focussing its efforts on opposing the government’s recent move to impose Rs40 billion in new taxes and for the privatisation of Pakistan International Airlines.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 7th,  2015.

COMMENTS (19)

bilal | 9 years ago | Reply MQM and PMLN trick worked. Make the first time voters so dis-allusion that they will never vote again... saying what is the point ! Pathetic critics here. This is what really explains why Pakistan continues to go in the gutter. Good and bad people, make the same decisions.
Ali S | 9 years ago | Reply @Asad: Any 'class' that has no interest in local bodies election is certainly not the 'educated class'. It's the only way to effectively govern densely populated urban areas and every major city in the world has it (even those in India). Local body elections are supposed to have a far more direct impact on the voter than national ones (which deal with macro issues) - so if PTI's 'educated class' is not interested in them, I think PTI has to reconsider what it defines as its 'educated class' (probably those who cry themselves hoarse singing praises of their Great Leader).
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