There is so much historical and sociological literature that talks about why men rebel and why people reject old parties and bring in new one. I am writing these lines with the assumption that a new party, new leadership with new ideas has finally emerged successful in the politics of Pakistan. However, this is not the assumption that a larger section of political analysts and commentators in the media take as valid. Their assertion is, ‘nothing has changed’ and ‘nothing will change’. They argue how Imran Khan can change Pakistan by enlisting the support of ‘electable’ dynastic political class.
Many of these arm-chair media ‘intellectuals’ have a flawed understanding of the feudal-agrarian class structure of Pakistan. They believe it has not changed, and it cannot change until we bring about land reforms, like India did by taking away lands and distributing it among the landless peasants. This is also the view of the old-fashioned, ideological socialists. The fact is that in the past seven decades, lot of changes have taken place in the agrarian economy — land and power relations at the grassroots level in rural society of Pakistan, which include fragmentation of land, the rise of mercantile bourgeoisie and rural middle class. Also, we see a discerning shift in the power of the urban centres that is likely to grow more.
The social and political competition among the dynastic political families has overtime empowered the common man, forcing them to bring development, and never taking the voters for granted. The national reach of the media and 11 general elections along with the local bodies’ polls have gradually created a space for political parties. If the dynastic political class could be so confident of its ‘secure’ social base of power, why would then they be scurrying for tickets — nomination — of more popular parties. It is the wave of the PTI and Imran Khan that has given a big margin of victory to the PTI candidates. The emergence of a credible leader and a reformist party is a big change, away from the dominant dynastic parties of old times.
This also puts a big burden on the Kaptaan and his party. People, having been deceived many times by the demagogic leaders, become sceptical of every well-intentioned, and honest leadership. This is the sentiment that prevails in Pakistan today. The problem with change is that it is path-dependent and generally incremental, while the public at large would like to see visible changes on the ground — a strategy that Mian Nawaz Sharif had for his re-election. However, the best contribution to change is finding that true path to progress, which involves allocating right resources, selecting right people for tasks and establishing clear responsibilities.
Reforming governance, education, health services, law and justice can produce immediate, visible effects on the lives of people. The real challenge is quality, speed, and kind of political goods that have to be delivered effectively.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 5th, 2018.
Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces.
COMMENTS (1)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ