The political vote trading has long been a major bane of our parliamentary system even with a law forbidding it being in place. Remember the 14th amendment to the Constitution? The amendment, brought by the heavy-mandated Nawaz Sharif government that came into being after the 1997 general elections, repealed the law that had allowed lawmakers to disagree to party policy during parliamentary voting and shift loyalty to any other party. But the amendment failed to prevent the formation of what was called the ‘like-minded group’ within the PML-N parliamentary party. Led by Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, the same like-minded group went on to become the PML-Q. With Pervez Musharraf, the military dictator, in the saddle in 1999, there was a new set of laws that also let a PPP-Patriot carved out of the PPP of Benazir Bhutto. Later, in 2011 the PML-Q had itself to face a breakaway faction by the name of ‘unification bloc’ that sided with the PML-N in the Punjab Assembly.
In focus now is the PTI — the party whose leader, now the country’s prime minister, had been bitterly critical of the ‘Chhaanga Maanga politics of the Sharifs’. It may well be a tit-for-tat reaction from the government to the opposition’s attempts at bringing change at the Senate helm, but it does not augur well for the future of politics and democracy in the country.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 2nd, 2019.
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