It is important to remember that all votes are equal regardless of whether they are cast by a member of the urban elite, or by a landless wageworker in the countryside. People have different experiences and interests, all of which go into shaping individual electoral choices. Elections serve to aggregate these individual choices, channeling them through the party system to ensure the formation of a government that is as representative as possible. In theory at least, voters occupy a pluralistic space in which different interests compete with one another on a level playing field. By that logic, there is little to distinguish “burgers” from their less privileged counterparts; all citizens have a right to have their voices heard, and to participate in the electoral process.
Put in this perspective, it is undeniably the case that terms like “burger”, which seek to belittle the political involvement of the urban elite, are unhelpful and should be avoided. However, to respond to this name-calling by blaming the opposition for being uneducated or ignorant is to perpetuate the exact same fallacy. When sections of the urban elite start to blame the electorate for the PTI’s loss, attributing the PML-N’s victory to rural voters who simply do not know better, or to urban traders who simply do not want change, they essentially question the right of those sections of the populace to express their own political preferences. One might argue that education and wealth lead to better informed voters, but that would be an incredibly presumptuous argument to make; you do not need a college education to know if you need roads, schools, and health care, and it is far from clear that the educated, urban elite have always made progressive political choices. After all, they were one of the main sources of support for the Musharraf dictatorship in its early years.
One of the problems here is the excessive emphasis the electoral process places on individual choice; change is believed to be guaranteed through the simple act of making a decision and casting vote. However, the reality is that the act of voting does not entitle any voter to a result of their choosing; compromise is an intrinsic and unavoidable part of the democratic process.
The emphasis placed on individual choice also obscures, to an extent, the role that broader social formations like class play in the electoral arena. After all, despite the democratic emphasis on pluralism, the fact remains that some voices are louder than others, and not all interests are equal. Amidst all the insults and accusations being traded by partisans on different sides of the political divide, the real irony lies in the fact that the PML-N and the PTI, as well as the other mainstream parties, all remain bastions of privilege, elite interest and, increasingly, middle class aspiration. For the most part, the parties themselves continue to be dominated by the propertied classes, with powerful local politicians garnering political support by dispensing patronage to captive constituents lacking alternative means through which to acquire public goods and services from the state. In the realm of policy, there is a clear consensus about the need for free market economic reform, with emphasis placed on the need to create an environment more conducive to the pursuit of profit. Those without businesses to run, capital to invest, or skills to exploit, are to be left to the tender mercies of the market, awaiting the fruits, if any, of trickle-down growth. In this entire discourse, the interests of the subordinate classes remain marginal to the concerns of mainstream politics. Roti, kapra, and makaan have been replaced by bullet trains, metro buses and drones.
At the time if its formation in the late 1960s, the PPP articulated a political vision that promised a radical transformation of the Pakistani society. Drawing on the language and symbolism of socialism, riding a wave of anti-Ayub Khan sentiment and explicitly identifying itself with the working classes of Pakistan, the PPP positioned itself as a party committed to smashing the traditional political, social and economic order. Despite its clearly mixed record once in government, the party at least came to represent, if only symbolically, a progressive alternative to the status quo. The elections of 1970 were significant not just because they were the first to feature universal adult suffrage, but also because they were characterised by a clear differentiation between the Right and the Left, the Old and the New.
The same cannot be said of 2013. Class is a category that cuts across the urban and the rural, the educated and the illiterate, with property ownership and income continuing to differentiate between the politically dominant minority whose interests are represented by the mainstream parties, and the subordinate majority. The lack of ideological difference between the major parties in 2013, at least on issues of economic justice and redistribution, poses important questions about the quality of our democracy in terms of its representative character. It also means that, in the grander scheme of things, the “burgers” and their counterparts facing off in Lahore can rest assured that whatever the outcome of their protests, the interests of the elite are unlikely to be endangered.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 18th, 2013.
COMMENTS (8)
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The 'upper' classes should realize that their accumulated wealth and power is seriously endandgered if the 'lower' classes do not have equal access to services,resources and governance. Already much of the upper class power is undercut due to the violent acts by sections of the 'lower' class in the form of the Taliban. Enjoying everyday life freely has been the privilege of the upper classes. But everyday life has become more risky for the upper classes as well as the other classes. Most urban Pakistanis are either themsleves the victim of a serious crime or have a close relative/friend who is. It is instructive to note how the height of bungalow walls have been raised in the past thirty odd years, or how many upper class families have security guards accompanying them in the cars. These are some of the signs of the loss of privilege of the upper classes and the loss is directly related to the feelings of inequality, deprivation and hopelessness among the unfortunate 'lower' classes. Inequaltity must be erradicated before it transforms into the radical demand to distribute the wealth of the upper classes among the 'lower' classes. Beware!
You seem to make a sound argument but the essence seems to be lost in your usage of heavy vocabulary. Just an honest advice, your opinions will be much more articulate if it is explained in simpler terms.
It is true that in most of our electorate, the decision to vote an 'electable' is based around a certain cult of personality and/or whether that person has been presnt in local weddings or funerals. There seem to be no class cleavages or voting pattern alignment. Rural class keeps on voting the rich property owners in expectation of a different result.
Although the next election are bound to be much different from traditional trends as we are much more likely to vote retrospectively in the future.
Who says a Dictator is bad when the country's economy is improving under his rule!!
They are protesting against the rigging that happened and are taking a principled stand. All the name calling and blame game was done on the election night when results began to come out. Its about getting robbed of your right that is the issue, don't twist it. Everyone knows what role Patronage plays in politics and how PMLn heavily recruited these electables which is undemocratic on its own but Protesters for the most part have not dredged that line to call that unfair etc. Their demand is simple" we have proof that there was rigging and steps were taken to marginalize our voice(votes)." It makes little sense that PTI emerges as the 2nd largest political force in Karachi and for that matter Pakistan and wins so little seats.
The thing with the urban elite coming into play is not really that they want their candidate to win but the open rigging they have witnessed and the fact that a candidate should be disqualified even if he rigged a single vote. It is pretty evident who rigged the elections and who is involved in this mafia. It is just people do not want the corrupt system to continue.
A very scholarly Op Ed by the ET. I agree with you "it is far from clear that the educated, urban elite have always made progressive political choices. After all, they were one of the main sources of support for the Musharraf dictatorship in its early years." The fact is not only most of the PTI supporters but IK himself endorsed Mush’s dictatorship against the elected govt. While the TTP and other extremist killers kept the three liberal parties away from the elections still PTI could not secure majority even in a single province. They are going crazy not to accept their mediocre performance and forget the fact that there are a lot more Urdu medium poor Pakistanis than the urban elites.
Both the vote of an urban elite and a rural villager are equally important, but what is even more important is that both votes genuinely belong to the person on whose name it has been cast and cast of free will. There is sufficient evidence that neither is the case for a large majority of votes cast in this election. This election needs to be completely declared null and void, and a new one held with a modern system not dependent on corrupt Punjab govt employees and Punjab police.
Nicely put. The vote is given in the hope that the rich guy elected would do something for the betterment of the poor guy. That is how the system is structured to work and it would if the other organs ( the bureaucrat, the judiciary, law enforcement, the media, the clergy and the armed forces ) that make up a democratic society apart from the politician, also did their share.........sadly none of them do.