Let the games begin. Bilawal Bhutto Zardari spoke from his heart. Or rather, read from his heart the text of the emotional speech penned by one of his wordsmiths. These carefully calibrated words contained no new thoughts or ideas; they nurtured no new information and birthed no new sentiments or ideology. Yet, they carried within them a certain potency, a certain oomph hitherto unheard, unseen and unfelt. Yes, this day in that place, we finally grasped the contours of the counter-narrative — we finally glimpsed the emergence of the storyline that may delegitimise the deadly logic of terrorists and their do-nothing apologists.
Sounds too grand? Perhaps. Bilawal is still wet behind the ears. His party is drowning in scorn. PPP grandees have been exposed for the pygmies they are: venal, corrupt, visionless and incompetent. His grandfather built a juggernaut, his mother nourished it into a mega-force, but now six years and multiple self-wounds later, the party is a mere shell — rotting from inside and rusting from the outside. Once the only truly national political force, it today is a withered and shrivelled regional entity mocking its own being.
And here’s the unkindest cut of all: in today’s national discourse, the PPP is irrelevant. It does not count. It’s voice has no weight. Nobody cares what it says or — mostly — does not say. This is a shocking fall for a force which for decades defined the parameters of debate; a party which stood like a rock against the relentless pounding of the establishment only to stand up and fight again.
But not anymore. After three stints in power, the PPP has nothing to show for itself. The politics of martyrdom has run out of steam. The old PPP is nothing more than a shipwreck, without any treasure inside. If ever there was a time to salvage this wreckage and raise the Titanic; if ever there was a time to reinvent this sagging hulk and inject it with steroids — it is now.
This is precisely why the moment made the man. The moment to stand up and be counted; the moment to shun ambiguity, doublespeak and hypocrisy; and the moment to shed greys and don blacks or whites. And yes, the moment to call a terrorist a terrorist. In the battle for ideas, this is indeed a step in the right direction. Belated? Absolutely. Enough? Absolutely not. Sufficient to chart a new course for the beleaguered party? Never.
So, how do we then weigh the importance of what young Bilawal said from that protected rostrum? How do we take stock of his words and emotions; how do we separate the manufactured brand that he is from the real person that hides under the layers of legacy? The answer lurks somewhere deep inside him, hesitant to emerge from within the folds for fear of being torn asunder by its ferociously ambivalent contradictions. Who was that we saw on that rostrum — the manufactured brand fresh off the legacy assembly line, or a young man coming into his own? For now, it is hard to tell.
What is not hard to tell is the yawning vacuum at the core of our political discourse; a vacuum created by the electoral annihilation of the non-Right parties. Non-Right because there is no true Left; or even no true Centre-Left parties left in the arena. Political mongrels stalk the land. Bilawal and the ruin that he calls his party can do little at this stage. They had their innings and they blew it. When action was needed, they fought with words. When courage was needed, they fought with compromises. When clarity was needed, they fought with confusion. And when efficiency was needed, they fought with glorious incompetence.
Now the most Bilawal can do is to draw clear lines between appeasement and resolve, because this nation desperately needs a narrative that readies it for what lies ahead in the existential fight for the soul of Pakistan.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 29th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (14)
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I don't think that is fair to say. PPP can be blamed for a lot of wrongs, but at least they have their basic approach towards Taliban right. As a result, they and ANP got a lot of hits. This is not the case with present lot. I think it is important to appreciate that difference, notwithstanding the hatred towards PPP.
@x: no, they only condemn when in opposition. when in power, they sleep.
@mind control: clear on the enemy? only by words? 5 long years wasted when in power but giving loud speeches when in opposition. Irony!
where dead are living, Living are dead
@Ahmed: Were they condemning when in power?
I agree with mind control. PPP and ANP at least have the courage to name our enemy. Present rulers prefer to seem clueless, but are probably too timid to name, let alone condemn those butchering us. PTI is off course, perhaps unwittingly acting like the political arm of Taliban.
At least the PPP is clear about the identity of the enemy.
Can we say the same about everyone else? Is there any clarity on whose war is it?
PPP is dead wood. No Bilawal can rescue it, no full page ads can evoke sympathy for the PPP, no journalist can be impressed, only Fahd Hussain can waste his brains, no coals can reignite the embers of a fire that has been extinguished by nobody else than As if Ali Zardari. Pakistan has suffered for decades under Bhutto charisma. PPP ate into the vitals of the nation repeatedly. Liberal political revival can take place with some new leadership no not with Bhutto clan. Let this soil beget a new son.
Excellent. Well articulated, clear and totally right.
Dear ET team - I must digress with the latter part of Mr. Husain's analysis. He claims that no Leftist or even Left of Center party exists in the Pakistani political landscape. I must disagree. Firstly, it must be recognized that the old Manichean differences between Left and Right are hard to come by anywhere in the world. And having said that, the PTI has an economic vision that is fairly Center-Left. Their manifesto of a "welfare state" and their purported education policy et al are all pretty leftist in the strict Political Science sense. One could even argue that their anti-Imperial strand of foreign policy is in some senses pretty Center-Left as well. But at least on the internal policy front I consider the PTI to be just slightly Left of Center.
Kind regards,
and when the Nation finally get the chance to boot them out the Nation vote them in. Ironic, isn't it.
regards,
Weak piece. Pardon my french, but any average joe can stand up and read a written speech, given a few days prep time with good teachers. Condemning the Taliban, well the ANP and PPP did it for 5 years (and did nothing more!). The TTP scourge only increased during those 5 years. Basically the author is saying, Bilawal wants 5 more years to do following: condemn TTP and leave it that, who cares if they killed BB, its time to make money!
PS: PPP has in EVERY all party conference voted in favor of talks with TTP. That position did NOT change in Bilawals speech.
I will gleefully lay down my life than to vote for this son of a crook, or wen consider him as a ray of hope.