Subsequent events proved that this decision became highly controversial, starting with the scrutiny of nomination papers by returning officers. In Pakistan, members of the election commission, including its chairman, are drawn mainly from the judicator branch. There is no harm in this if this provision is revisited and membership of the commission is opened to other key branches of government, including the civil service, whose members could draw on their valuable field experience. In India, for instance, the chief election commissioner is generally a member of the civil service and is responsible for manning a huge and most complex exercise. The success of the Indian electoral process, to a great extent, owes itself to the hard work of two of its former chief election commissioners, TN Seshan and MS Gill.
The present system practiced in Pakistan of selection of names for the post of the chief election commissioner by the leader of the house and leader of the opposition points towards a culture of ‘politics of compromise' rather than a laid down, objective criterion to assess the credentials of persons considered suitable for this position. The reforms committee should look into this present practice.
The role of political parties is of key significance in electoral politics. The prevalent laws fall short in configuring a direct nexus of political parties with the electoral processes. As a result, we find a huge mushrooming of political parties. There are about 200 political parties registered with the election commission while just a dozen of them have a presence in parliament. Parties with no history of presence in parliament should be deregistered by the commission. They can, at best, form advocacy groups. Also, a threshold of minimum percentage of votes received out of the total votes cast in a particular province should be established as the benchmark for a party to exist. This will provide some space to regional parties. In all other cases, the parties should be given the option to merge with a larger political party in parliament or their elected members should be declared independents.
Political parties control the selection of candidates for elections. But who controls political parties? There is a need to bring under scrutiny the practice of officeholders within parties being elected unopposed. Also, the practice of giving ‘lifetime achievement awards' should be replaced with transparent, well-contested intraparty elections. In addition, the practice of a candidate contesting on more than one seat should be restricted as this is just a waste of resources.
The crunch lies on election day. We need to move swiftly towards introducing electronic voting machines to ensure transparency, fairness and efficiency while ruling out chances of bogus voting and ballot stuffing. This will also help in overcoming identification and transactional issues associated with a time consuming manual system. There could be security issues in the system, which could be backed up by a paper audit trail system, enabling simultaneous crosschecking of data.
The voting system also requires a thorough critique. Under the prevalent system, a candidate with just 35 per cent of votes may well make it to parliament. In two general elections held in the 1990s, parties securing less percentage of aggregate votes secured a larger share of seats and formed the government. In developed political systems, proportional representation has been the answer to this conundrum. Are we ready to consider such a system here? The proposed committee should be looking into the pros and cons of such a proposal.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 15th, 2014.
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I think the most important part of the article was the electoral reforms within the political parties through proper election under neutral companies (specialty trained to conduct the election) You can not change the electoral system with out up bringing of the genuine elected lot, elected through the intra party elections of the political parties. Imran khan
The writer has rightly claimed that he had given a timely call to the concerned towards the basic flaw in the electoral system and if attention had been paid to it the devastating results which followed could have been avoided.As such his opinion that we should follow the Indian Model in this regard duly carries a weight...But still the question remains as how we are going to handle the real crisis that is the crisis of trust?Almost all the institutions have lost their credibility with respect to electoral process. These are individuals only that we trust upon.now which means that taken from any strata of life the members of the election commission should comprise of a team of competent men and women of integrity to be duly supported by the civil society.
Pakistan's electoral system definitely needs Reforms . Scores of parties exist with one name , people are confused with so many Muslim leagues , even Ejaz ul Haque has formed a Muslim league in his fathers name , pml (z) , Zia , whose one time qualification was that he dismissed Muslim league Govenment headed by late prime minister Junejo . Sheikh Rashid has one Muslim league , no one knows who are the other members . The election commission like a Robot machine keep churning out such registrations without sense of application .
Now is the time to shift to electronic voting . It will not only reduce cost in terms of stationary , its storage , transportation to staff to mange the exercise but also eliminate chances of bogus voting .Selection of election commissioners should also be opened up . We had been having the chief election commissioners from the judiciary since 1977 yet there were serious charges of rigging each time . Imagine the former Chief Election Commisioner during 2013 elections could not ensure polling at umpteen stations in Karachi , his home town , where he was present on the day . Nobody question the competence of retired judges in their own field , but conducting an election is a Hughes exercise which requires different training and knack .
The Article contains very good suggestions. I will add just one more: The returning officers and polling staff should not be taken from the government employees. They should be borrowed from private businesses or from general public with good education, or retired government or private employees. Serving government employees are always influenced by the fear of censure by their bosses, if they don't oblige certain politicians.