PPP's Yousuf Raza Gilani tenders resignation as Senate opposition leader

Published January 31, 2022
Former prime minister and Leader of the Opposition in the Senate Yousuf Raza Gilani speaks during the Senate session on Monday. — DawnNewsTV
Former prime minister and Leader of the Opposition in the Senate Yousuf Raza Gilani speaks during the Senate session on Monday. — DawnNewsTV

PPP leader Yousuf Raza Gilani announced on Monday that he had resigned as the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate during a speech in the upper house of parliament.

Gilani was among at least eight opposition senators who had skipped last Friday's Senate session, which allowed the PTI government to narrowly manage to get the crucial State Bank of Pakistan (Amendment) Bill passed from the opposition-controlled house — a development that had raised many eyebrows.

In an indirect reference to his absence from Friday's session, Gilani said "some turncoats" were accusing him of helping the government.

"I am not astonished by the harsh words from my opponents, but I am astonished by the silence of my well-wishers," he said.

"If ministers would have said something [of this sort], it would have been an honour for me. But some turncoats are saying that I helped the government and I am saying that [the government] won because of your votes."

He also said that the agenda for Friday's Senate session was issued hours before it was slated to take place, adding that lawmakers should have been given some time to discuss it.

The PPP leader lamented the fact that the agenda was not even referred to the relevant standing committee, adding that this was the democratic norm.

Turning his guns on Senate Chairman Sadiq Sanjrani, he said that Friday's session was suspended for 30 minutes. "That means you facilitated the government and not the opposition," he said while addressing Sanjrani.

He said that the opposition was in the majority before the break, while after the break the numbers of the two benches were equal which led to the Senate chairman casting his vote. "This happened for the first time in the history of Senate."

He said the Senate chairman was bound to remain neutral as he was the custodian of the House, not the government.

He concluded his brief speech by stating that he had already sent his resignation to his party and he no longer wanted to be the Senate opposition leader. However, it remained unclear whether his resignation had been accepted.

In response to Gilani's speech, Leader of the House Dr Shahzad Waseem said the treasury benches were "thankful" to the PPP leader for skipping Friday's session.

Commenting on the technical points Gilani raised, Waseem said that according to the rules of procedure the agenda was supposed to be issued on a specific day, but not at a specific time.

He said that in the past, supplementary agendas were issued as the Senate session was underway. "So I do not think that his argument holds any weight."

He added that lawmakers do not attend House proceedings based on the day's agenda. "Whatever the agenda is, all of it is important [...] as a parliamentarian I don't think we should pick and choose," he said, adding that lawmakers had a responsibility to participate in House proceedings.

Waseem went on to say that the treasury benches also did not have the requisite numbers on several occasions, adding that they had accepted it at the time.

Commenting on Friday's session, he said that the opposition had been thumping the desks and had called on the government to table the SBP bill. "But when they realised they had miscalculated [their numbers], they called for adjourning the session."

He said that there was a tie during voting on the bill and the Senate chairman was bound to follow the rules of procedure. "You had the right to cast a vote when there was an equality of votes."

Senate Dilawar Khan says group is neutral

Senator Dilawar Khan, who leads a group of six independents that had primarily voted in favour of the SBP bill, maintained that his group was neutral. "We are neither with the government nor the opposition," he said.

In his speech, he said that the group had voted for Gilani as the Senate opposition leader last year as it did not know the other candidate, PML-N's Azam Nazir Tarar.

He said that his group was labelled pro-government by some and "opposition-friendly" by others. Khan said that Gilani had contacted his group to attend Friday's Senate session, but was not present in his chamber.

He went on to say that Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin met him before the session and explained the features of the SBP bill which is why the group voted in favour of it. He lamented the fact that fingers were now being pointed at the independent group of senators.

'Gilani is an honourable man'

Reacting to Gilani's resignation, Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry said that the PPP leader was an "honourable" man.

He said that it made more sense for PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari or co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari to resign.

"The senior leaders of the PML-N and PPP are embarrassed and upset at the behaviour of their leadership," he said, adding that the change in the attitude of the opposition parties was a welcome development.

Opposition red-faced after Senate adopts key SBP bill

Despite having a clear majority in the 100-member Senate, the opposition had failed to prevent the passage of the controversial SBP bill which was passed with a mere one-vote majority.

At least eight opposition senators, including Gilani, skipped the session, while at least four members of the Dilawar Khan-group voted in favour of the government bill.

The opposition had earlier faced a similar defeat on four bills in the Senate on November 19 when members of the same independents’ group had voted in support of the government.

The six independent senators elected in 2018 had been sitting on the treasury benches before Senate elections in March last year and all of a sudden they submitted an application to the Senate chairman seeking allocation of seats on the opposition benches.

They later through a letter to the Senate chairman supported Gilani for the opposition leader’s office for which the PML-N had already nominated Azam Nazeer Tarar.

Five members of this group were enjoying privileges as chairmen of various committees which they got on the opposition’s quota as a reward for their support to Gilani.

Interestingly, all these independents had voted for Sadiq Sanjrani in the elections, only days before their decision to sit on the opposition benches.

Other members of the independents’ group are Ahmed Khan, Kauda Babar and Naseebullah Bazai from Balochistan and Hidayatullah Khan and Hilalur Rehman from the erstwhile Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata).

During a heated exchange of arguments with PPP chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari in the National Assembly on June 30 last year, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi had stated that it was the government which through its six men had helped Gilani get the opposition leader’s slot.

A number of PPP leaders now admit that it was a wrong decision of their leadership to get the support of the six independents and then facilitating the appointment of five of them as chairmen of the committees.

Over the weekend, a number of PPP lawmakers called on the leadership to take action against senators who had supported Gilani at the time of his nomination as the opposition leader and caused a rift within the opposition’s alliance.

“The parties in the opposition must carry out a purge of the soft-at-heart members and those senators who sit on the opposition benches but vote for the treasury,” said PPP Senator Raza Rabbani in a statement on Saturday.

Mustafa Nawaz Khokhar regretted that there was a group of people who sat on the opposition benches but never voted for the opposition on crucial occasions.

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