SMOKERS’ CORNER: DEMOCRATIC ORIGINS
Whenever the history of democracy in Pakistan is being discussed, the topic of elections almost always begins from the historic 1970 elections. These were the first elections to be held in the country on the basis of adult franchise. Since then the country has held nine more elections. The elections held before the 1970 polls have not been discussed in as much detail as the ones held in and after 1970.
It is true that the country’s first decade (1947-57) was largely wasted on navel-gazing about the constitution. This delayed the introduction of parliamentary democracy in Pakistan (thus creating various ethnic and sectarian fissures within the volatile Pakistani polity). On the surface the two elections (held under Ayub Khan’s Basic Democracies’ system) in the 1960s are of little or no importance to most historians. Truth is that the 1965 presidential elections were almost as important as the 1970 polls.
Most commentators and historians only briefly comment on these elections because it is believed that these were “entirely rigged.” That’s why no one has really studied these in as much detail as they have the elections of 1970 and beyond. However, much is available in the shape of reports and commentaries on the elections in newspapers and magazines of the time. If one has the patience to go through most of these reports, one would not be exaggerating in suggesting that to ignore these elections or simply declaring them as “rigged” has largely been a case of sheer intellectual laziness.
Were the elections of 1965 really rigged?
The 1965 elections triggered a number of consequences which directly shaped the next 10 years of politics in Pakistan. To begin with, the elections were contested by Field Marshal Ayub Khan, a powerful sitting president, and Ms Fatima Jinnah, the sister of Pakistan’s founder. Secondly, the commotion that this combination created directly influenced the anti-Ayub movement in 1968 which forced him to resign (in March 1969) and set the scene for the 1970 elections.
For example, according to the January 4, 1965 edition of The Los Angeles Times, Ms Jinnah (after losing the elections) is quoted as saying that by contesting the election, she was actually heading a movement for democracy; and that even her defeat had provided new opportunities for the opposition to carry forward this movement.
Indeed, there were incidents of rigging reported by the local and foreign media, but M. Reza Pirbhai in his book Fatima Jinnah: Mother of the Nation quotes from a letter authored by the head of the British Council in Pakistan as saying that most of the claims in this context were from “opposition circles” and he had found no evidence of any large scale rigging. What’s even more interesting is that in her concession speech (as reported by The Los Angeles Times), Ms Jinnah did not even once mention the word rigging. Instead, she lamented that the system under which the election was held “did not provide full opportunity for the effective expression of people’s will.” By this she meant the Basic Democracies’ system introduced by the Ayub regime in 1960 in which (to put it briefly) union councillors elected by the people constituted the basic democracies’/basic democrats who in turn would elect the president.
Ayub had won the first such election in 1960 as Field Marshal. In 1965 he was contesting as a member of his own faction of the Muslim League, the Convention Muslim League. The party (formed in 1962) stood for Ayub’s ideas of “Modernist/Progressive Islam” and widespread industrialisation. Ms Jinnah had initially welcomed Ayub’s military coup in October 1958. But in 1961 she had had a falling out with him. According to Pirbhai, Ms Jinnah was supportive of many of Ayub’s initial economic and social policies but she began to criticise him for undermining democratic rights. In 1963, she quietly joined the anti-Ayub faction of the Muslim League, the Council Muslim League.