Some former party members have been denied tickets as well. Jam Saifullah Dharejo, the irrigation minister in the party’s 2008 government, is going up against the third Mahar brother, Ali Nawaz Khan Mahar aka Raja Mahar, after Dharejo was denied the party ticket for a second time. Dharejo has now joined the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl. Even in Larkana, the home of the PPP, the party is poised to face the group led by Dr Safdar Abbasi, who is allied with the Grand Democratic Alliance (GDA) and the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf.
In 2013, the PPP won 92 out of 168 seats in the Sindh provincial assembly. The voter turnout, according to the Election Commission of Pakistan, was about 52 per cent in 2013, a little higher than the 45pc in the 2008 polls. In the National Assembly, the PPP won 91 directly contested seats in 2008 to form a coalition government, but managed a humbling 36 in 2013.
“Social media has changed everything. The youth are scaring waderas with their cell phones. Sindh’s urban youth has broken free from the waderas and the pirs. The political landscape is changing,” explains an analyst.
“The PPP has a bumpy ride ahead of it in Dadu district where the rookie candidate Irfan Leghari is competing against seasoned politician Liaquat Ali Khan Jatoi of the PTI, and in Shikarpur where the PPP’s former MPA Agha Taimoor is set to take on Imtiaz Shaikh,” admits a central party leader.
Asif Zardari and his sister Faryal Talpur — who wields a considerable amount of authority in the party — have okayed Thatta’s Shirazis return despite serious reservations voiced by other senior leaders.
“The Shirazis — who had mistreated party workers in 2008 — have been accepted back into the party, which is surprising. We can’t even object to these decisions considering we must abide by party policy. With the Shirazis on board, the PPP was hoping to sweep seven seats in Thatta and Sujawal, but the PTI and the GDA spoilt all the fun. The novice, Arsalan Brohi, is competing on a PTI ticket and he’s not backing down despite all attempts,” concedes a senior PPP leader.
Ever since the veterans — and former PPP leaders — Dr Zulfikar and his wife, Dr Fehmida Mirza, staged a revolt in Badin, things have not been the same for the PPP in the district. The Mirzas, who have recently joined the GDA, have been able to make inroads into the PPP’s stronghold.
Like in Badin, the PPP must contend with another disgruntled ex-party member in Mirpurkhas. Syed Ali Nawaz Shah, a close confidante of Benazir Bhutto and her father, is running as an independent candidate against the PPP on national and provincial assembly seats. The PPP is not out of the woods in Thar either, as the PTI’s Shah Mehmood Qureshi squares off against its candidate, Noor Mohammad Shah Jillani.
Sindh’s PPP president Nisar Khuhro believes that the party’s strategy has not failed. “We tried to attack the anti-PPP vote, and increase our tally of seats but we never claimed we were going to have all our candidates elected unopposed. Barring Ghotki, where the Mahars are having second thoughts, we are comfortable in all other constituencies.”
Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2018