Smokers’ corner: The NA-247 Armageddon
For a long time, Karachi’s NA-250 has been one of the city’s most unpredictable constituencies. It still is. Now even more so, as due to last year’s delimitation of constituencies, it has been merged with NA-249 to become NA-247. One of the biggest constituencies of Karachi has become even larger.
As NA-250, it constituted the city’s main “posh” localities as well as some thickly-populated middle- and working-class areas. All of these localities are dotted by hefty pockets of Mohajir, Pakhtun, Baloch, Punjabi and Sindhi populations. The ethnic and class diversity of this constituency has become even more widespread with the merger of NA-249.
Between 1988 and 2008, Karachi as a whole was overwhelmingly an Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) stronghold, but with pockets such as Lyari and Malir often going to the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP). The Mohajir majority of the city (now about 41 percent of Karachi’s population) predominantly voted for MQM, whereas the city’s Sindhi, Baloch and some Pakhtun segments cast their ballots in favour of the PPP.
Thirty-two candidates are vying for a constituency where no party has managed to maintain a political hold
However, with the entry of Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) during the 2013 election, the PPP’s vote bank in the city was drastically reduced. According to the June 2013 issue of the Herald, this was especially due to the fact that the Pakhtun population of the city and Karachi’s Sindhi middle-classes opted to vote for PTI, which got the second largest number of votes in Karachi in 2013.
What’s more, even though PTI failed to dislodge the MQM from most of its strongholds in the city, it did manage to bring down MQM’s margins of victory by eating into its once impenetrable vote bank.
Nevertheless, both PPP and MQM managed to bounce back during some by-elections of 2016 and 2017 and, particularly, during the 2015 local bodies’ elections, in which both the parties wiped out whatever influence PTI had managed to gain in 2013.
During this period, PTI’s Karachi leadership was heard grumbling that the PTI chief was squarely concentrating on gaining ground against PML-N in Punjab, thus squandering the electoral gains that the party had made in Karachi in 2013. The situation became even more frustrating for the party’s Karachi leadership when MQM eventually splintered into three factions. During two by-elections held in the city in 2017, most Mohajir voters did not venture out to vote. Those who did, voted for the PPP. The PPP also managed to bag many Pakhtun and Punjabi votes in these by-elections. PTI, on the other hand, was taken to the cleaners.
But as Karachi’s electoral politics opened up after MQM’s disintegration, in a late move, PTI has decided to field some of its top guns here for the coming July 25 general election.
This includes Imran Khan himself, who will be contesting from the city’s NA-243 seat. In fact, almost every major party is now looking to make serious electoral inroads here as MQM’s largest faction, MQM-P, tries to fend off the challenge posed by its other major faction, Pak Sarzameen Party (PSP), in various MQM strongholds.
But NA-250 was always an open constituency. It has never been any particular party’s stronghold. The situation remains the same even now with its merger with NA-249.