Bilawal Bhutto Zardari and his father hold copies of the PPP’s manifesto | Tanveer Shahzad/White Star
In his speeches Imran Khan praises Mahathir Mohamad of Malaysia and Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore, who may have enabled their respective countries to become “economic power houses”, but their records have been one of authoritarian rulers with strong undemocratic tendencies. Perhaps such pronouncements by the PTI chief can be excused as mere performance in front of large crowds. But it may also point toward an underlying thought process that in its populist rendering encapsulates an elite agenda, which merely knows how to fix problems through the application of correct technocratic solutions and not through consensus building. This is evident by his dismal record of attendance in parliament (close to five percent, he has little patience or respect for others’ points of view) and wants to rely on “electables” rather than trusting his own cadres. He alone knows what is best for Pakistan and how the system works; he knows how the “masses vote” and he cannot take any chances. Elitist arrogance is part and parcel of the Imran Khan phenomena.
Nawaz Sharif may feel like a victim today, but there is no soul searching or remorse about his own role in destabilising earlier-elected governments in collusion with the powers that be, whose own prodigy he once was.
It is the same for the Sharif’s. It is ironic that in terms of a politics or technocratic fixes, the Sharif’s are very similar to their arch rival, Imran Khan. Nawaz Sharif may feel like a victim today, but there is no soul searching or remorse about his own role in destabilising earlier-elected governments in collusion with the powers that be, whose own prodigy he once was. People can change, we can concede that, but Nawaz and his brother have always believed in politics from above where the parliamentary procedure and process is best avoided. Nawaz, too, seldom entered the National Assembly during his tenure in office and mega-development projects and technocratic interventions micro-managed by Shahbaz and his coterie of chosen men (and they were mostly men) was the order of the day in Punjab. Despite their slogan of “vote ko izzat do [respect the vote]”, Nawaz and his close associates have, in the past, been masters at electoral manipulation and backroom deals.
Despite these elitist tendencies, in the ’70 elections and perhaps in 2008 we clearly saw that, when given a chance, the Pakistani people freely voted for their own representatives. The political task may be to deepen the democratic impulse that is present in Pakistan’s populace, rather than disrespect them. Further, in all cases, the leadership of these parties tend to forget that whenever they have trusted non-civilian forces to assist them into power, they have always been betrayed. Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, sided with the governing junta in ’70-71 and even became the first civilian martial law administrator of a truncated country; no reminders are needed about his fate. Nawaz Sharif was created by the regime in power in the ’80s; he was sent packing once and debarred the second time. And now Imran hopes that the “umpire” will favour him; history has repeatedly shown that such trust is misplaced.
The civilians may want to finally understand this and start developing a consensus and a vision of ethical politics that adheres to guidelines that puts the success of building a democratic process and strengthening institutions above and beyond their own personal success. The challenge remains to address the issues that are pertinent to the lives of the people, such as poverty, health, education and housing. But this should not be at the cost of democratic freedoms or cultural rights. If the PTI, or any other political group, truly wants to deepen democracy in Pakistan, they need to
bring these several threads of political practice together — respect for cultural and religious difference, economic justice and civic liberties. Only then, a more meaningful democratic future can be imagined, the kind that Obrador is about to embark on.
The writer teaches at University of Texas, Austin
Published in Dawn, EOS, July 22nd, 2018