Just like most elections in Pakistan, the 2018 polls have been marred by allegations of rigging. Nevertheless, even though numerous cases of bungling in this context can (and have) been highlighted, there is scant reason to believe that had the election been entirely free and fair, Imran Khan’s centre-right Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) would not have been able to win.
According to the final tally announced by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP), PTI grabbed 115 NA seats. However, I believe that in a more free and fair election, PTI would not have bagged more than 90 to 95 seats. But it would still have managed to win more than the centrist Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), and certainly, the left-liberal Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP).
No matter how marred the elections actually were, they did correctly reflect the highly polarised nature of Pakistan’s polity. The bulk of the votes were split between PTI, PML-N and PPP, with PTI receiving approximately 32 percent.
Rigged or not, the recent polls reflected the highly polarised nature of Pakistan’s polity
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) voters decided to stick with PTI and voted overwhelmingly for the party. The main reasons for this are PTI chief Imran Khan’s continuing popularity in that province; the police reforms that the last PTI government in KP initiated; and, interestingly, the de facto positive image the party’s provincial government in the province enjoyed due to a considerable decrease in extremist terror attacks in the region.
I have used the word de facto because, ironically, PTI was against the military operation that was eventually launched by Pakistan’s armed forces and the PMLN-led federal government in 2015. The relative peace that followed just happened to emerge during a period when PTI was ruling KP.
This time, Punjab — Pakistan’s most populous province — was split in half between PML-N and PTI. The former had swept it in 2013. But in 2018, whereas the ousted PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif’s narrative of him being a victim of ‘establishmentarian intrigues’ bagged PML-N some massive wins in much of central Punjab, the more conservative areas of the province — mainly in the northern and the hilly Pothwari regions — largely switched to PTI. The more feudal-dominated southern Punjab region, too, mostly went to PTI.
Balochistan was as mercurial as ever. As has been the case for decades, its votes were distributed among the ever-splintering and ever-changing secular Baloch nationalist outfits and religious groups.
Sindh was once again swept by the PPP which notched a number of huge wins here, proving to be an unmatched electoral force in the province. A majority of Sindhis have continued to see the PPP as their bridge to the larger politics and economics of the country.
However, the most stunning results emerged in Sindh’s large, chaotic capital, Karachi. Karachi does not have a Sindhi majority. Approximately 41 percent of its enormous population is made up of Urdu-speaking Mohajirs. The city’s second-largest ethnic group is Pakhtun (approximately 22 percent) followed by Punjabi, Baloch, Sindhi and Seraiki groups.
Between 1988 and 2008, the secular and once radical Mohajir nationalist Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) was an overwhelming electoral force in this city. But its vote bank began to slowly dwindle from 2013 onward. The party split into three factions in 2017, leaving the city open for other parties to sneak in.
The PPP, on the other hand, had remained strong in Karachi’s Baloch, Kutchi and Sindhi majority areas, such as Malir and Lyari.