Illustration by Abro
In his controversial book Pakistan’s ISI: Covert Action and Internal Operations, Owen L. Sirrs writes that Pakistan’s first elected prime minister, Z.A. Bhutto, wanted a presidential system to replace the parliamentary one that had elected him. Economist and author Shahid Javed Burki, in his 1980 book Pakistan under Bhutto, 1971-1977, also mentions that Bhutto desired a presidential form of democracy.
Sirrs writes that Bhutto had enjoyed numerous executive powers when he replaced Yahya Khan as president and chief martial law administrator in December 1971. However, his government transformed Pakistan into a parliamentary democracy in 1973 and Bhutto became prime minister. Burki suggests that Bhutto did this because his party’s manifesto had advocated parliamentary democracy. Nevertheless, since the fate and workings of the executive in parliamentary democracy are closely related to the legislative assemblies, this meant that PM Bhutto had to let go of the powers that were at his disposal as president.
Even though his party had a majority in the national assembly, Bhutto struggled to navigate around the interests of his party’s elected legislators, to fully enact the kind of reforms he wanted to. On many occasions, he had to compromise to keep his own MNAs and MPAs happy, let alone dealing in this context with the opposition. Being an ambitious politician, he wanted to wield power without the many constitutional checks and balances which assemblies are armed with, including having the power to dismiss a PM through a ‘no confidence’ move.
There is understandable scepticism in Pakistan at the calls for adopting a presidential system of government. But aside from its history, it’s instructive to look at whether a presidential system is actually more politically stable
In a presidential system, the executive and the legislature are independent bodies. The assemblies cannot dismiss a president who is directly elected by the electorate. The president can also appoint non-elected members as ministers in his or her cabinet. Former ideologue of Bhutto’s PPP, Dr Mubashir Hasan, in his 2001 book The Mirage of Power, more than alludes that Bhutto was looking for a big win in the 1977 election so that he could use his party’s majority in the assemblies to constitutionally change Pakistan’s parliamentary form of government to a presidential one.
Bhutto was confident of winning a majority. But once it was realised that a united opposition alliance had the potential to curtail his ambition in this respect, government officials handling the polling went overboard in rigging the election on various seats, especially in Punjab.
All four military dictators who ruled Pakistan during various stages preferred the presidential system. This is one reason why even the mention of this system raises many eyebrows. Recently, as the establishment-backed PTI government of Imran Khan faces increasing criticism on its handling of the country’s floundering economy, talk of replacing Pakistan’s parliamentary system with a presidential one can be heard again from certain quarters. The perception being developed by such talk is that PTI’s wafer-thin majority in the National Assembly and lack of elected ministerial talent within the party has left PM Khan’s reformist agenda reeling.
What has made this (coy) call for a presidential system even more suspect is that some are calling it an ‘Islamic presidential system.’ Truth is, anything in Pakistan with the prefix ‘Islamic’ has and should draw immediate scepticism, because it has always been cynically used — often causing more confusion than resolution. Ideas in this regard have been nothing more than convoluted rhetorical drivel.