The Pak Banker

Hybrid pitfalls for PML-N

- Abbas Nasir

Hybrid set-ups have internal power struggle built into them. Like me, if you find some of the statements confusing, signalling difference­s of opinion within the top tiers of the major political parties, you must determine whether this is a precursor to something dramatic or merely a struggle to create some elbow room in the straitjack­et these parties find themselves in.

Apologies for the mouthful above. Before you give up on this column and move on to the next, let me explain what I am trying to say. Just as the PML-N is contributi­ng to the establishm­ent’s ever-expanding footprint (as did the PTI before it), it is also clear the party isn’t exactly content with the status quo.

Don’t you consider it bizarre that while Shehbaz Sharif is the prime minister and party supremo Nawaz Sharif’s daughter Maryam Nawaz holds the reins to Pakistan’s biggest province, with over 50 per cent of the country’s population and votes, senior leaders such as Rana Sanaullah and Javed Latif continue to moan and groan about how the ‘real’ power is vested elsewhere?

If Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif functions as a junior partner in a hybrid regime, where he takes the back seat in key areas such as the economy, law and order, and control of all federal law-enforcemen­t/ investigat­ion/ intelligen­ce agencies, surely he can’t be happy governing with these and other constraint­s.

The PML-N isn’t alone in this struggle for space as similar mixed signals come almost daily from the PTI as well. For instance, the party’s favourite candidate for finance minister could make it only to the foreign ministry, while a rank outsider, who was elected senator from Punjab by the PML-N but didn’t bother to reciprocat­e by joining it, is the interior czar.

The prime minister’s niece and Punjab chief executive appeared reluctant to allow the transfer of a police officer serving as Lahore’s top cop to Islamabad Police as its chief, merely because it was so willed by the interior minister.

Everyone knows where he draws his power from and, therefore, he prevailed. His denial of any friction with the prime minister didn’t change the reality.

Both Shehbaz Sharif and Maryam Nawaz appeared helpless and couldn’t stop this policeman’s transfer.

Such slights might be an integral part of hybrid regimes, which politician­s willingly almost daily from the PTI as well, with one accept as they feel their political future and top leader talking of political reconcilia­tion longevity in office hinges on them. Still, it must one day and being shot down by others in the be hurtful. party the next.

So how do they air their disappoint­ment One moment, you hear a party stalwart saying while, at the same time, keeping onside their there is no point in talking to other political establishm­ent benefactor­s? Well, they let the parties, and that dialogue can only take place Rana Sanaullahs and Javed Latifs hold forth with the real rulers such as ‘the army chief and about who is who in the country’s power structure the DG ISI’, and the next moment he is contradict­ed and point out its flaws. by Imran Khan himself.

Obviously, all this is done in the hope of As far as the establishm­ent is concerned, it exerting some pressure on the powers that be appears to have one unambiguou­s message: it for a few concession­s, so a little space is isn’t interested in a dialogue or in offering any secured in decision-making. other concession to the PTI that gives Imran

They may have decided to ride on the coattails Khan more space than he already commands on of the establishm­ent to power, but they account of his sizable public support. It is a also understand that in the ultimate analysis zero-sum game with the PTI. whatever political capital is at stake it is theirs Therefore, the establishm­ent is happy to alone to lose. Ergo, the quest for a little more lead a hybrid regime because it hopes that it is elbow room. the safest bet to revive the economy, which it

As it is, any upturn in the economy will be identified as an existentia­l threat to the country credited to the military-steered SIFC and any and, by implicatio­n, to itself. fallout from the IMF-mandated belt-tightening, Unless some dramatic developmen­t forces inflation and unemployme­nt will fall squarely a change in its approach, this sentiment will on the PML-N’s shoulders, further eroding its prevail. electoral prospects whenever the next elections In Pakistan’s case, this ‘dramatic developmen­t’ are held. could well come in the shape of the next

The PML-N isn’t alone in this struggle chief justice or the chief of army staff if there for space as similar mixed signals come are no hitherto undisclose­d extension plans, as in a country which has seen the systematic, single-minded destructio­n of institutio­ns, appointmen­ts to the top slots of key institutio­ns assume great significan­ce.

I am afraid this trend will continue till political parties, without exception, abandon their pursuit of shortcuts to corridors of power through partnershi­ps with extra-parliament­ary forces and start relying on the support of their electorate alone to get into government.

My guess is that, given that any such fundamenta­l change isn’t likely in the foreseeabl­e future, hybrids of one sort or another, ie, with one permanent player and a revolving door policy to choose the junior partner, will continue, regardless of the consequenc­es. So expect a lot more of meaningles­s, often combative rhetoric that leads to nowhere.

For the love of my beloved land, where some 40pc of the population lives below the poverty line, where a staggering 26 million children are out of school and where basic health facilities and potable water are like gold dust, I earnestly hope that even this deeply flawed system is able to deliver some basics to the people.

I shudder to think what will happen if the anger and despair of millions of desperate Pakistanis blows the lid off the system.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan