No confidence motion fails…

Posted on August 29, 2006
Filed Under >Adil Najam, People, Politics
18 Comments
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Adil Najam

According to the first news coming out, the opposition’s No Confidence vote against Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz has failed. According to The News internet site:

Islamabad: The no confidence motion tabled by the opposition against Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz on Tuesday has not been passed. The National Assembly voted the no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz moved by PPPP’s Aitzaz Ahsan. According to Speaker, National Assembly Chaudhry Ameer Hussain, the opposition motion polled 136 votes, less than the 172 needed from the 342-seat National Assembly to oust the prime minister. Aziz rebutted the opposition charges, saying that his government had improved the country’s economy and strengthened the democratic process.

The vote had been expected to fail. It is, however, surprising that 136 members did vote against the government, given earlier statements from the Information Minister that they would not.

Also, as analysts have pointed out, this motion was important not because it had a chance of going through but because it symbolizes larger and more important political dynamics. According to Nasim Zehra, writing in The News (29 August, 2006):

An open vote is expected on the motion which will be taken up for discussion on August 29. This move by the opposition of course poses no immediate threat to the survival of the present government. It does however underscore the severe problems with the current military engineered political set-up. The no-confidence motion is against the prime minister because he is the head of the parliamentary government but it actually targets the military-engineered quasi-democracy. The opposition too realizes fully well that the move will not succeed. But its objective isn’t to remove the government. It is to initiate pressure on the government. The opposition has used the current system to exert pressure in a coordinated, coherent and widely communicated manner. It has used its constitutional prerogative to table the no-confidence motion. Its major corruption charges against the government rest on the Supreme Court of Pakistan’s judgment against the privatisation of the Pakistan Steel Mill. In moving as a united group to table the motion the opposition has demonstrated its ability to forge unity on the crucial common denominator of establishing genuine democratic rule and an end to all military involvement in politics.

In a country where there is urgent need for reformed, rational and rooted but contemporary politics, the bulk of political energy is expended on battling political foes. The deep divide between the Establishment and some of the major political forces like the PPP and even the PML-N is not over ideological and policy differences. It’s over absence of fair-play. Conversely Pakistan’s opposition is united over the absence of credible democracy. Not a reform agenda. Clearly until the political battles remain, they will dominate all else in Pakistan. Minor advances notwithstanding, no major reform agenda can succeed without support of popular political forces. With all the post-1999 numbers-based political victories that the present set-up has won, the Establishment has only used it to take Pakistan towards military-engineered quasi-democracy, not towards genuine democracy. The government’s numbers victory on August 29 is only likely to strengthen quasi-democracy. Until the ostracisation of the mainstream political parties ends, the present system will not move any closer to a credible democracy.

I myself am of the view that irrespective of what result you might have wanted, the vote is a good omen for the democratic process. The numbers were not large enough to dislodge the government, but they were significant enough to suggest that there is a real opposition within the system. A credible opposition is a necessary ingredient for democracy and the way to express opposition and engage in discourse should be through debate within the legislative forums.

18 responses to “No confidence motion fails…”

  1. PatExpat says:

    I should not be suggesting anyone. The people will select their own PM. Hold free and fair elections today and PPP will secure the highest votes followed by PML(N). But we think our GCSEs, foreign degrees makes us more equal than others and impose our will on the rest of the population. As far as I recall, democracy was not about what a select few thought, it was about what the majority wants.

    We can discuss the vision some other time. Frankly speaking, profits of banking sector, multinationals and stock market index are not an indicator of general well being. However, I am digressing. We can discuss the vision some other time.

  2. PatExpat says:

    I should not be suggesting anyone. You have to decide on a lesser evil amongst the present candidates. We can discuss all that we want on these blogs ranting about different personalities, but the question is would we go and vote for that person at the time of election. I am sure majority of the people on these blogs haven’t voted once in their life.

    Everybody knows that if fair elections are held now, majority will vote for PPP followed by PML(N). Why should will of select few elite be imposed on the rest of the population. Does our GCSEs, foreign qualifications make us more equal than the rest of the population. As far as I recall, democracy was about one person one vote but I may be wrong.

    We can discuss about the vision some other time.

  3. Suleman says:

    PatExpat, you state the obvious, but can you suggest a better PM who has a vision to improving our economy at present time?

  4. PatExpat says:

    I am sometimes surprised that we are so naive when it comes to supporting Mr. Shortcut Aziz. Does anyone remember which village he stood from to gain the National Assembly seat and subsequently Prime Ministership. Did he have anything to do with that area or did he ever return to that area after promising to turn the town into a modern city.

    SA will remain PM as long as Mush wants him as PM. Does anyone recall that when Musharraf returned from his US trip, SA almost lost his job because he could not handle MQM. There wasn’t any no confidence move against him but everybody knew that if Musharraf does not want him, he will not remain PM.

    It was not without a reason that Jamali used to call Mush as ‘Boss’

  5. Owais Mughal says:

    Only thing it shows is that all opposition members can agree on one sigle point. i.e. to bring down the govt. We have seen such overtures before. Only thing missing this time is late Nawabzada Nasrullah Khan from the equation. He ran quite a few opposition campaigns succesfully. e.g. PNA, IJI, COP, ABC, XYZ etc. and everyone listened to him. Current opposition does not have such personality. It may be a blessing in disguise as it may mean a Govt in Pakistan will actually complete its full term :)

    Makhdoom Amin Fahim is a sour grape example. He was a PM candidate with the same govt few years ago, but when PM-ship went to Mir Zafarullah Jamali, he is now busy in gathering votes of no-confidence

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