A house of cards
Published: July 6, 2009- Digg
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THOUGH it concerns the fate of the third largest parliamentary presence in the National Assembly of Pakistan, one cannot help but appreciate the humour of the situation in the upcoming internal elections of the PML(Q). There are three principle players. The first, the Chaudhrys of Gujrat, who have been running the party ever since it was formed. The second, a forward bloc of dissidents (not a monolithic group) who are disaffected by the Chaudhrys' lobby. And the third and final is retired President Pervez Musharraf whom the Gujrati leadership once pledged to elect president in uniform over and over again.
As opposed to common practice, it is not the Chuadhrys that are providing the humour here. It is the forward bloc. Not too happy with the previous General Council because of a perception that the cousins from Gujrat have it cornered, they wanted a newer GC, which is the electoral college for the presidency of the party. A newer council was formed, which is again unacceptable to the dissidents. The reasons are pretty much the same. The humour stems not from the fact that their allegations are unfounded (they're not; everybody knows the GC will favour the Chaudhrys) but from what they expect of the former King's Party: democracy. Do the dissidents need to be reminded of 2002, when the machinery of the state and establishment used everything in its arsenal to ensure that the League's candidates, themselves included, win their seats? What moral higher ground are the pleading now?







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