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What if PTI fails?

Chakar The Great

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SOMETIMES even rhetorical questions deserve answers.

Twenty-five years since it was formed, and 31 months since it came into power, PTI is faced with this inevitable question, which may be triggered by its inability to reduce the gap between what it says and what it does. In this rather peculiar matter of judging yourself against your own set standards, PTI stands as an outlier among the array of political parties that have over the decades taken turns to mismanage the governance of Pakistan. For Imran Khan’s party, it is a strange and alien place to be. All those years in the political wilderness, relegated to the margins of mainstream politics, often made fun of and neglected — yes all these years the leader and his ragtag army of dedicated followers braved the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune because they believed they would change the world.

Today, they look exhausted. And frustrated. And bewildered. What happened? How could they — with all their good intention and clear-eyed vision — trip so bad and fall so hard? Only a few years back, it was inconceivable; only a few years ahead it will be a case study.

The firing of Special Assistant on Petroleum Nadeem Babar on Friday is a seminal moment in this journey of angst for the party that aimed to sculpt a new and exciting future for the country. There was nothing gentle about the petroleum czar’s axing. Which in a way is good because it reflects, among other things, Prime Minister Imran Khan’s penchant for taking hard and uncomfortable decisions in his stride. But it also reflects something a bit darker, and a tad bit more ominous: an admission that all these years the PTI leadership kept embarking on the wrong course with the wrong management for the most critical area of governance today.

Something is going on deep inside the soul of PTI; something that is very slowly but very surely rearranging the building blocks of its DNA.
Did Nadeem Babar really mess up the petroleum sector through unwise decision-making? Did his conflict of interest pollute the clarity required to steer a sector as huge as this? PTI’s case study — whenever it is written and taught — will address these questions and attempt to answer them, but for now, in the fog of immediacy, what can be said with an element of certainty is that PTI’s absolute certainty in its own ability to do no wrong has itself become a victim of acute uncertainty.

For Imran Khan’s party today, Nadeem Babar’s unceremonious ouster is but a speck on the tapestry of challenges that flutter outside the Prime Minister’s Office. And they all amalgamate into one simple but obvious question that the party never wished, and never believed, would be asked of it: why cannot PTI govern?

There are stock answers, of course. We did not know how bad the situation was; the bureaucracy is not letting us work; the opposition is destroying institutional equilibrium; Khan doesn’t have the right team; the media is not projecting our successes — the list goes on and on. But in their heart of hearts, key people in the party — only the key people, because most others continue to digest their own rhetoric — know that things are off-track. Something, somewhere has gone horribly wrong.

But do they know what has gone wrong? Here’s where the situation gets a bit complicated.

Let’s start with some definitives. PTI is not a failure — yet. Failure can be a subjective word when measuring a political party, and the electorate is expected to provide an answer at the end of PTI’s term. However, in the absence of free and transparent elections, the answer remains — to an extent — elusive, and prone to be shaped by popular perceptions. Today, PTI may be a failure in terms of its own targets, but the final judgement should await the end of the term.

Can the judgement really wait? Formally yes, but informally perhaps no. More so when you acknowledge that failure is more a process than an event. If that be the case, the cascading ******** of dashed expectations are gurgling out their own verdict without waiting for any external timelines and deadlines. It was this wave that swept PTI into power; it is this wave that is now threatening to drown it.

But this still does not explain the fundamental question: why is PTI failing?

It is a question that is consumed like contraband at private party gatherings. People are concerned. They whisper. They crib. And they mourn the faltering end to an excitement that fuelled the party DNA all these years. Performance is a by-product of a number of variables. Those who have lived PTI and breathed PTI can sense the change in variables. They can sense a change in the culture of their party. Something is going on deep inside the soul of PTI; something that is very slowly but very surely rearranging the building blocks — the nucleotides if you will — of its DNA and transforming its culture into something resembling traditional parties.

It’s hard to put a finger on it. Sometimes it is reflected in the rising tide of sycophancy in leadership meetings; other times it manifests itself in the inability of the leadership to accept and internalise genuine feedback; and often it displays itself in the rigid and intractable reaction to unexpected events. PTI has become brittle. And brittle things break.

Grounded people do not change quickly. Same for parties and organisations. PTI had a quasi-revolutionary manifesto and the country’s biggest brand as its leader. It should have been in a far better position midway through its term than it is today. The external challenge may be measured in projects, schemes and deliverables, but the internal challenge — the real one dragging the party down — is much harder to measure in tangibles. Failure is an outcome of something deeper than a drop-down list. If PTI wants to resurrect its fortunes, it may need to look closer to home.

For this to happen, it may want to start by being honest with itself.

The writer is Dawn’s resident editor in Islamabad.

Twitter:****@fahdhusain

Published in Dawn, March 27th, 2021
 
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Pakistan needs 100 IK to make the change sustainable. There is no other person in Pakistan competent, intelligent and honest enough. This is a problem. IK will be in power for another 7 years, very important years for you folks, make or break.
 
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IK is not the final answer to Pakistan's problems. The hope is that he sets a precedent of farsighted policies in the greatest interest of the nation, promotes education, development and accountability so that the next generation of Pakistanis especially the youth can take advantage of the situation.

A key task for Imran will be the grooming of new leadership. Meritocracy is non existent in Pakistani politics as evidenced by PML-N and Bhutto League. A democratic, accountable and progressive PTI can do wonders for the landscape of Pakistan if it properly grooms and cultivates future leaders from all 4 corners. It will then solidify its status as a true national party.
 
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Pakistan needs 100 IK to make the change sustainable. There is no other person in Pakistan competent, intelligent and honest enough. This is a problem. IK will be in power for another 7 years, very important years for you folks, make or break.
Agreed. But there is a deeper issue brewing. A country is only a united country if it shares common political platform as articulated by political parties. When population of a country begins to vote along clear ethnic or regional lines then it points to dangerously divided society. In fact when this happens that country has already broken up conceptually and just waits for physical cracks to appear. We saw this in 1971. The prelude was when Mujib's Awami Party got landslide victory in Bangla whereas West Pakistan parties almost got not seats in the east. This pointed to a divided polity. We saw what that led to.

In Pakistan today sadly things are going in that direction. PPP has in fact become a rump party of the interior Sindh. PML-N is restricted to Punjab. BAP is dominant in Balochistan. MQM in Karachi. PTI was dominant in K-Pk but gained traction across all of Pakistan thus today is the only 'national party'.

If PTI fails the danger is it will end up retreating to K-Pk, PML-N will reassert in Punjab, PPP have dug deep in Sindh, MQM are firmly ensconced in Karachi. BAP in Balochistan.
This would mean Pakistan would have no national party left. All it would have is ethnic/regional parties alluding to a divided Pakistan. That would present a real danger tro the future of the federation.

So let us hope PTI succeeds.

@peagle
 
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Pakistan needs 100 IK to make the change sustainable. There is no other person in Pakistan competent, intelligent and honest enough. This is a problem. IK will be in power for another 7 years, very important years for you folks, make or break.
Yes. IK inherited the BS from several haramkhoor governments. Baby steps! Progress takes time.
When population of a country begins to vote along clear ethnic or regional lines then it points to dangerously divided society.
And still you advocate against Islam as unifier of people. BTW believing in the magic of a river doesn’t make or break nations!
 
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This is actually the problem. Thinking one man can correct all variables. PTI is failing because of lack of governance and corrupt and dishonest party members. From oil mafia to sugar crisis PTI was involved, people saw this and know PTI isn't what it says it is.
 
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PTI is a grand failure, Imran khan fooled everyone and himself. Bajwa is a total liability.
In today's Pakistan, mediocrity is celebrated.
The state bank being Autonomous will mean total capitulation to the IMF and Zionist global elite. Kashmir was meekly surrendered
That's why PTI/ik where brought in, the establishment is answerable
 
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To cut it short, PTI has had enough of status quo. To stay on "same page" pti is demanded to play safe and pragmatic. Which was never the plan of Imran Khan, dreamers and leaders aren't too cautious.. Being cautious ruined half of term of government. Giving IK less seats was a strategy to secure "Have your say" in government. He lost 2013 because of Hamid mir interview questioning him about drones and IK mentioning PAF as last resort. This frightened deep state from Imran khan with absolute majority. He was cut to size and now he can't do what he wanted.. Being cauhas fired back, Big time!
SOMETIMES even rhetorical questions deserve answers.

Twenty-five years since it was formed, and 31 months since it came into power, PTI is faced with this inevitable question, which may be triggered by its inability to reduce the gap between what it says and what it does. In this rather peculiar matter of judging yourself against your own set standards, PTI stands as an outlier among the array of political parties that have over the decades taken turns to mismanage the governance of Pakistan. For Imran Khan’s party, it is a strange and alien place to be. All those years in the political wilderness, relegated to the margins of mainstream politics, often made fun of and neglected — yes all these years the leader and his ragtag army of dedicated followers braved the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune because they believed they would change the world.

Today, they look exhausted. And frustrated. And bewildered. What happened? How could they — with all their good intention and clear-eyed vision — trip so bad and fall so hard? Only a few years back, it was inconceivable; only a few years ahead it will be a case study.

The firing of Special Assistant on Petroleum Nadeem Babar on Friday is a seminal moment in this journey of angst for the party that aimed to sculpt a new and exciting future for the country. There was nothing gentle about the petroleum czar’s axing. Which in a way is good because it reflects, among other things, Prime Minister Imran Khan’s penchant for taking hard and uncomfortable decisions in his stride. But it also reflects something a bit darker, and a tad bit more ominous: an admission that all these years the PTI leadership kept embarking on the wrong course with the wrong management for the most critical area of governance today.


Did Nadeem Babar really mess up the petroleum sector through unwise decision-making? Did his conflict of interest pollute the clarity required to steer a sector as huge as this? PTI’s case study — whenever it is written and taught — will address these questions and attempt to answer them, but for now, in the fog of immediacy, what can be said with an element of certainty is that PTI’s absolute certainty in its own ability to do no wrong has itself become a victim of acute uncertainty.

For Imran Khan’s party today, Nadeem Babar’s unceremonious ouster is but a speck on the tapestry of challenges that flutter outside the Prime Minister’s Office. And they all amalgamate into one simple but obvious question that the party never wished, and never believed, would be asked of it: why cannot PTI govern?

There are stock answers, of course. We did not know how bad the situation was; the bureaucracy is not letting us work; the opposition is destroying institutional equilibrium; Khan doesn’t have the right team; the media is not projecting our successes — the list goes on and on. But in their heart of hearts, key people in the party — only the key people, because most others continue to digest their own rhetoric — know that things are off-track. Something, somewhere has gone horribly wrong.

But do they know what has gone wrong? Here’s where the situation gets a bit complicated.

Let’s start with some definitives. PTI is not a failure — yet. Failure can be a subjective word when measuring a political party, and the electorate is expected to provide an answer at the end of PTI’s term. However, in the absence of free and transparent elections, the answer remains — to an extent — elusive, and prone to be shaped by popular perceptions. Today, PTI may be a failure in terms of its own targets, but the final judgement should await the end of the term.

Can the judgement really wait? Formally yes, but informally perhaps no. More so when you acknowledge that failure is more a process than an event. If that be the case, the cascading ******** of dashed expectations are gurgling out their own verdict without waiting for any external timelines and deadlines. It was this wave that swept PTI into power; it is this wave that is now threatening to drown it.

But this still does not explain the fundamental question: why is PTI failing?

It is a question that is consumed like contraband at private party gatherings. People are concerned. They whisper. They crib. And they mourn the faltering end to an excitement that fuelled the party DNA all these years. Performance is a by-product of a number of variables. Those who have lived PTI and breathed PTI can sense the change in variables. They can sense a change in the culture of their party. Something is going on deep inside the soul of PTI; something that is very slowly but very surely rearranging the building blocks — the nucleotides if you will — of its DNA and transforming its culture into something resembling traditional parties.

It’s hard to put a finger on it. Sometimes it is reflected in the rising tide of sycophancy in leadership meetings; other times it manifests itself in the inability of the leadership to accept and internalise genuine feedback; and often it displays itself in the rigid and intractable reaction to unexpected events. PTI has become brittle. And brittle things break.

Grounded people do not change quickly. Same for parties and organisations. PTI had a quasi-revolutionary manifesto and the country’s biggest brand as its leader. It should have been in a far better position midway through its term than it is today. The external challenge may be measured in projects, schemes and deliverables, but the internal challenge — the real one dragging the party down — is much harder to measure in tangibles. Failure is an outcome of something deeper than a drop-down list. If PTI wants to resurrect its fortunes, it may need to look closer to home.

For this to happen, it may want to start by being honest with itself.

The writer is Dawn’s resident editor in Islamabad.

Twitter:****@fahdhusain

Published in Dawn, March 27th, 2021
 
.
Pakistan needs 100 IK to make the change sustainable. There is no other person in Pakistan competent, intelligent and honest enough. This is a problem. IK will be in power for another 7 years, very important years for you folks, make or break.
Even though IK is the best option pakistan has but the powers against him be it internal or external wont let him succeed. Pakistan is a race that is brain dead and love to worship wrong people like zardari nawaj etc...
 
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Actually there is this ruling elite class that has been running things and have destroyed Pakistan though made themselves rich. PTI was a hope because it wanted the status quo changed. But as we all see that did not happen. Infact the same elite class took over PTI. Just see how your local PTI MPA or MNA is from same family as older politicians. This class have ruined Pakistan that includes politicians, waderas, khans, peers, sardars, bureaucrats, generals.

I am close to one such family. You see they have one guy as leader of one party, a brother in another party, cousin in another, cousins in bureaucracy and military, chacha son in police, other local govt servants mostly their apointed ones. This way they have deep relations and their "kaam" gets done in every govt. Pakistan elite is a bunch of such families, like leeches sucking this nation. Unless we rise up and get rid of this class, there is little progress we can make.
 
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PTI may succeed or fail. Our nation may go on to better things or regress backwards but I firmly believe we will see success if we have faith.

You must have faith in Allah first and foremost. Ultimately he is the bringer of success.

Then you must have faith in yourself. PTI did not fall from the sky. It was tens of millions of Pakistani people who voted for change. It was tens of millions who took money out of thier own pocket and funded a political party. These people are what will bring change.

If you as an individual live a good life. stay within the limits of halal, make the moral choice, work hard eventually your positivity will change those around you.
 
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And still you advocate against Islam as unifier of people
That rivder is more of a unifier then Islam. I can prove that contention. Below is map of the Muslim world coloured in green. All Muslim majority yet they are divided into 51 countries. This is empirical proof that Islam is not a unifier. 51 countries. If you can't see this fact staring at you there is no point in wasting my time with you.

1616970113474.png



On the other hand Pakistan is wrapped around the geography of the Indus Basin like a glove around a hand.
 
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