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When new politics begins to look like old politics, old politics wins out.

AdeelFaheem

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PTI's inconvenient truth

By Fouzia Qasoori

On October 31st 2011, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf’s Inquilabi Nazriyaerupted on the streets of Pakistan. But then something inexplicable happened. Having achieved critical mass on the basis of our message, the PTI initiated a course contrary to its political ideals. Now that the electorate were convinced we were different, that we represented the disenfranchised middle and lower classes, we began recruiting opportunists from other political parties. The leadership felt that these ‘electables’ were needed to ensure victory in the 2013 elections. Elections, which despite a wave of support, were lost due to the resultant internal strife.

Nevertheless, party loyalists supported Imran Khan because he had consistently assured us that like Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital, we would make the PTI an institution, so that its core values would remain intact, no matter who came or went, and for generations to come.

Today, the PTI faces a far greater existential threat than the PML-N or the PPP because its future is tied to the fate of one man. The latter two will survive their current leadership because they have hereditary succession. While this is not particularly democratic, having no system at all, virtually guarantees the PTI’s early demise. Much like Ayub Khan’s Convention Muslim League or Pervez Musharraf’s ‘King’s Party’, in its current state, the PTI will go the way of the dodo.

The inability to build this institution has also profoundly demoralised party workers across Pakistan. Our repeated failure to fill the vacuum created by the PPP’s decline in Punjab, and the MQM’s continued fracture in Sindh, have further exacerbated matters. Despite countless opportunities, God-given, people-bestowed, and establishment-provided, the PTI has lost momentum. History, politics and people rarely create political opportunities of this magnitude. I am deeply saddened to see the way in which we are squandering ours.

It is ironic that a leadership which based much of its recent political strategy on the sanctity of the Supreme Court, has largely ignored its own party’s constitution. The concept of universality seems lost on them. They have forced out not one, but two chief election commissioners, for attempting to enforce it, through the implementation of a free and fair intra-party election. The consequent failure to enforce the rule of law and to democratise the party, a prerequisite for any organisation hoping to democratise a nation, has devastated party unity and discipline.

This lamentable absence of rules has enabled the PTI’s own version of carpetbaggers to take over the party, and institute a sort of ‘Billionaires’ Darwinism’. From ticket allocations to party positions, everything is decided unilaterally, using the central executive committee as a rubber stamp, undermining the democratic principles on which our party was built. Needless to say, Imran’s reliance on, and inclination towards these ‘gatekeepers of Banigala’, doesn’t go down well with the party faithful either.

It is now critical for Imran to realise that these billionaires have derailed our movement; the one for justice, that is. We are no longer held together by ideals. Now, the driving force is the power of money and the pursuit of power. Most of us who founded the party have either left, been side-lined or died, whilst others have been co-opted. What is left is a steady supply of plutocrats, opportunists and camp followers. Much to the detriment of those who poured blood, sweat and tears to uphold party principles. Principles that Imran has wantonly sacrificed at the altar of political expediency. One doesn’t have to be a genius to understand that when new politics begins to look like old politics, old politics wins out.

Even if one accepts that electables are a necessary evil to win a plurality of seats in Parliament, there is no rational basis for also making them the faces of our party. Instead of plotting intrigues in Banigala, these opportunists should be in their constituencies delivering their end of this Faustian bargain. The job of preserving and of speaking for the party’s values should lie with those who have lived our struggle.

After all, it is hard convincing voters that we will protect the farmers from exploitation when our party is run by sugar barons. Or that we will end corruption in Pakistan in 20 years (let alone 90 days) when our party’s ‘electable MPAs’ sold out in larger numbers than members of any other political party during the recent Senate election. Or, even that we stand against Mauroosi Siyasatwhen we parachute the progeny of leaders discredited by the Supreme Court, into constituencies as heirs apparent. And, with what results?

Most importantly, who are we to convince voters that we have a worthwhile agenda for the future when we are encouraging our youth to become a lynch mob, ready to denigrate in an abusive manner, the motivations of those who voice opinions different than those of the Supreme Leader, or his sacred cows. Jinnah’s vision for Pakistan never included its transformation into a North Korea, did it?

We had set out to build an institution, but sadly, what we have now is a cult of personality. It is extremely unfortunate that the aspirations of millions of Pakistanis have been reduced to rubble. Even if by some major miracle we win, what locus standi would we have to claim the moral high ground that enabled our meteoric rise in 2011?

All that is left really, is the mirage of the PTI’s coronation by the ‘men behind the curtains’. Given our track record, it is more likely that they will take centre stage themselves.

Imran often quotes Einstein’s definition of “Insanity: Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” Sadly, Einstein isn’t around to tell him how many more electoral defeats the PTI must endure, before he re-aligns it with the vision that once galvanised millions. For now, Einstein turns in his grave, our opponents rejoice, and the PTIs leadership dances to the tune of the Pied Piper. Or perhaps, they are just staggering in the dark.

Published in The Express Tribune, March 27th, 2018.

Source: https://tribune.com.pk/story/1669828/6-an-inconvenient-truth/
 
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Fauzia Kasuri was never a founding member: Imran Khan

ISLAMABAD: In an official statement, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan clarified on Thursday that Fauzia Kasuri was never a founding member of the party.

According to a party statement, all allegations that were leveled by Kasuri against PTI leadership were baseless and false.

The statement listed Imran Khan, Naeemul Haque, Ahsan Rasheed, Hafeez Khan, Mowahid Hussain Syed, Mahmood Awan and Nausherwan Burki as the party founding members. The seven members founded PTI in April 1996, others were members who joined afterwards.

“The party has a number of committed members who have been working since a very long time but no one else apart from the ones mentioned are founding members,” the statement said.

Kasuri quit PTI earlier this week after accusing party leadership of ignoring merit and involving itself in nepotism. PTI Chairman had refused to award ticket to Kasuri for NA-48, the seat vacated by PTI leader Javed Hashmi, confirmed the statement.
 
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Really!!!
مئی 2013 میں ٹکٹ نہ ملنے کا غصّہ مارچ 2018 میں نکالا، وہ بھی بس ایک کالم لکھ کے
Think hard, you can do better
+ back in 2013 she clarified that she did not have dual nationality in May 2013
.did you even read that she wanted a ticket for senator from KPK and because of dual nationality and not being from KPK, she got rejected ...which happened in 2018...so why did your brain stopped working shitwari..
 
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Fauzia Kasuri was never a founding member: Imran Khan

ISLAMABAD: In an official statement, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan clarified on Thursday that Fauzia Kasuri was never a founding member of the party.

According to a party statement, all allegations that were leveled by Kasuri against PTI leadership were baseless and false.

The statement listed Imran Khan, Naeemul Haque, Ahsan Rasheed, Hafeez Khan, Mowahid Hussain Syed, Mahmood Awan and Nausherwan Burki as the party founding members. The seven members founded PTI in April 1996, others were members who joined afterwards.

“The party has a number of committed members who have been working since a very long time but no one else apart from the ones mentioned are founding members,” the statement said.

Kasuri quit PTI earlier this week after accusing party leadership of ignoring merit and involving itself in nepotism. PTI Chairman had refused to award ticket to Kasuri for NA-48, the seat vacated by PTI leader Javed Hashmi, confirmed the statement.
ہاہاہا
پیارے بھائی، موضوع یہ نہیں کہ کون کون پی ٹی آئی کا فاؤنڈنگ ممبر ہے اور کون نہیں.
 
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She is right. I don't know about the details, but a few things are obvious.

1. Imran Khan has surrounded himself with electables
2. Party loyalists have been sidelined
3. PTI has started to participate in dynasty politics (JKT son standing for election)
4. Imran Khan has failed to institutionalise PTI - it's focused around him, not around the principles.
5. There is civil war within PTI
6. PTI has failed to capitalise on the fall of it's opponents.

Still by far PTI is the best of a bad bunch.
 
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ہاہاہا
پیارے بھائی، موضوع یہ نہیں کہ کون کون پی ٹی آئی کا فاؤنڈنگ ممبر ہے اور کون نہیں.
Rather than discussing this, you should be concerned about Marvi Memon..

Maryam media cell active again.... @AdeelFaheem bhai aj kal ghaday kay ghosht ka kya daam chal raha hai? :partay:

Noothiya workers.. lollll..

aik aik kilo gosht ke iwaz bikne wali awaam.. woh bhi gadhay ka..
 
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She is right. I don't know about the details, but a few things are obvious.

1. Imran Khan has surrounded himself with electables
2. Party loyalists have been sidelined
3. PTI has started to participate in dynasty politics (JKT son standing for election)
4. Imran Khan has failed to institutionalise PTI - it's focused around him, not around the principles.
5. There is civil war within PTI
6. PTI has failed to capitalise on the fall of it's opponents.

Still by far PTI is the best of a bad bunch.
آپکا کمنٹ بالکل ایسا ہی ہے جیسے کہہ رہے ہوں کہ " جو قاتل ڈاکو اور لٹیرا ہماری جماعت کا ہے وہ نیک ہے اور جسکا تعلق ہماری جماعت سے نہیں وہ بدکردار ہے"
 
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PTI's inconvenient truth

By Fouzia Qasoori

On October 31st 2011, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf’s Inquilabi Nazriyaerupted on the streets of Pakistan. But then something inexplicable happened. Having achieved critical mass on the basis of our message, the PTI initiated a course contrary to its political ideals. Now that the electorate were convinced we were different, that we represented the disenfranchised middle and lower classes, we began recruiting opportunists from other political parties. The leadership felt that these ‘electables’ were needed to ensure victory in the 2013 elections. Elections, which despite a wave of support, were lost due to the resultant internal strife.

Nevertheless, party loyalists supported Imran Khan because he had consistently assured us that like Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital, we would make the PTI an institution, so that its core values would remain intact, no matter who came or went, and for generations to come.

Today, the PTI faces a far greater existential threat than the PML-N or the PPP because its future is tied to the fate of one man. The latter two will survive their current leadership because they have hereditary succession. While this is not particularly democratic, having no system at all, virtually guarantees the PTI’s early demise. Much like Ayub Khan’s Convention Muslim League or Pervez Musharraf’s ‘King’s Party’, in its current state, the PTI will go the way of the dodo.

The inability to build this institution has also profoundly demoralised party workers across Pakistan. Our repeated failure to fill the vacuum created by the PPP’s decline in Punjab, and the MQM’s continued fracture in Sindh, have further exacerbated matters. Despite countless opportunities, God-given, people-bestowed, and establishment-provided, the PTI has lost momentum. History, politics and people rarely create political opportunities of this magnitude. I am deeply saddened to see the way in which we are squandering ours.

It is ironic that a leadership which based much of its recent political strategy on the sanctity of the Supreme Court, has largely ignored its own party’s constitution. The concept of universality seems lost on them. They have forced out not one, but two chief election commissioners, for attempting to enforce it, through the implementation of a free and fair intra-party election. The consequent failure to enforce the rule of law and to democratise the party, a prerequisite for any organisation hoping to democratise a nation, has devastated party unity and discipline.

This lamentable absence of rules has enabled the PTI’s own version of carpetbaggers to take over the party, and institute a sort of ‘Billionaires’ Darwinism’. From ticket allocations to party positions, everything is decided unilaterally, using the central executive committee as a rubber stamp, undermining the democratic principles on which our party was built. Needless to say, Imran’s reliance on, and inclination towards these ‘gatekeepers of Banigala’, doesn’t go down well with the party faithful either.

It is now critical for Imran to realise that these billionaires have derailed our movement; the one for justice, that is. We are no longer held together by ideals. Now, the driving force is the power of money and the pursuit of power. Most of us who founded the party have either left, been side-lined or died, whilst others have been co-opted. What is left is a steady supply of plutocrats, opportunists and camp followers. Much to the detriment of those who poured blood, sweat and tears to uphold party principles. Principles that Imran has wantonly sacrificed at the altar of political expediency. One doesn’t have to be a genius to understand that when new politics begins to look like old politics, old politics wins out.

Even if one accepts that electables are a necessary evil to win a plurality of seats in Parliament, there is no rational basis for also making them the faces of our party. Instead of plotting intrigues in Banigala, these opportunists should be in their constituencies delivering their end of this Faustian bargain. The job of preserving and of speaking for the party’s values should lie with those who have lived our struggle.

After all, it is hard convincing voters that we will protect the farmers from exploitation when our party is run by sugar barons. Or that we will end corruption in Pakistan in 20 years (let alone 90 days) when our party’s ‘electable MPAs’ sold out in larger numbers than members of any other political party during the recent Senate election. Or, even that we stand against Mauroosi Siyasatwhen we parachute the progeny of leaders discredited by the Supreme Court, into constituencies as heirs apparent. And, with what results?

Most importantly, who are we to convince voters that we have a worthwhile agenda for the future when we are encouraging our youth to become a lynch mob, ready to denigrate in an abusive manner, the motivations of those who voice opinions different than those of the Supreme Leader, or his sacred cows. Jinnah’s vision for Pakistan never included its transformation into a North Korea, did it?

We had set out to build an institution, but sadly, what we have now is a cult of personality. It is extremely unfortunate that the aspirations of millions of Pakistanis have been reduced to rubble. Even if by some major miracle we win, what locus standi would we have to claim the moral high ground that enabled our meteoric rise in 2011?

All that is left really, is the mirage of the PTI’s coronation by the ‘men behind the curtains’. Given our track record, it is more likely that they will take centre stage themselves.

Imran often quotes Einstein’s definition of “Insanity: Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” Sadly, Einstein isn’t around to tell him how many more electoral defeats the PTI must endure, before he re-aligns it with the vision that once galvanised millions. For now, Einstein turns in his grave, our opponents rejoice, and the PTIs leadership dances to the tune of the Pied Piper. Or perhaps, they are just staggering in the dark.

Published in The Express Tribune, March 27th, 2018.

Source: https://tribune.com.pk/story/1669828/6-an-inconvenient-truth/

Bro in pakistan the politics is dirty since decades, its basically a war of electables, each party including PTI craves for electables, all this talk of nazriati siyasat is deception and nothing else....PTI will prefer electables every time upon nazriati workers, cuz they have to survive in this chaotic electoral system...PTI wants power in center by hook or by crook like all other parties. I mean look at all the parties includimg PTI.. Almost all of them are beneficiaries of prevailing status quo, so how can they fight that same status quo, when their survival depends opon it...
Look what happened to justice wajih...
JKT, Aleem khan, azam swati were among the electables, and justics wajih was nazriyati karkun of PTI, who won?? The status quo, the electables....
What haapened to general hamid khan and ehtisaab comission kpk? Who won? The status quo...Still in kpk, the ehtisaab commission has been run on adhoc basis...
But bro don't bother waking up this cult family of PTI, let them be... with their abuses/accusations...
They will learn their lessons in due course of time..
Waqt bara ustaad ha, abhi ghulami ka nasha zoron pe ha, nasha utarnay do...
Nasha utarnay k baad ki realities buhat khaufnaak hoti han, give them time....
 
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Bro in pakistan the politics is dirty since decades, its basically a war of electables, each party including PTI craves for electables, all this talk of nazriati siyasat is deception and nothing else....PTI will prefer electables every time upon nazriati workers, cuz they have to survive in this chaotic electoral system...PTI wants power in center by hook or by crook like all other parties. I mean look at all the parties includimg PTI.. Almost all of them are beneficiaries of prevailing status quo, so how can they fight that same status quo, when their survival depends opon it...
Look what happened to justice wajih...
JKT, Aleem khan, azam swati were among the electables, and justics wajih was nazriyati karkun of PTI, who won?? The status quo, the electables....
What haapened to general hamid khan and ehtisaab comission kpk? Who won? The status quo...Still in kpk, the ehtisaab commission has been run on adhoc basis...
But bro don't bother waking up this cult family of PTI, let them be... with their abuses/accusations...
They will learn their lessons in due course of time..
Waqt bara ustaad ha, abhi ghulami ka nasha zoron pe ha, nasha utarnay do...
Nasha utarnay k baad ki realities buhat khaufnaak hoti han, give them time....
نشہ زوروں پر ہے agreed
پائڈ پائپر جدھر کو ہانک رہا ہے سب ہنک رہے ہیں نشے میں چور، کچھ پتہ نہیں کدھر جا رہے ہیں.
 
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