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[πŸ‡§πŸ‡©] New Government (BNP) in Bangladesh After the Polls

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[πŸ‡§πŸ‡©] New Government (BNP) in Bangladesh After the Polls
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Democracy gets its House back

FE
Published :
Mar 14, 2026 23:37
Updated :
Mar 14, 2026 23:37

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The maiden sitting of the 13th parliament was convened on Thursday after a long and difficult political journey. After fifteen years of authoritarian misrule that reduced successive parliaments to little more than rubber stamps, the country has now returned to a genuinely representative legislature. A transitional period of nearly two years under an interim government followed, serving as necessary, though often trying, passage between a discredited past and the promise of a democratic future. The election that produced the present House was widely expected to return representative politics to its rightful place at the centre of national life. Its first day proceeded through the customary steps that accompany the birth of a new legislature. A new Speaker and Deputy Speaker were elected and sworn in, and the formalities of an inaugural sitting were duly carried out. The chamber now includes an unusually large number of new lawmakers, many entering parliament for the first time. That reality will demand an adjustment period, but it also opens a window to restore the culture of debate and scrutiny that had long withered.

Yet this historic occasion was not without its contradictions and tensions. The opposition Jamaat-e-Islami and its allied parties staged a dramatic walkout during the presidential address chanting slogans, creating a moment of confrontation on what was otherwise a ceremonial day. Their objection was directed at President Mohammed Shahabuddin, whom they branded a collaborator of the deposed regime and labelled a traitor to the July uprising. The difficulty with this position is that the Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the very parliament in which these lawmakers sit both took their oaths of office administered by the same president, as did the Prime Minister himself and the entire cabinet. Home Minister Salahuddin Ahmed put the question plainly when he noted that opposition leaders had themselves engaged with the president on 5th and 6th August during the most critical hours of the political transition and that it was under his authority that the interim arrangement was constituted after all. To participate in a parliament whose entire constitutional architecture rests on oaths administered by the president while simultaneously declaring that president is unfit to address that parliament is not principled protest but rather a selective recognition of legitimacy, which is to say, no coherent principle at all.

Encouragement can nevertheless be drawn from the tone set by the prime minister in his opening remarks. He expressed a clear desire to see parliament function as the centrepiece of national discourse where all arguments and national problems would find resolution. That aspiration resonates deeply with the Bangladeshi public, which has borne the cost of its absence in full. What the country needs from this parliament, and what the Prime Minister's speech implicitly promised, is a legislature that debates with vigour, legislates with care and holds the executive to account with genuine independence.

This chamber inherits 133 ordinances from the interim period requiring parliamentary scrutiny and also carries the burden of institutional reform that demand serious law-making rather than political theatre. The ruling party's two-thirds majority is a democratic mandate of considerable weight but also a temptation toward unilateralism that must be consciously and consistently resisted. The opposition, for its part, must recognise that its role is not to delegitimise the chamber from within but to make it uncomfortable for power to be abused through argument and engagement. After all, Bangladesh has paid too high a price to see its hard-won parliamentary democracy reduced to contradiction and spectacle when so much serious law-making, deliberation and democratic work still lies ahead.​
 
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Implementing BNP's Poll Manifesto: PMO asks ministries, divisions to make detailed plans

FE REPORT
Published :
Mar 14, 2026 13:11
Updated :
Mar 14, 2026 13:11

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The Prime Minister's Office (PMO) has asked all ministries and divisions to prepare detailed implementation plans in line with the election manifesto of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP)-led government following its victory in the 13th parliamentary election, sources say.

The directive specifically asked ministries to prepare implementation strategies for three different timelines, including the first 180 days of the government, the ongoing 2026-27 fiscal year, and a broader five-year action plan.

To ensure swift execution, ministries have been directed to identify the manifesto pledges relevant to their respective jurisdictions and prepare a comprehensive list along with an annual implementation roadmap.

In an official directive issued from the PMO, ministries have been instructed to formulate short-, medium-, and long-term action plans to implement the pledges made in the party's electoral manifesto.

According to the document, the 13th Jatiya Sangsad election held on February 12, 2026, resulted in a decisive victory for the BNP-led alliance, which subsequently formed the government. The manifesto commitments made before the election are now considered national commitments and must be implemented as part of the government's policy agenda.

Officials have also been asked to determine which commitments can be implemented within the government's first 180 days and which initiatives will require longer-term policy and budgetary support.

For the 2026-27 fiscal year, ministries must separately outline programmes that can be implemented within the first 60 days and the remaining 120 days of the fiscal period.

In addition, ministries have been instructed to ensure that necessary allocations are incorporated into the national budget to support the implementation of manifesto pledges over the next five years. Where necessary, new development projects may be proposed, while ongoing projects and programmes may also be restructured to align with the government's policy priorities. The PMO has asked ministries and divisions to review the manifesto in detail and submit their proposed action plans and implementation frameworks to the authorities concerned within three days.​
 
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