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[🇵🇰] Pakistan General Elections -- 2024

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[🇵🇰] Pakistan General Elections -- 2024
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Bilawal vows to change Karachi’s fortune in five years if PPP elected​

PPP chairman says city will be given representation it deserves in Sindh cabinet

News Desk
February 05, 2024

ppp chairman bilawal bhutto zardari addressing a rally in karachi on february 5 2024 photo ppp media cell

PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari addressing a rally in Karachi on February 5, 2024. PHOTO: PPP MEDIA CELL

Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari on Monday stated that if the people of Karachi elected PPP candidates from at least 20 National Assembly seats, the city’s landscape will change within five years.

The Pakistan’s financial capital 22 and 47 national and provincial assembly seats,
5 years, just enough time to steal some more money and extend the Dubai empire. Putting it in UK is too much trouble. Just Dubai serves the purpose of it not being in Pakistan
 
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70% of Pakistanis Lack Trust in Elections, Gallup Poll Finds​

A new survey indicates that more than two-thirds of Pakistan citizens lack faith in the integrity of their electoral process and government ahead of Thursday’s parliamentary elections. The U.S.-based Gallup polling company found that Pakistanis are increasingly discouraged by economic, political, and security challenges that threaten their country’s stability, with discontent reaching a record high before the vote.
70% of Pakistanis Lack Trust in Elections, Gallup Poll Finds (voanews.com)
 
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Pakistanis' Discontent Reaches Record High Before Election​

Summary
According to recent Gallup surveys, Pakistanis are feeling more discouraged than they have in decades due to a range of economic, political, and security challenges that threaten the stability of their country. The country's financial struggles will likely be a focal point in the upcoming election, although it is not the only concern on citizens' minds. In late 2023, Gallup found that Pakistanis were more pessimistic about their economy than at any other point in the past 18 years. A record-high 70% of respondents reported worsening economic conditions in their area.


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Pakistanis' Discontent Reaches Record High Before Election (gallup.com)
 
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Rohait Bhagwant
 
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How religious does your party have to be to win an election in Pakistan?

Religious parties like JI or JUI have never won enough votes in Pakistan, a country founded in the name of Islam. Is it the will of the people or the influence of electables that dictates electoral success?

Umair Rasheed
February 7, 2024

Why have, say, the Jamaat-i-Islami or the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam’s Samiul Haq never won enough votes to form the national government on their own in Pakistan? We are, after all, a country that was created in the name of Islam. Shouldn’t religious parties win more votes?

Two major reasons to explain this: The will of the people of Pakistan has to be accounted for. You ignore popular concerns such as the prices of petrol, potatoes, and power at your peril. Then you have to factor in those who control the levers of the Pakistani state and society. The powers-that-be play an outsized role in the electoral battlefield with their constituency-level lieutenants (read: electable politicians, who can sway election results one way or the other depending on the muscle of their biradari or the depth of their pockets).

Whoever wants to form the government must either have the blessings of the puppet masters, or be able to harness enough popular endorsement by personifying the will of the people. From Zulfikar Ali Bhutto to Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif to Imran Khan, however, none of the mainstream leaders have managed to unlock the second route to power. Thus, the tried-and-tested ingredient to forming a national government is electables who can reach the right numbers.

There are over two dozen religious political parties registered with the Election Commission of Pakistan. They all share the goal of Sharia-based governance. Some of them, such as the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam — Fazl (JUI-F) and the Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) have wisened up, which means they may do well on February 8. The JUI-F stands out for its Deoband lineage, its sway over the Pakistan-Afghanistan relations, and its consistent electoral successes in southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and northern Balochistan.
 
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