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Amid post-election chaos, new government takes shape in Pakistan

Nearly two weeks after the general election, Pakistan finds itself on the brink of being governed by a coalition of the also-rans.

Defying all odds, candidates affiliated with imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, emerged from the Feb. 8 polls as the largest voting bloc in Parliament. This resulted in several rounds of negotiations between the Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz and the Pakistan People’s Party to create a coalition government that could counter PTI’s influence. On Tuesday night, the two parties reached a power-sharing agreement.

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A new government is preparing to take the reins in Pakistan, but not the one its people elected. After what many believe to be the most brazenly rigged election in the country’s history, will this new coalition be able to steer Pakistan through political and economic turmoil?

The deal has restored a degree of confidence in the markets, with the Pakistan Stock Exchange rallying by over a thousand points. Yet throughout the country, protests continue to rage over alleged election-rigging, and a perilous economic situation has left almost 40% of the population below the poverty line. Without a clear mandate to govern, the incoming coalition may find it difficult to get Pakistan’s economy back on track.

“Given the lack of a majority by any of the parties of the coalition, the new government will be walking on eggshells,” says journalist Taha Siddiqui. “Plus, with such a weak coalition, the powerful military establishment will be able to easily manipulate the Parliament into doing its bidding … as it has been known to do in the past.” 

It was hoped that the 2024 general election would produce the kind of stable government necessary for Pakistan to begin dealing with its myriad problems. Yet almost two weeks after voters went to the polls, the country of 240 million finds itself on the brink of being governed by a coalition of the also-rans.

Defying all odds, candidates affiliated with imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, emerged from the Feb. 8 polls as the largest voting bloc in Parliament. This resulted in several rounds of complex negotiations between the Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz and the Pakistan People’s Party to create a coalition government that could counter PTI’s influence. On Tuesday night, the impasse was finally breached when the two parties agreed to a power-sharing formula that would see the PMLN’s Shehbaz Sharif becoming the prime minister and the PPP’s Asif Ali Zardari becoming the president.

“This government is illicit, it is illegal, and it will collapse on its own feet,” says Shandana Gulzar, a PTI-affiliated candidate who won her seat in Peshawar. “I got a whopping majority in the election simply because people are sick and tired of dealing with sycophants, with corrupt dynasties, and they wanted change.” 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

A new government is preparing to take the reins in Pakistan, but not the one its people elected. After what many believe to be the most brazenly rigged election in the country’s history, will this new coalition be able to steer Pakistan through political and economic turmoil?

The deal between the PMLN and the PPP, who came second and third in the general election, has restored a degree of confidence in the markets, with the Pakistan Stock Exchange rallying by over a thousand points. Yet throughout the country, protests continue to rage over alleged election-rigging, and a perilous economic situation has left almost 40% of the population below the poverty line. Without a clear mandate to govern, the incoming coalition may find it difficult to secure a much-needed bailout from the International Monetary Fund and get Pakistan’s economy back on track. 

“Pakistan has soaring crises across the board, which means there’s much at stake for a new government,” says Michael Kugelman, director of the Wilson Center’s South Asia Institute. The coalition “will be expected to hit the ground running.”

K.M. Chaudary/AP

Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif gestures during a press conference regarding parliamentary elections, in Lahore, Pakistan, Feb. 13, 2024. Under a power-sharing agreement reached Feb. 20, Mr. Sharif is set to become Pakistan’s next prime minister.

Mounting evidence of rigging 

On Feb. 20, the Election Commission of Pakistan, which has been excoriated for the way it conducted the vote, heard petitions filed by candidates from around 40 constituencies, many alleging that their results had been manipulated. 

Their experiences resemble that of Shoaib Shaheen, a PTI-backed candidate who had taken a commanding lead in his Islamabad constituency before election results suddenly stopped on the evening of Feb. 8. The next morning, when the results resumed, Mr. Shaheen and many others saw their leads evaporate. 

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