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Pakistan is gearing up for elections. Will the army let them happen?

With a general election less than a month out, Pakistan’s political landscape is awash with uncertainty. 

Pakistan’s most popular political party, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) is struggling to get names on the ballot. In recent weeks, PTI lawyers have had to fight to retain the cricket bat as the party’s election symbol – a critical identifier for millions of illiterate voters. Meanwhile, PTI’s main rival, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, finalized most of its candidates Wednesday night.

Why We Wrote This

Ideally, campaign season is a time of rich debate, problem solving, and civic engagement. But in Pakistan, conversation has focused instead on the unlevel political playing field, which threatens to undermine upcoming elections.

Though the Election Commission of Pakistan has dismissed claims of an uneven playing field, politicians of all stripes are openly questioning whether the election, slated for Feb. 8, will actually take place. Many believe the country’s powerful military establishment will delay elections until they are certain that the PTI – and its imprisoned leader, former Prime Minister Imran Khan – do not pose a threat. 

Regardless, the pre-election chaos has robbed voters of the chance to hear candidates debate about the compounding crises facing Pakistan, including an uptick in terror attacks and high inflation.

“It has been a listless and issueless election campaign so far,” says political scientist Maleeha Lodhi. “Some of this is because of the uncertainty about the integrity of elections, but it is also due to the lack of focus by political contestants.”

With less than a month to go until a general election, Pakistan’s political landscape is awash with rumor and uncertainty. 

Would-be candidates from the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) – the most popular political party, according to a Gallup survey – are struggling to get on the ballot. They are allegedly being suppressed on the orders of Pakistan’s powerful military establishment, though the Election Commission of Pakistan has dismissed claims of an uneven playing field. Meanwhile, PTI’s main rival, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PMLN), only finalized most of its candidates Wednesday night, in what many view as a sign of complacency.

Such is the level of confusion that politicians of all stripes are openly questioning whether the election – currently slated for Feb. 8 – will actually take place. 

Why We Wrote This

Ideally, campaign season is a time of rich debate, problem solving, and civic engagement. But in Pakistan, conversation has focused instead on the unlevel political playing field, which threatens to undermine upcoming elections.

Socialist politician Ammar Ali Jan, who belongs to neither the PMLN nor the PTI, says most parties are unsure whether elections can happen while the military establishment remains locked in a tussle with the PTI. “A lot of people are of the opinion that … unless [the military establishment] can create conditions” for a result which it finds acceptable, it “won’t let elections take place,” he says.

Central to this power struggle is the personal animosity between former Prime Minister Imran Khan and the chief of the Pakistan Army, Gen. Syed Asim Munir. Mr. Khan, the PTI leader who headed a coalition government from August 2018 until he was ousted in a vote of no confidence in April 2022, had removed General Munir from his post as the country’s top spymaster under acrimonious circumstances while serving as prime minister.

“Because it is such a personalized struggle between General Munir and Imran Khan, I think the calculation here is that there can only be one man standing, and Munir is not about to allow that one man to be Imran Khan,” says Farzana Shaikh, associate fellow at Chatham House. Dr. Shaikh predicts that elections will likely be delayed until General Munir has assured himself that the PTI will not be able to come in as a credible force.

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