Decaying politics…Dr Niaz Murtaza
POLITICS is to acquire and use power to achieve ones aims and is often autocratic (won via force to favour elites). However, its best form is democratic, where rulers present pro-poor policies to win and implement them. But elites have created many perverse political forms to prevail even in democracy: patronage, populist, fascist and religious politics.
Our politics is clearly elitist. Sadly, it has shown a huge drift to perverse political forms over time. Our mother political form was Muslim Leagues freedom one. Unlike Congress and Awami Leagues pro-poor left ideology, its politics were rightwing ethnoreligious populism based on fear of Hindu rule sans a pro-poor vision. Yet this national politics hid many regional forms.
Muslim League co-opted feudal Unionists in Punjab and patronage politics ruled there for long, with elites winning by offering crumbs to familial voter blocs rather than pro-poor agendas. Yet Punjab voted for PPPs leftist agenda in 1970 but later adopted aberrant rightwing forms again like PML-Ns patronage and PTIs populism (anti-elitism sans clear pro-poor agenda). So, which one will prevail in Punjab is unclear. A distinct Seraiki identity has emerged in its poorer southern region but is yet to spawn ethno-ideological politics there. After 1947, Pakhtuns stuck to Ghaffar Khans leftist ethno-ideology for long. Religious parties ascended slowly in isolated areas like Dir, Kohistan and the south but PTIs religio-populist nationalism now holds sway despite the crackdown. Khyber Pakhtunkhwas Hindko region, better off than many Pakhtun areas, has always stuck to patronage politics, like Gilgit-Baltistan and Azad Kashmir.
Sindhis and Baloch too started with leftist ethno-ideology led by G.M. Syed and Bizenjo. Among the Baloch, establishment ploys have stoked religious and feudal-led politics as older ethno-ideological parties face extinction. Sindhis later switched to PPPs leftist ideology, but then adopted patronage politics. Ethno-ideological Sindhi parties now get few votes. Mohajirs supported Muslim Leagues rightwing politics initially, swung to religious parties in 1970, then turned to MQMs ethno-populist quasi-fascism after 1980 and PTI in 2018. With both PTI and MQM facing state oppression, religious parties (JI and TLP) are rising again. But like Punjab, the future of Mohajir politics remains unclear though it too may remain rightwing. Mohajir politics is the oddest nationally as despite their high education, income, global links and exposure, urban location (which makes mobilisation easy) and big intellectual pockets, they keep moving from one perverse political form to another.
Most of our failures stem from our political failures.
So nationally, there is no ethnicity or region where ideological politics prevails. Even those who had it have embraced perverse politics. Stagnant patronage is now our main political form, vacuous populism its main challenger, religious extremist politics the main wild card, and terrorist politics the main spoiler, cutting a bleak view of our politics. This state is mainly due to the establishments autocratic politics that serves as the bedrock of our politics. It has ruled directly for 30 years and runs politics covertly, and even otherwise, by furthering various forms of political patronage. Our huge economic, security, social and foreign policy failures stem from our political failures. Our political failures exist because powerful forces have blocked our natural political evolution for six decades.
The view is not entirely bleak as small pro-poor forces are rising. Strangely, these are mainly in the two poorest and most violent areas: ex-
Fata and Balochistan. The misery from poverty is magnified by terrorism religious in ex-Fata to conquer the state and ethnic |in Balochistan. PTM won two national seats in 2018 in ex-Fata.
Baloch forces are still loose as seen in Gwadar protests and Baloch march. So, politics in these areas now has three forms: patronage politics, militant politics, and mass politics, which rejects both.
The state is unwisely crushing it, not seeing its value in ending both forms of terrorism. The huge political energy of Baloch protests must crystallise into durable political forms like PTM. In my solidarity visits to the Baloch protest camp in Islamabad, I requested Mahrang Baloch and others to think on these lines.
Our political decay reflects a larger Saarc proclivity: Bangladesh embraces one-party autocracy, India has illiberal extremism and Sri Lanka stagnant politics. Yet nowhere are multiple crises and the need for mass politics bigger than in Pakistan.
Courtesy Dawn