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A sympathy wave: myth or reality?

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A sympathy wave: myth or reality?

By Cyril Almeida

IN the wake of Benazir Bhutto’s assassination, election talk has centred on a ‘sympathy wave’ at the ballot box for the Pakistan People’s Party. As politicians have sparred over and commentators tussled with the wave, number-crunching and dispassionate electoral analysis has been pushed aside.

On the eve of Pakistan’s eighth general election, little light has been shed on the wave phenomenon. What constitutes a wave and will there be one? Does the wave even matter?

Several factors are important. One: Indisputably, a successful wave will be measured against the PPP’s success in elections past. But what is the measure of a successful wave?

The answer, as it turns out, is complicated. A good starting point is the percentage of total votes cast for the PPP.

The party has never won more than 40 per cent of the votes in any election since 1988. In the last two elections, this figure remained between 20 per cent and 26 per cent.

If the PPP bags 40 per cent of the votes on Feb 18, the party will undoubtedly claim that their predictions of a wave are validated. But this figure would only return the party to its base support, given that the party claimed widespread rigging against it in the last two rounds of elections.

A more promising measure of the wave would be the total number of votes the party bags. The PPP’s vote bank has been lodged firmly in the region of 7.5 million to 8 million votes since 1988, barring the catastrophic elections of 1997 where its take was nearly halved.

If more votes make a wave, then the PPP has good reason to worry. In 2002, the party bagged fewer votes than it did in 1988, despite the fact that the total number of votes cast increased by over 10 million over the same period.

How can the PPP get its vote bank to cross 10 million, a figure that would be clear enough to constitute a sympathy wave? Well, the party needs a higher turnout on election day.

Achieving that may be difficult. In the five elections held since 1988, the turnout has ranged between 35 per cent and 45 per cent. In 1988, the first election contested by the PPP since its founder was killed, the turnout was only 40 per cent.

If the history and numbers are not on the PPP’s side, then the current climate holds even less promise. If voters perceive that the manufactured ‘transition to democracy’ scheme concocted by the president will not be dislodged, a perception that last year’s events will have reinforced, then the party will struggle to energise the electorate beyond its base.

Within the party, the unseemly public quarrelling over the prime ministerial slot has reminded many of Zardari’s uneasy relationship with the party rank and file.

Second: A successful wave cannot be confined to a surge in the smaller provinces. In the ‘first past the post’ system of parliamentary elections such as that in Pakistan, the true measure of electoral success is the number of seats a party bags. The PPP has always done well in elections in terms of the overall votes captured, finishing in the top two in all the elections since 1988. But in the high-water mark for the party in the 1993 elections, the party actually won fewer votes nationally than the PML-N. Votes do not necessarily translate into seats.

If the sympathy wave is confined to Sindh, the PPP group in parliament may be little different to the one in 2002. With 20 out of 61 seats available in Karachi and the party’s ability to outmuscle the MQM in urban Sindh considered slim, even a sweep of the rest of the province will mean only a handful of seats more than the 27 it picked up in 2002.

It is no secret that national elections are won or lost in the Punjab, and any successful wave must sweep through this province. Northern Punjab has never been kind to the PPP, so the focus will be on central and southern Punjab. And this is where the issue becomes more complicated.

The PPP was routed in central and southern Punjab in 1997 and struggled again for traction there in 2002. With 134 seats up for grabs there, the party cannot afford a losing trifecta.

The problem for a PPP wave is that the region is mired in a three-party fight, often complicated by powerful independent candidates. The Nawaz league was leaderless and picked apart by the state apparatus in 2002. This time around, the Sharif brothers are back and campaigning on a platform that gained much traction amongst the public last year: rejecting President Musharraf’s modus operandi in his so-called transition to democracy.

Meanwhile, the PML-Q is limping and on the back foot, but state backing nevertheless makes it a formidable contender. Will the PML-N, PML-Q and a cohort of independent candidates be successful in smothering a sympathy wave in southern and central Punjab? The possibility is real.

Third: Rigging. It is an ever present threat and one that makes the PML-Q a formidable force still in the Punjab. The Citizen’s Group on Electoral Process, a credible body sponsored by PILDAT, has this to say on rigging: “In fact, after such a thoroughly unfair pre-poll process, the need for any manipulation in the polling-day process should be drastically reduced.”

For the wave analysis, of particular interest is the group’s assessment of the correctness, completeness and credibility of the electoral rolls. In its report on pre-poll rigging, the group states: “The process of addition of 27 million ‘missing’ voters is rather shrouded in mystery and it is not clear how well the verification was carried out by the ECP.”

Votes can only be cast by people on the list, and if the electoral rolls disproportionately affect PPP supporters, the wave could already have been thwarted.

Election day offers further opportunity to suppress the wave. Polling stations set up in terrain inhospitable and dangerous for PPP voters could suppress the party’s vote count, particularly amongst women and the elderly.

Fourth: History is only a guide. Extrapolating from past electoral results whether there will be a wave or not is fraught with problems, not least because all results since 1988 are believed to have been massaged to some degree. Equally, the pundits’ glib pronouncements ought to be taken with a heavy dose of scepticism.

Nawaz Sharif is illustrative of the perils faced by those who live by the pen. The former prime minister’s political obituary has been written many times since last summer. First, acknowledgement of a deal with Musharraf was supposed to have killed off his chances in the elections. Then the tepid response to his attempted return to Pakistan in September was pounced upon as proof of a leader past his prime. U-turns on participating in elections were cited as evidence of a leader adrift.

Now, as the election day approaches, the consensus is that the PML-N is poised to strike a blow to the ruling party. If Sharif somehow succeeds in restoring the deposed judges, erstwhile critics will trot out hagiographies of Pakistan’s latest saviour.

So will there be a sympathy wave? In truth, the answer to that will only be known on Feb 18.

The writer is a Karachi-based lawyer. He can be reached at [email protected].

A sympathy wave: myth or reality? -DAWN - Top Stories; February 10, 2008
 
‘BB’s last wish was to talk to Nawaz’

LAHORE: Former premier Benazir Bhutto’s last wish was to talk to Nawaz Sharif so that she could condole the deaths of four Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz workers killed in a rally on December 27, 2007, said Naheed Khan. Benazir’s political secretary told Geo News that these had been her last words before she stood and started waving to the crowd. Naheed denied that the impact caused by the explosion had killed Benazir, saying the Pakistan People’s Party chairwoman had fallen inside the vehicle six seconds before the blast occurred. Naheed reiterated that the shots fired at Benazir caused her death, adding that Benazir did not say anything more after she was shot. daily times monitor

Courtesy Daily Times
 
Bhutto sympathy vote seen key to Pakistan election

By Robert Birsel

MULTAN, Pakistan (Reuters) - The strength of a sympathy vote for assassinated Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto in the country's biggest province is likely to determine the result of a general election on Feb. 18.

The vote could seal the fate of President Pervez Musharraf, even though it is not a presidential election, with opponents calling for the increasingly unpopular leader to step down.

"Certainly there's a sympathy vote," said Syed Yousaf Raza Gilani, a vice chairman of Bhutto's party standing in Punjab province, where half the country's 160 million people live and half of its members of parliament will be elected.

"If there's a free, fair and transparent election the PPP will be number one," Gilani said at his house in the city of Multan, while aides bustled about in the gloom of a power cut.

Months of political turmoil and militant violence have raised worries about the stability for the nuclear-armed U.S. ally.

Fear of violence has stifled election campaigning, especially after Bhutto was killed on Dec. 27 in an attack the government blamed on militants, and is also expected to hurt turnout in the election for a National Assembly and four provincial assemblies.

A suicide bomb attack on Saturday at a rally by an ethnic Pashtun nationalist party opposed to Musharraf killed at least 16 people.

Opposition parties have also complained of rigging in favour of Musharraf's allies.

The main challengers to the pro-Musharraf Pakistan Muslim League (PML) are Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and the party of Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister Musharraf ousted in a coup in 1999. Punjab is their main battleground.

"She was very brave and gave Musharraf a tough time, which nobody else has dared to do. People should vote for her party," Punjab labourer Jumma Khan said of Bhutto.

Musharraf, who stepped down as army chief in November, has lost popularity over his efforts to cling to power, which included the purging of the judiciary and gagging of the media after he imposed a six-week stint of emergency rule on Nov. 3.

His security ties with the United States are also unpopular.

But it is inflation, power cuts and shortages of the staple flour and natural gas that could scupper the election hopes of the PML, which has been ruling under Musharraf.

Musharraf won re-election for another five-year term as president in an October vote by legislators. But critics say he has held on to power unconstitutionally and he could face efforts to unseat him in an opposition-dominated parliament.


PUNJAB IS KEY

Bhutto's party is expected to sweep rural areas of her home province of Sindh and split the vote in its capital, Karachi, with a pro-Musharraf party.

It also looks set to make gains in Punjab, which has the country's most independent voters, unattached to a party and free from caste or tribal voting compulsions, said political analyst and academic Rasul Bakhsh Rais.

"The People's Party has a much brighter chance now than it probably could have had with Bhutto on the scene," Rais said of the sympathy vote. "Punjab is key and I see some change in Punjab in their favour."

Sharif's party, the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), known as the PML-N or Nawaz League, is also expected to do well in Punjab, particularly in urban areas, and could be the biggest there if a sympathy swing to the PPP fizzles.

Sharif's party and the PPP look likely to be in a position to establish a dominant coalition, if they want, analysts say.

But Musharraf's allies cannot be written off. They are fielding strong candidates and have support from powerful families who command banks of votes in the countryside.

Former President Farooq Leghari, standing for the PML in his home district of Dera Ghazi Khan in Punjab, said his party would win although it was being hurt by rising prices and shortages, and discontent with Musharraf.

"People see Musharraf, his leading the so-called war on terror at the behest of the West, as a major factor," said Leghari, who as president dismissed Bhutto's government in 1996 over accusations of corruption and misrule.

"There was a tremendous, huge, crest of sympathy for her but it is ebbing," he said of Bhutto. "What is going to hurt the PML is more the increase in prices and so on rather than any special performance by the other parties."

Bhutto sympathy vote seen key to Pakistan election | Top News | Reuters
 

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