Pappa Alpha
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What Pakistan needs is new provinces and powerful local bodies. That's it.
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you are Absolutely right.I fully agree with you. The US presidential system is one of the best decentralized, federal unions on earth. It's a darn shame that thoughtout our decades old relationship with the US, we never sought their assistance in setting up and establishing this form of government in Pakistan. It will bring stability and accountability to the nation.
The present provincial structure allows the parasitic old oligarchs, along with the industrial, and agricultural feudals to keep looting and plundering this country till perpetuity. But, no one has guts to implement these reforms, but until we do, there is no hope for Pakistan.IMO the real issue is the lack of delegation or devolution to the local level. I think the provincial system as a whole needs to go.
Replace it with 100+ districts that (1) collect the tax and (2) manage the needs of the district mostly however they want. So, let them invest in preserving a particular language, culture, etc, provided they adhere to federal mandates towards healthcare, baseline education, etc.
If some districts want to live in the 7th century, then let them be. If someone there dislikes it, they can move to another district suited to their needs and preferences. The worst districts will lose their population and die off (no tax collection). IMO 'dead' districts can help absorb and naturalize refugees without destabilization risks (@313ghazi).
Pakistani and American system is very similar. Only difference is in America president governor of the state head of local government and senators are directly elected.
Unpopular politicians fear they would become irrelevant if head of state and governors of the provinces are directly elected isliye wo direct election k khilaf hain. New local government system of Punjab and kpk is first step towards American system. Opposition parties of sindh are also demanding direct election for Karachi mayor
And Imran Khan na senators k direct election ka 2015 main kaha tha
only successful purely parliamentary democracy is UK- let that sink in... (despite UK colonizing most of the world so many countries following parliamentary democracy)
And except for this genuine flaw of dead lock - all else is Ok
Make electoral colledge legally obligable to carry out the will of his voters- if he doesn't than his vote doesn't count and hell be replaced (after wards criminal prosecution)
Make Chief Justices term 2.5 or 5 years
@Patriot forever
"Imagine if the parliament has a majority from one party and president is from a different party > there will be complete dead lock in the government, nothing will get done."
deadlock is a genuine issue in this system though - we need a work around this
Islamist can support this too- as it is the closest to Calipha system in a democracy
New Recruit
I'm sorry yaar, but you are seriously mistaken. UK is not the only parliamentary system in the world, neither is it the only successful one. There are many dozens of countries with parliamentary forms of government, and many successful one, more then the Presidential forms.
Parliamentary forms of government and presidential forms come in different formats.
UK is not the only successful parliamentary form of government, there are many others, such as Canada, New Zeeland, Australia, Sweden, Germany, Ireland, the list goes on. The parliamentary form of government is far more inclusive then a presidential form of government.
But, you already have contradicted yourself by suggesting limitations, you have suggested changes, but that's the point, no system is perfect. It has to be changed and adopted to suit the needs of every country. There will always be a need to make changes over time, every constitution changes over time because the requirements of governance change. So rather then continuously demanding a new form of government every few decades, stick with the one you have, continue making small changes, when required, and it will entrench and stabilise over time.
The modern mature western democracies did not become perfect overnight, it took time, effort and adjustment, that is the most important part, not drastic change, but sticking with the same system and making small adjustments, not drastic change every time you get bored.
Wrong assumptions lead to wrong conclusions!I'm sorry yaar, but you are seriously mistaken. UK is not the only parliamentary system in the world, neither is it the only successful one. There are many dozens of countries with parliamentary forms of government, and many successful one, more then the Presidential forms.
Parliamentary forms of government and presidential forms come in different formats.
UK is not the only successful parliamentary form of government, there are many others, such as Canada, New Zeeland, Australia, Sweden, Germany, Ireland, the list goes on. The parliamentary form of government is far more inclusive then a presidential form of government.
But, you already have contradicted yourself by suggesting limitations, you have suggested changes, but that's the point, no system is perfect. It has to be changed and adopted to suit the needs of every country. There will always be a need to make changes over time, every constitution changes over time because the requirements of governance change. So rather then continuously demanding a new form of government every few decades, stick with the one you have, continue making small changes, when required, and it will entrench and stabilise over time.
The modern mature western democracies did not become perfect overnight, it took time, effort and adjustment, that is the most important part, not drastic change, but sticking with the same system and making small adjustments, not drastic change every time you get bored.
Unfortunately the current Parliamentary system is beyond repair. In Pakistans case it was created by and for the corrupt. Any changes made to the system over the past several years aka 18th amendment were done to continue the hold of looters and we see the damage that has been done. Unfortunately the current system is the bread and butter of the various Mafias and political parties whose sole objective is to full their own pockets. So the idea of reforming the system to make it better over time is out of the question. It simply won't happen. The only way is to throw the 1973 constitution in the trash where it belongs and put in a real Presidential system as has been discussed by many here. We are at a point where that's the only way forward.
Wrong assumptions lead to wrong conclusions!
While Pakistanis do understand when they participate in the electoral process that essentially they're choosing a representative but that is about it... it is this superficial understanding that this already flawed model further exasperates. But that is only one side of the coin... those who represent them are lost themselves.
These fundamentals can however be understood and people clued in... but that will not make it any better. As it stands western multiparty politics is grounded in western realities, their struggles and priorities. The ideologies fundamental to their realities social fabric, ideals, unions, industrialists, barons, aristocracy and royals. These political parties then represent their niche political ideologies set in socialist, capitalist or libertarian principles. They cannot be translated into a society where similar discourse never took place... where fundamentals and social contracts are totally different. Political parties thus revolve around cults of personality that further translates into their families.
A true and honest dialogue can never happen! It has been stifled by a fleeting and foreign ideology/politics that will never mirror grounded realities.
It will frustrate all parties in perpetuity attempting an impossible, fitting a square peg in a round hole.
I think US style democracy is one of the best in the world from governance presepctive and for the most part is very beneficial to small states and Thier rights
American Presidential system
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Phillipines and Latin America also follows this style of governance
Philippines is doing good to decent while Latin America is stagenent (I think drugs, US hegemony made it that way)
But corruption becomes a huge problem in this system
I honestly did not understand your argument.
You made a statement that included a bunch of criticism going in different directions, but it had no direct relevance to the parliamentary system of governance.
What you describe is essentially part of every single form of governance, it is a reality of life, reality of governance, reality of society.
Those issues will, and do exist in one form or another in every kind of governance that has ever existed. So, how is it relevant as a criticism for the parliamentary form of governance?
Plus, you have not clearly stated which form of government you would support and why, and how it would be different from the parliamentary system.