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There’s a storm raging through the PTI’s frozen heart.

Musafir117

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Ever since Aleem Khan’s defeat in the NA-122 by-election, the future of his party is under microscopic review. There is much that has gone wrong with its grand strategy. The PTI high command now looks back and sees the last two years littered with the debris of pious intentions. The dharna did not work out. The Judicial Commission did not work out. NA-122 and other elections did not work out. The party is struggling to find a message — any message — that finds traction.

Things are bad for the party. Seriously bad. But wait. Are we missing something here?

Imran Khan evokes strong emotions amongst the electorate: voters either adore him or loathe him — rare is one who is indifferent to him and his politics. He is measured against a higher scale than other politicians. He shouldn’t complain because his own fiery rhetoric and high moral positioning is the cause.

This contrast with other politicians has served him well. He’s the ‘outsider’, the ‘non-politician’ who has gatecrashed an elite club and flung open the doors for we the people to enter. He’s the ‘unpredictable’ star who plays by his own rules; who incites passion where none existed; and who has redefined the traditional concept of politics. In short, Khan has revolutionised our socio-political thought process and redrawn the contours of our national agenda.



Imran Khan is, without doubt, a glorious change-maker. And a glorious failure.

He failed to win in 2013. He failed to rock the country with his protests. He failed to bring down the Sharifs with his dharna. He failed to prove his rigging charges. He failed to get his way in the Judicial Commission. He failed to win elections. He failed to halt the bloodletting within his party. He failed to make the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa government a model to be emulated across the land. He failed to have a deep impact on national policy. He failed to perform in the National Assembly. He failed to get rid of the election commission members. And he may be setting himself for failure in the 2018 elections.

This is the conventional view. But it may not tell the whole story.

For that, let’s rewind to October 30, 2011. It’s a balmy evening at the Manto Park and Khan stands tall, surveying a crowd that is swelling like an angry ocean. Imran Khan’s message has finally reached home. A new movement is born and it is straining to break out into the political arena to bring down the crumbling walls of privilege, patronage and personal aggrandisement.

Fast-forward to today. It’s October 2015 and the walls of privilege, patronage and personal aggrandisement have not crumbled. Something somewhere went horribly wrong.

Or did it?

Today Imran Khan’s failure is measured against unrealistic expectations borne out of an ideological zeal. He promised things he could not deliver. His followers then magnified expectations by projecting their dreams and aspirations on him and him alone. Could one man shoulder the weight of so many dreams alone? Khan’s strength became his weakness, but in reality it remains his strength: galvanising millions in search of their dreams for a better homeland.

But here’s the catch: dreams may launch a revolutionary movement, they do not automatically translate into votes. For this to happen, a movement needs to evolve into a political party. Yes, a party that works the system; that adheres to the twisted rules of electoral politics; that embraces men and women with suspect credentials and solid vote banks; that learns to compromise every now and then.

In other words, to win power, the PTI must become more like the PML-N.

If it is already doing that, it is not a failure. It’s a natural evolution.

So let’s not rake Khan over coals. Instead, let us readjust our analytical barometers and judge his actions afresh. Khan has been running since 2011. Now he must learn to walk, and then crawl.

What we are witnessing now is the not-so-gradual mainstreaming of Khan and the PTI. The party has gone through phases it needed to: from the domination of the ideological core to the entry of the traditional politician, leading to the inevitable conflict, followed by a fractious civil war and confusion over what the party stands for. Finally, with NA-122, the party is getting comfortable in its new mainstream skin.

It is a skin stitched together by the likes of Jehangir Tareen, Shah Mehmood Qureshi and Chaudhry Sarwar. These three are the architects of the new PTI; a party that is in the process of outgrowing its adolescent zeal and maturing into a standard, traditional, political party that accepts that its hunger to win is now stronger than its desire for change.

In its apparent failure then lies the PTI’s ultimate win. Tareen, Qureshi and Sarwar have successfully re-engineered the party so it can win votes, not hearts. It’s a new culture that is taking root inside a movement that is moving in a new direction. It is not an easy transition; and certainly a tortuous one for those who are still driven by passion, zeal and dreams. But it is a necessary transition if the PTI really wants to rule Pakistan one day.

Does this mainstreaming come naturally to Imran Khan? No. Look at him and you can tell he is uncomfortable. He should be. The manipulative world of electoral politics is not his field of expertise. It shouldn’t be. That’s where his appeal lies. But having gone through the highs and lows of the last few years, Khan is well aware that if he wants to beat Nawaz Sharif, he will have to become more like Nawaz Sharif. He also realises he cannot do that. But Tareen can. Qureshi can. Sarwar can.

So this then is the final end of innocence for the PTI: a party led by Khan but powered by these three gentlemen. Khan can keep harping on the rigging and the stealing of 2013 elections, and he can keep breathing fire like the Targaryen dragons, but as long as his three mainstreamers have their eyes set on 2018 instead of 2013, the PML-N should be afraid.

Dear Insafians, do not grieve over the death of dreams and the end of innocence, for therein lie the seeds of electoral salvation. Welcome to the world of grown-ups.

Published in The Express Tribune, October 18th, 2015.
PTI’s end of innocence - The Express Tribune
 
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Ever since Aleem Khan’s defeat in the NA-122 by-election, the future of his party is under microscopic review. There is much that has gone wrong with its grand strategy. The PTI high command now looks back and sees the last two years littered with the debris of pious intentions. The dharna did not work out. The Judicial Commission did not work out. NA-122 and other elections did not work out. The party is struggling to find a message — any message — that finds traction.

The message has come, directly to IK's cell phone and he was told to follow the system, no more instigating hateful politics that can turn violent and can start a civil war, and that any deviation from this, will be considered him vs. the state and he'll be considered outside the system.

He was also clearly told that NS is working on the highest national priority projects and those projects must end. And that the military and NS are working very closely without any gaps in taking Pakistan forward, and no one will be allowed to derail that progress.

So he needs to sit down till 2018. Then try his luck, **IF** he passes the investigation of funding from seriously anti-Pakistan sources sitting in many different countries.
 
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PTI leadership should realize one thing by now. No one can beat PML N in lahore, PPP in sindh and MQM in karachi even if the leadership of these parties sell the country they will still be in power in their respective areas of influence according to the current system of elections
 
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PTI leadership should realize one thing by now. No one can beat PML N in lahore, PPP in sindh and MQM in karachi even if the leadership of these parties sell the country they will still be in power in their respective areas of influence according to the current system of elections
The same current system they won in KPK and other seats in Pakistan, two and half years they spent on protests allegations just gone waste.
 
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The same current system they won in KPK and other seats in Pakistan, two and half years they spent on protests allegations just gone waste.

Yup, billions wasted, and a lot of progress that could've been made, wasn't made due to such negative politics!!! That at the end, don't damage NS as an individual. These dangerous politics damage the entire country that's on the verge of high growth or total collapse. This is the last change anyone would trust Pakistan with $ 46 billion investments. It won't happen again and here we have negative Debby downers, who always think pessimistically and find wrong in everything, vs. trying to see a bigger picture and letting someone finish their legal terms granted to them by the people!!
 
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The same current system they won in KPK and other seats in Pakistan, two and half years they spent on protests allegations just gone waste.

Have you been to KPK and seen the changes they've implemented there personally?

How are the public services doing there since they've taken government ?

-how's the police ?
-how's the state run hospitals ?
-how's the state run schools/colleges ?
 
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PTI will stay at number 2 position as long ask IK keeps up with this politics of revenge and agitation. People are fed up. NA-122 was a close match in PML's heartland, but no where near the hype IK tried to create pre-polls.
 
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Have you been to KPK and seen the changes they've implemented there personally?

How are the public services doing there since they've taken government ?

-how's the police ?
-how's the state run hospitals ?
-how's the state run schools/colleges ?
People outside of KPK don't see it, they see dharna.
 
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Interesting I never saw an article on pmln
 
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