Home Elections 2013 Polling for Pakistan’s Next President Begins

Polling for Pakistan’s Next President Begins

by AFP
Aamir Qureshi—AFP

Aamir Qureshi—AFP

PMLN’s Mamnoon Hussain likely to be elected; results expected late on Tuesday.

Pakistani lawmakers on Tuesday began voting for a new president, marking an end to the five-year term of outgoing Asif Ali Zardari whose Pakistan Peoples Party lost May’s general elections.

An official from the Election Commission said that lawmakers in the Senate, National Assembly and the four provincial assemblies have started casting their votes to elect a new head of state.

Mamnoon Hussain, a businessman from Karachi and close ally of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, is the most likely to replace Zardari. A long-serving member of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), Hussain addressed a party meeting in Islamabad on Monday.

“Describing the office of president as the symbol of federation, the presidential candidate pledged to serve the country and its people in his capacity as president,” a statement issued by Sharif’s office said.

Zardari’s opposition PPP has boycotted the election, complaining it was not consulted on bringing the date forward from Aug. 6, and its absence means Sharif’s candidate is certain to win.

Hussain’s low profile and loyalty to Sharif will shore up the prime minister’s authority and provide a stark contrast to Zardari, considered a sharp political operator behind the scenes.

Hussain first impressed Sharif in 1999 as president of the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) and was made the governor of Sindh province.

“He had no political affiliation until 1999 but his polite discourse and professional ability impressed Nawaz Sharif who made him governor of Sindh,” Azhar Haroon, the current president of KCCI, said.

In a reminder of the enormous challenges Pakistan faces, Taliban militants launched a brazen attack on a prison in the northwest of the country overnight, escaping with over 200 prisoners after a three-hour gunfight with security forces. A debilitating power crisis also needs to be solved and U.S. relations are complicated by drone attacks targeting militants.

Supporters say Hussain’s election could be important domestically by giving the south some stake in the federal administration, otherwise dominated by Punjab, Sharif’s power base.

There are two candidates: Hussain and respected, retired Supreme Court judge Wajihuddin Ahmed nominated by the third largest party of cricket hero Imran Khan.

Voting began at 10 a.m. and will last until 3 p.m., with the result expected to be announced late on Tuesday.

Constitutional amendments passed by the last PPP government mean that the presidency is again a ceremonial post, a status likely to be cemented by the fact that Hussain has little personal clout.

Sharif won a commanding general election victory in May, which marked the first time a Pakistani civilian government completed a full term in office and handed over to another at the ballot box.

Political analyst Hasan Askari says Tuesday’s election will return Pakistan to a strong executive prime minister and a ceremonial head of state. “Mamnoon Hussain is a political lightweight and this is the reason Mr. Sharif chose him to become the next president,” he said.

But the last PPP government had a turbulent relationship with Pakistan’s top court and Askari warned that its boycott could lead to rocky relations with the PMLN. “Mamnoon Hussain will be elected easily and it will be an easy walkover, but he will start his term with a strong controversy. In the long-term it will cause tensions between PPP and PMLN.”

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