ISLAMABAD: A leading coalition partner of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party on Tuesday objected to a proposed amendment to the Election Act, 2017, which seeks to vest more powers in caretaker administrations during the course of a parliamentary debate.
The government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif introduced a number of amendments to the said legislation just a few days before the five-year constitutional tenure of the present National Assembly is due to expire.
According to the law minister of the country, Azam Nazir Tarar, the proposed amendments to the Elections Act aim to enhance transparency in the upcoming national polls. He noted that the recommendations included the initiation of criminal proceedings against officials intentionally delaying election results.
However, Senator Raza Rabbani of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) objected to the proposed changes to Section 230 of the Elections Act to empower the caretaker setups to make important decisions like elected administrations of the country.
“An unelected government cannot be put on the same pedestal as that of an elected government,” he said while addressing the parliamentary session. “You are trying to bring the two on a par with each other. I strongly disagree with this.”
Rabbani noted he was in favor of improving the electoral process in the country, but caretaker administrations only took over for a limited period of 60 or 90 days and were only required to attend to administrative matters.
He criticized the government for not providing the copies of proposed amendments to parliamentarians.
“If you want to turn the joint parliamentary sitting into a rubber stamp like the Senate and the National Assembly and make it lose its value, then that is a separate issue,” he continued.
However, a PML-N parliamentarian, Ayaz Saddiq, said the amendments were discussed in a parliamentary committee which even tried to incorporate suggestions from political factions outside the parliament.
“I would say that this [amended] document was prepared after near-consensus [among the country’s political forces],” he continued.
The joint parliamentary sitting will resume its session on Wednesday and begin to debate the proposed amendeds to the Elections Act, 2017, once again.