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View from Pakistan: Culture of dissent or deceit?

Karachi: Why are sane voices opposing the proposed 22nd constitutional amendment that aims to scrap the secret ballot for Senate elections? Agreed, party heads calling for the change are probably driven by the urge to entrench their stranglehold over MPs further. But should Pakistan worry about motivations or outcomes? What critics are saying is essentially this: because party heads are dictators who disregard wishes of their MPs, let’s retain the secret ballot to enable MPs to deceive them, and treat it as dissent.

The main arguments against the amendment are the following: a secret ballot is meant to preserve freedom of choice of a voter and must be retained; party heads are terrible people focused on monopolising power and running autocracies under the garb of democracy and any move adding to their influence directly or indirectly must be resisted; and the Senate serves no useful purpose and fixing the procedure for its election is pointless.

The arguments being made by proponents of the secret ballot for Senate election are not just misconceived but also ironical. When the secret ballot started emerging as a norm in democracies a couple of hundred years back the object was to protect the political privacy of the voter. In Pakistan, it is a matter of historical record that the secret ballot, not just in Senate elections but also in those for PM/CM cultivated a market for vote buying.

The logic of the secret ballot is simple. A citizen’s right to freedom of association is protected and he can make such association public by joining a political party if he so chooses. But if he wishes to keep his preferences anonymous, his right to privacy includes political privacy. The winner in an election represents the entire constituency and not just those who vote in his favour. Thus, it is deemed essential to ensure that once the winners are in control of the state’s coercive apparatus, those who voted against them do not become easy targets.

This logic has no application to votes and other legislative choices made by MPs for three reasons. One, MPs, as members of political parties, have declared political loyalties and the question of their political privacy simply doesn’t arise. Two, their position is not comparable to that of an average voter who is vulnerable to intimidation. And three, MPs, as representatives of people exercise delegated authority and can’t claim right to secrecy.

In other democracies too it is uncommon to hide the choices made by legislators. Pakistan’s Constitution ought to have excluded from the secret ballot all elections involving MPs. If democracy is government of the people, by the people and for the people, don’t people have a right to know what choices their representatives are making in their name? Would we rather continue with horse-trading (remember Changa Manga?) because open elections might empower party heads further? Have we concluded that public representatives will never have the courage to speak their minds unless they have the secret ballot? If MPs can’t muster the guts to raise their hands in full public view to vote for who they think they should, how will they do the job they are elected to do i.e. legislate for the people in accordance with their conscience?

When luminaries of political parties got together to finalise the 18th Amendment, they agreed that the Constitution must not mandate internal party democracy. They also agreed that voting by an MP against the party line in an election for the PM/CM or in relation to a vote of no-confidence, money bill or Constitution amendment bill qualifies as defection. So if Mr Raza Rabbani had not voted in favour of military courts he would have attracted disqualification under Article 63A. He had only two choices: either resign or cry.

Here is the scary bit about our Constitution: If four men — Nawaz Sharif, Asif Zardari, Imran Khan and Altaf Hussain agree to amend the Constitution, all other warm bodies representing the PML(N), PPP, PTI and MQM in Parliament would be bound by such a verdict. The point is that existence of Article 63A or deletion of Article 17(4) (that mandated intra-party elections) is not the cause of our politicos’ servile attitude but its consequence.

In Pakistan’s social and political culture of duplicity and expediency, speaking one’s mind attracts costs that we are unwilling to incur. That is why there is no dissent in Assemblies, Cabinets, courts or even boardrooms etc. Everyone is busy trying to suck up to everyone else ahead in the power pyramid. So long as this culture prevails, secret ballot for MPs will not help them grow a spine. It will only create an opportunity for the entrepreneurial ones to sell their vote along with their conscience.

The only purposeful critique of the proposed 22nd Amendment is that it is largely insignificant given the drastic reform our Senate needs. We must have an empowered Senate directly elected by ordinary citizens of each province. The Senate’s term ought to be revisited. And its elections scheduled at such time that they serve as a referendum on a government’s performance midterm. This will provide for electoral accountability in the middle of the National Assembly’s term, work as a safety valve enabling people to vent and keep government on its feet.

By arrangement with Dawn

( Source : dc )
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