
PM writes to opp to confer on new CEC
After months of dead air and no movement on key electoral appointments, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday extended an olive branch to National Assembly Opposition Leader Omar Ayub, inviting him for consultations on the appointment of a new Chief Election Commissioner (CEC).
In a letter, the premier stated that the term of the CEC, as well as that of two other members of the ECP, ended on January 26. However, all three have continued their duties under Article 215 of the Constitution.
He stated that, according to Article 218, proposals for the CEC and its members must be submitted to the parliamentary committee.
The letter comes as the constitutional logjam has been festering since January, as the five-year terms of CEC Sikandar Sultan Raja, Sindh Member Nisar Durrani and Balochistan Member Shah Muhammad Jatoi ended on January 26.
The process, laid out clearly in Article 213, requires a consensus between the prime minister and the opposition leader. In the event of no agreement, both sides are supposed to send separate lists of three names to a 12-member bipartisan committee, which would then pick one and send it to the president for formal appointment.
However, the process has been gathering dust. Though the seats of the CEC and two members expired in January, the government allowed the 45-day constitutional deadline for new appointments, which lapsed on March 12, to come and go without resolution.
The impasse now rests at the feet of both the treasury and opposition, with neither side making serious contact until the PM's letter.
On the other hand, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) has already taken the government to court in March. A petition filed in the Islamabad High Court by Ayub and Senate Opposition Leader Shibli Faraz lambasts the inaction as a constitutional violation. It names the federal government, Senate chairman, National Assembly speaker and the ECP as respondents.
The petition urges the court to compel the National Assembly speaker to constitute the required parliamentary committee and calls on the Senate chairman to provide names of senators for the same.
It further asks the court to order the prime minister to hold meaningful consultations with Ayub, as required under Article 213, and to declare the continued presence of the CEC and two expired members as illegal.
Constitutional experts point to the 26th Amendment, which altered Article 215(4) to allow officeholders to continue "till successors are appointed". Both opposition and observers allege the amendment is a legislative patch over executive indecision, especially when key posts meant to guarantee fair elections remain in limbo.
Of the four members of the ECP, only the Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa representatives - Babar Hassan Bharwana and Justice (retd) Ikramullah Khan - still have valid tenures, both stretching till mid-2027.
It is worth noting that CEC Sikandar Sultan Raja's tenure has been full of political minefields.
Opposition parties, particularly the PTI, have accused him of everything from election mismanagement to open partisanship. He has been criticised for failing to ensure timely general elections and for stripping the PTI of its iconic 'bat' symbol ahead of the 2024 polls.
The ECP has also come under fire for failing to implement the Supreme Court's verdict on reserved seats and for not holding Senate elections in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, a delay denounced by critics as undermining federal parliamentary integrity.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Express Tribune
2 hours ago
- Express Tribune
SHC orders opening of Governor House for acting governor
The Constitutional Bench of the Sindh High Court (SHC), comprising Justice K.K. Agha and Justice Adnan-ul-Karim Memon, heard Acting Governor Owais Qadir Shah's petition challenging the locking of Governor House offices. The court ordered the immediate reopening of these offices and directed the principal secretary to submit a compliance report by June 23. During the urgent hearing, the bench granted acting governor immediate access to the Sindh Governor's official residence. The court specifically ordered the unlocking of all offices (excluding private residential quarters) and restrained the principal secretary from obstructing the acting governor's access. The court also directed that a copy of the judicial order be transmitted to the President of Pakistan and the Principal Secretary of the Governor's House, Sindh. In the petition, it was averred that since assuming charge, the Acting Governor, Owais Qadir Shah, has been denied entry to the Governor's House for official duties which is a violation of Article 104 of the Constitution. Governor Kamran Tessori has been abroad since June 2. Acting Governor of Sindh, Owais Qadir Shah, informed the court that a meeting on law and order in the was scheduled for today, specifically to discuss matters related to Muharram. The home minister, secretary, IG Sindh, and other officials reached for the meeting. However, the principal secretary stated that the governor had taken the office keys with him. Owais Qadir Shah stated that this was an act of considering the Governor's House as their personal lounge. He cited the Constitution, which clearly states that in the absence of the governor, the acting governor can perform duties. Owais Qadir Shah said, he would write to the chief minister, highlighting that this was a mockery of the Constitution.


Express Tribune
3 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Elite clubs come under tax ambit
Listen to article The government's plan to ban economic transactions by ineligible persons from the start of new fiscal year has faced a setback, as a National Assembly panel found the online portal being developed to determine the eligibility criteria for carrying economic transactions was far from the finishing line. National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance Chairman Syed Naveed Qamar gave his critical post-review assessment on Friday after reviewing the government's much-trumpeted plan to catch tax evaders. The committee, nonetheless, supported the government's proposal to impose income tax on the earnings of elite recreational clubs, like Islamabad Club and Guns and Country Club that charge more than Rs1 million membership fees. Work on the online platform is far from the finishing line, said Naveed Qamar, a day after he and other committee members took a briefing of the new system in a visit to the Federal Board of Revenue headquarter. The statement made by the chairman after reviewing the system shows that FBR has failed to develop a credible online system. The government has proposed to ban economic transactions by those whose assets and wealth statements do not support buying a plot, a car, invest in securities or maintaining bank accounts. The committee had linked the approval of the powers with the FBR's ability to develop a system that is free from the exploitation of the taxpayers. The FBR had earlier promised to develop this system by April this year. The FBR's briefing showed that it was merely a prototype system that cannot be described fully functional and does not have the ability to achieve the intended purposes, said Usama Mela, the member of the standing committee and the PTI MNA. In his post-budget press conference, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb had warned that if the Parliament did not approve the proposed amendments, the government may have to impose Rs400 billion to Rs500 billion in new tax measures. But his organization has not developed a trustworthy system. There is still a chance that the National Assembly committee will approve these amendments but their enforcement will be linked with the development of a credible online platform. The new system determining the eligibility criteria of taxpayers to undertake economic transactions would not be enforced from July 1st, the Chairman FBR Rashid Langrial told the standing committee. He further explained that the current system will continue until a new system is put in place. The government has already proposed in the law that these new conditions will take effect after the approval of the federal government. The chairman of the standing committee proposed that initially the FBR should apply the new system to a set of taxpayers instead of fully rolling it out. The chairman FBR agreed to the recommendation. The government has proposed that only those people can buy cars, plots, invest in securities who have sufficient declared white legal resources to buy these assets and maintain bank accounts According to the bill, the ineligible persons would not be allowed to withdraw cash from their bank accounts beyond a certain limit. However, it gives certain relaxations to them, including the freedom to procure up to 800cc vehicles, buses, trucks and tractors and invest in shares up to a certain limit. The new system was conceived by Rashid Langrial in order to collect due taxes from people, either filers or non-filers. An eligible person can make major purchases of up to 130% of the value of cash and assets, declared in his last tax return and the wealth statement or he can justify any new source. Recreational Clubs The FBR informed the standing committee about an amendment in the law to capture the incomes of the elite clubs, which are exempted from paying income tax. The government has proposed to exclude these recreational clubs charging over Rs1 million for the membership fee from the purview of the non-profitable organizations. The Islamabad Club is very much coming in the tax net, said Muhammad Aurangzeb. The club had been built as a recreational facility for the bureaucrats and diplomats. Over the years, its fee was exorbitantly increased to many millions of rupees. Its membership is being offered to only the richest or the influential people, denying others from availing facilities being built on the state land. The standing committee also rejected a government budget proposal of indirectly charging income tax from the farmers despite their income cannot be taxed by the federal government.


Business Recorder
4 hours ago
- Business Recorder
PTI expresses strong solidarity with Iran
ISLAMABAD: The opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) on Friday expressed strong solidarity with Iran, declaring that the people of Pakistan stand firmly with their Iranian brethren amid ongoing hostilities between Iran and Israel. A PTI delegation, led by the Opposition Leader in National Assembly Omar Ayub, comprising senior party leaders, visited the Iranian Embassy to convey support on behalf of the Pakistani nation. The delegation met with Iran's Ambassador to Pakistan Dr Reza Amiri Moghadam. The visit was undertaken on the instructions of PTI's incarcerated patron-in-chief and ex-prime minister Imran Khan. A message from Khan was formally delivered to the Iranian envoy during the meeting. During his meeting with the Iranian envoy, Ayub condemned the Israeli aggression, calling recent actions by Tel Aviv violations of international law. 'We stand firmly with the Iranian government and its people,' he said. 'From Gaza to Tehran, the cries of the oppressed are shaking the conscience of the world.' He urged the international community to recognise Iran's right to self-defence and called on the Muslim world to move beyond symbolic gestures and adopt practical steps. 'Israel has become a threat to global peace,' he added, reiterating PTI's support for Iran. The acting PTI chairman Barrister Gohar Ali Khan who was also part of the delegation, said that 'we extended condolences over the recent losses in Iran and assured the ambassador that the people, opposition, and government of Pakistan stand united with Iran during this challenging time.' Separately, talking to journalists outside Parliament House, Khan reaffirmed that any efforts regarding Imran Khan's release would be pursued solely through constitutional and legal means. 'There will be no deal,' Khan asserted, dismissing speculation of backdoor negotiations. 'Imran Khan has always maintained that he will not seek or accept any deal.' He also emphasised that PTI had never sought assistance from any foreign government. 'We are not relying on the new US administration or any foreign intervention,' he said. 'Our trust lies with the judiciary, which is performing under extremely difficult conditions.' Copyright Business Recorder, 2025