The signal from Zardari

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  • Are PTI and PML-N getting closer?

It is becoming abundantly clear  that the PTI had done  little homework  before forming the government. The party therefore failed to hit the ground running that it had promised. The stand taken by one of Imran Khan’s ace advisors about the CPEC is just one example of the persisting confusion in the PTI ranks. Over two months in power the government  remains undecided when to announce the hike in power charges.  An IMF staff level team is scheduled to arrive next week  but the government waits for response to its request for loans from friendly countries. Malaysia has now replaced UAE in the list of friends  indeed.

Former President Zardari is not entirely off the mark  when he complains that  the government is incompetent. There is however another equally valid  view  which holds that a little over two months of  incumbency  is too small a period to judge the performance of a government. The PPP and PML-N  are gradually realising that  one of the factors that  helped PTI to win the election with a paper thin majority  was the squabbles among the   opposition which stood in the way of their collaboration even in constituencies  where this could have  changed the results.

The signals emanating from the PPP indicate a possible decrease in tensions between the PPP and  PML-N after the heightening of  pressure from the FIA and NAB  on  the  PPP leadership.  Whatever the outcome of the NAB cases, there remains a  need for a strong opposition bloc in Parliament  that can keep the government on its toes by pointing  out the drawbacks in its working and  exposing its faulty policies. This will not only project a positive  image of the opposition among the general public but also provide an opportunity to the ruling party to correct its mistakes. The opposition however must avoid the temptation to use the accumulating resentment against rising prices and service charges by premature calls for agitation. The PTI being the party in power it is going to  be judged by its performance. It is time for the government to  concentrate on its job  instead of wasting all energy on recounting  the failures of the past two governments.