It has now been two years since Imran Khan, the former Prime Minister and chairman of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), was arrested and handed down a ten-year sentence. Since then, the political landscape has changed dramatically. PTI, once the most dominant force in Pakistan’s politics, finds itself in disarray banned from mainstream media, fractured internally, and at odds with nearly every institution of the state.
Despite the overwhelming pressure, it remains a political reality that PTI is still the largest party on the ground. Its popularity among the urban middle class, youth, and overseas Pakistanis remains significant. However, size alone is not enough. The party’s recent missteps, particularly the call for protest on August 5 the same day India revoked the special status of Occupied Kashmir – show a worrying disconnect from political sensitivity and national issues and priorities. As reported PTI is planning protest on 14 August its significance cannot be over emphasized. This would be another blunder, it should immediately be called off not that it will draw criticism but it can be termed as most unwise decision
PTI’s current crisis is not just political it is existential. Thousands of its workers are behind bars. Most of its top-tier leadership has either been jailed, silenced, or sidelined. The party is facing institutional hostility from all directions. It is under legal, media, administrative, and intelligence siege.
Worse still, there appears to be no clear direction from within. The absence of a unified leadership structure has made strategy inconsistent and reactionary. The party seems stuck between a populist defiance and the harsh realities of power politics in Pakistan.
It is imperative for PTI to realize one undeniable truth: no political party can fight the state especially a state that is nuclear, deeply entrenched, and supported by a vast bureaucracy, judiciary, and security apparatus. The events of May 9, 2023, served as a turning point, eroding the political space available to PTI and justifying a harsh crackdown in the name of national security. But PTI learnt no lesson,
If PTI continues with a confrontational posture, it risks total political annihilation. Pakistan’s political history is replete with examples where parties that challenged the establishment head-on paid a heavy price often disappearing for years,
What then is the way forward.
PTI must shift its tone from confrontation to reconciliation. It should express willingness to work within the constitutional framework and avoid inciting street politics or public unrest. This will not work anymore. Backchannel communication with power brokers is essential, even if difficult.
Keep Imran Khan as the Moral Leader, Not Operational Chief.
While Imran Khan remains the face and soul of PTI, the time has come to project new leadership for operational matters. A more pragmatic, softer leadership team can work within the system while Khan’s ideological role remains intact.
PTI must invest in a strong legal front not just to defend itself, but to reclaim its political space through courts and institutions. Alliances with other political and civil society groups, even former rivals, must be explored to avoid political isolation
Street protests and Twitter (X) trends have their place, but they do not win elections under Pakistan’s complex electoral dynamics. PTI should focus on rebuilding its ground structure union councils, youth wings, and digital organizing from the grassroots.
PTI must shift from emotional rhetoric to substantive policy. Instead of slogans and victimhood narratives, offer solutions on inflation, education, governance, and foreign policy. Prove that PTI is not just a protest party protest movement, but a government-in-waiting.
Pakistan is in a fragile state politically polarized, economically vulnerable, and diplomatically full of problems. This is not the time for any party, especially one with PTI’s potential, to remain trapped in confrontation. The country needs a responsible, policy-driven, and mature opposition not a protest party
PTI must reinvent itself. If it chooses wisdom over defiance, strategy over emotion, and reconciliation over revenge, it can still re-emerge stronger, not just as a political force but as a national institution.
History offers few second chances in politics. PTI must seize this one and have patience.
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