ECP wants to announce election date unilaterally, seeks amendment in law

ECP takes exception to stay order in contempt proceedings

The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) has formally requested the government to amend the Elections Act, 2017 so that the watchdog could announce election date without consultation with anybody.
To this end, Chief Election Commissioner Sikandar Sultan Raja and ECP Secretary Omar Hamid Khan wrote letters to Principal Secretary to Prime Minister Dr Syed Tauqir Hussain Shah, Parliamentary Affairs Secretary Muhammad Shakeel Malik, National Assembly Speaker Raja Pervaiz Ashraf and Senate Chairman Sadiq Sanjrani on Monday.
Referring to the “controversy” regarding elections to Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa assemblies, the officials in the letters cited mentioned Supreme Court (SC) judgments in this connection, issued on March 1 and April 4.
According to the Constitution, the commission was the “sole arbiter” to decide whether the circumstances existed to conduct elections or not and this mandate was not “subordinate to any authority, the official said in the letters.
The SC’s March 1 and April 4 judgements, on the other hand, “have divested the commission of its constitutional powers to determine as to whether conducive environment in facts and cirtcumstances exists for the conduct of elections in a given time to meet the standards mentioned in Article 218 (3)” of the Constitution, the letters said.
They further stated that under Article 218 (3), the ECP was obligated to “organise and conduct elections and to make such arrangements as are necessary to ensure that the election is conducted honestly, justly, fairly and in accordance with the law and that corrupt practices are guarded against”.
The ECP officials also lamented that while the institution had “consistently strived to uphold the writ of law, fair play and merit in letter and spirit”, these “exemplary efforts” were not supplemented and rather its “writ has systematically been challenged on several occasions”.
“In practice, the ECP’s authority has been eroded,” the letters read.
Complaining that the disciplinary proceedings initiated by the ECP in connection with the `by-polls held in Daska in 2021 were set aside, ECP officials said the “writ of the ECP was compromised severely”.
Moreover, the ECP officials also took exception to the issuance of stay orders in contempt proceedings issued by the electoral watch dog.
And “there are many other incidents of “judicial overbearing” that had “diluted the writ of the ECP,” their letters stated.
They questioned that in such a situation, could the commission perform its duty to conduct free and fair elections in the given environment and whether administrative functionaries, political representatives and other institutions took the commission seriously and gave weight to its directions.

“And finally, can in such conditions, through the administrative functionaries and other institutions, is it possible to hold the elections in Punjab and KP followed by the main elections in an effective and transparent manner?”

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