The response to the PML-N withdrawal from the ruling coalition was not one of great surprise. Dawn (August 26) says, “ The Pakistan Muslim League-N on Monday finally quit the five-month-old ruling coalition because of differences with the Pakistan People’s Party on the issues of reinstatement of the deposed judges and unilateral nomination of PPP co-chairman Asif Zardari as a presidential candidate.” The report adds that: “The PML-N also announced that it would field former chief justice Saeeduz Zaman Siddiqui as its candidate for the Sept 6 presidential election”.
There was a sense of remorse in Sharif’s tone — according to The News,“Nawaz Sharif said the PML-N after going to the last limit and seeing no further ray of hope decided to end its coalition with the PPP ...The PML-N leader showed to the media the two-page written agreement with PPP Co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari, which was signed on August 7, 2008 in Islamabad. Sharif said both pages of the agreement, according to which resolution was to be submitted in the National Assembly to restore the judges to the November 2, 2007 position within 24 hours of the impeachment or resignation of Pervez Musharraf, bear his and Zardari’s signatures”.
While it remains to be seen whether Nawaz Sharif can cash in on his popularity, there is no doubt that it is at its peak. Masooda Bano in an opinion piece in The News (August 29) says that the decision of the PML (N) to part ways with the PPP was not unexpected:
... contd.