Illustration by Marium Ali
It is tempting to start this essay with the sensationalist claim that the election of Imran Khan as prime minister is part of a process that may end the world as we know it. Apart from everything that is wrong with sensationalism, the statement may unfairly blur causation and correlation. In any case, the route to change will be long, coursing across the rapids, gorges and watersheds of political science and will be fed by various tributaries of international relations before meandering into history.
The process is well under way with the latest advent of populist politics that is sweeping across the western world. Examples range from the election of Donald Trump as the president of the United States, the successful Brexit referendum in Britain to leave the European Union, the electoral victory of Victor Orbán in Hungary, the rise to power of the Five Star Movement in Italy and the strong political showing of such right-wing ultra-nationalist parties as the Alternative for Germany, Marine Le Pen’s National Front in France and the Freedom Party in Austria.
The rise of populist parties and leaders is not confined to the West though. Closer to home, we have seen the Bharatiya Janata Party and its bhakts come to power in India and Rodrigo Duterte becoming president in the Philippines. And now we have Imran Khan as prime minister in Pakistan.
There are, of course, huge differences between these examples but populist politicians and parties, whether of the left or the right, all share a set of tactics or styles. For instance, instead of seeing politics as a process of competing interests, populists present it as a struggle between the forces of good and evil. They claim monopoly over morality and make difference of opinion with them a marker of immorality. They deny the very legitimacy of their opponents, pitting the ‘pure’ masses against a ‘corrupt’ elite. They shore up anger and disgust against their political opponents, bureaucrats, journalists, non-governmental organisations and dissenters, calling for their removal from jobs and even for their imprisonment. They, in short, brand themselves as leading a revolt against the system, the status quo, the stasis.
Other hallmarks of populists include: highly personalised styles of leadership (asking people to vote for the leader and not for the candidate), cultivation of a strongman saviour persona, emphasising upon a direct relationship between the leader and the people (awaam in our local parlance), the use of coarse language and manners (such as oye, geeli shalwars, etc) to challenge the established political culture and a push for popular but unsustainable policies (for instance, bringing back 200 billion US dollars of corruption money allegedly stashed abroad or building five million houses for the poor).
The intended consequences of these tactics and policies are increasingly becoming obvious across the globe. Populists everywhere are undermining whatever trust citizens have in the institutions and procedures of representative democracy.
Authors of Going to Extremes, a study published in 2016 in the European Economic Review, state that such trust deficit often follows economic upheavals. They looked at 800 elections in Europe across 140 years and found that, after every financial crisis, majority parties shrank, rightwing parties gained ground and political polarisation intensified.
The current wave of populism could be more of the same — a result of the financial crises in many countries. It is also entirely possible that it is not: that we are witnessing something qualitatively different from the panicked bursts of populism of the past. Here is why.
There are some common denominators in the content of the current surge of populism. In Europe, it is the fear of and aggression against migration and minorities and insecurities over cultural identity; in the United States, populism is targeted against immigrants and the globalised world economy and it stands for economic nativism; in India, it is about culture, religion and minorities; and in Pakistan, Imran Khan’s political rise owes it to his clarion calls for protecting Pakistan’s sovereignty and his mass mobilisation on the notion of national honour (qaumi ghairat) threatened and undermined by interventions from outsiders (though he has appreciably spoken in the favour of minorities and refugees).
Whether it was financial assistance from the International Monetary Fund or drone attacks by the United States inside Pakistani territory or civilian-centric American aid promised under the Kerry-Lugar-Berman Law in return for specific restrictions on terrorist organisations — he portrayed each of them as national humiliation and surrender.
Taken together, this listing of immigrants versus locals, linguistic, religious and racial homogeneity, impermeable national borders, protected economy, sovereignty, national honour and national identity are all the characteristics of a single entity: the nation state.
The problem is that each of these is unraveling.
In Naara desert in Sindh, a woman told me about her son working as a driver with an oil and gas exploration company in its Islamabad office. What she said was: “Woh mulk mein naukri karta hai. Saal mein aik dafa watan waapis aata hai. Mein yahaan apni qaum ke saath rehti hoon” (he works in the country, comes back to his homeland once a year while I live with my community, or tribe, here).
Her formulation was as curious as it was revealing. Islamabad was a symbol of the state for her; Sindh was motherland and her own tribe was her nation. For her, mulk, watan and qaum were separate enclaves within the geographical boundaries of Pakistan. Nobody in her community found her phrasing jarring.
Where does this leave the nation state?
The nation and the state were not always synonymous. A state is a political entity comprising institutions of governance that operate within demarcated geographical borders. A nation is a group of people who believe they have a common origin, shared history and a collective culture, language and/or ethnicity — commonalities that make them distinct from other groups. A nation state, thus, is a space inhabited by a relatively homogenous group of people who are governed by the same set of political, legal and economic institutions. Essentially, each nation gets its own state and, conversely, each state has one nation living in it.
In theory, therefore, a nation state makes political and geographical boundaries correspond with psychosocial ones. In actuality, the story varies.
The history of the nation state can be traced back to the aftermath of the Thirty Years’ War in which more than five million people died across Europe in religious and sectarian conflicts. The war ended with the ‘Peace of Exhaustion’ that resulted in the Treaty of Westphalia. The treaty stated that the ruler of each realm would decide the official religion of their domain, limiting the role of the church and the Holy Roman Empire in this regard. This is how the idea of worldly sovereignty was born in Europe — as opposed to divine sovereignty bestowed by the clergy.
The creation of nation states gained momentum in the 20th century when independence movements coalesced around nationalism against the colonial powers of Spain, France and Britain. Between 1944 and 1984, 90 new states were created. As of now, the world is divided into 193 states.