Islamabad: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif will start consultations on Thursday and meet Leader of the Opposition Raja Riaz to finalise the name of the interim prime minister to oversee the election after the dissolution of the National Assembly. President Dr Arif Aliv dissolved the assembly before the end of its legal term on Wednesday on the advice of the prime minister. The step has been taken to give extra time to the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to organise polls.
Sources told PTI that Prime Minister Shehbaz would meet Leader of Opposition Riaz to discuss the interim leader. The two leaders have three days to agree on a name, otherwise, the Speaker of the defunct assembly would appoint an eight-member panel, including four lawmakers each from the treasury and opposition benches, to forge an agreement. Both sides, the prime minister and leader of the opposition, can put forward a maximum of two names for the top post.
The panel has three days to agree and in case it fails, all names considered during its meetings would be sent to the ECP which would appoint one of them as the interim premier within 48 hours. The same exercise is repeated in provinces where chief ministers lead the process with the local opposition leaders. The process was adopted in Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (KP) when their assemblies were dissolved in January.
In the case of Punjab, no agreement was reached at the first two levels and ultimately the ECP was involved and appointed the incumbent Mohsin Naqvi as chief minister. However, in KP, the then-chief minister and leader of the opposition agreed to appoint the current Azam Khan as interim chief minister. Under the Constitution, the prime minister will continue to serve for a limited period until a caretaker premier takes an oath.
Sources said that Prime Minister Shehbaz has already held detailed discussions with his former 13-member coalition government parties and there is an agreement on the nominee but the name has not been revealed. Raja Riaz, a dissident leader of PTI, is considered close to leading parties like Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and is expected not to make a show and support the government candidate.