Home TRENDING THE GOVERNMENT HAS ONCE AGAIN ADVISED IMRAN TO RETURN TO NA.

THE GOVERNMENT HAS ONCE AGAIN ADVISED IMRAN TO RETURN TO NA.

The government once more encourages Imran to go back to NA.

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The government once more encourages Imran to go back to NA.
According to Saad Rafique, Elahi ought to receive a vote of confidence so that order can be preserved.

PML-N leader Khawaja Saad Rafique and PTI chief Imran Khan. PHOTO: File

The administration has once more recommended the former prime minister return to the National Assembly to present his demands and lead a “healthy opposition” against the ruling coalition for negotiations, but PTI head Imran Khan is resolute about pressing for early elections.

After meeting with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Sunday, Railways Minister Khwaja Saad Rafique made this statement to the media.

Since the PTI was in charge of affairs in Punjab, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, Azad Kashmir, and Gilgit-Baltistan, the minister emphasized that the party should use its influence to benefit the populace rather than overturn elected bodies.

The minister emphasized that despite the PTI leader’s intention to end the legislature’s term early, “You [Imran Khan] have four administrations, run the governments, and serve the people.” He also insisted that the assembly will continue to function and fulfill its mandate.

Repent and return to the National Assembly. Come and air your grievances,” he urged. He poked fun at Imran, “Is it now our job to teach you politics?”

He added that the assemblies should not be dissolved because they were created to govern the state and should not be dissolved for such “petty problems.”

Imran Khan should concentrate on serving the public rather than lying, and the Punjab chief minister should ask for a vote of confidence in order to keep the peace.

With PTI’s entry into politics, the minister bemoaned the practice of insulting political opponents in front of the people. He lamented the fact that using derogatory language in speeches has spread throughout the nation’s politics.

Rafique cited how, in stark contrast, “we did not protest even when we were thrown away into detention cells” as evidence for the old ruling party’s tainting of the political discourse.

The PTI-PML-Q alliance in the federal capital and PDM are at odds over the future of the Punjab Assembly, and the ruling party is insisting on returning to the parliament as a prerequisite for negotiations.

The provincial chief, who rules with assistance from the PTI, has claimed that the plan to dismantle the provincial legislature will be carried out after securing a vote of confidence from the assembly in the wake of the Lahore High Court’s (LHC) decision to reinstate Pervaiz Elahi as chief minister and the PDM’s efforts to retake the lost citadel.

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