The (political) science behind delimitation

The (political) science behind delimitation

To stay within the 266 seat-limit for the National Assembly, there has been some ‘creative’ redrawing of constituency boundaries, which in certain cases give particular parties a definite edge over their rivals in the area.

With each passing day, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) and political parties are achieving election-related milestones, even though uncertainty still shrouds the prospects of polls on Feb 8. While the commission has allotted symbols and parties have announced their candidates, none of the endeavours have been without contention.

Arguably, the most contentious of all processes was delimitation carried out late last year. The roots of the widespread discontent surrounding the exercise stemmed from a meeting held in August 2023.

Four days before it dissolved the National Assembly on August 9, 2023, the coalition Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) government convened the Council of Common Interests to approve the results of the 2023 digital census.



The move effectively shut the door on the prospects of elections within the 90-day constitutional limit as the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) had to conduct fresh delimitation of constituencies. The compulsion was due to the stipulation laid down in Article 51(5) of the Constitution which states, “[The] seats in the National Assembly shall be allocated to each Province and the Federal Capital on the basis of population in accordance with the last preceding census officially published.”

While delimitation of constituencies is a fairly routine exercise, it was different this time around for one reason: there was no elected government in power during the process. In the absence of a National Assembly, the total number of seats couldn’t be modified as it requires a constitutional amendment, which again, can’t be done without an elected lower house of the Parliament.

So even though the population increased from 207.7 million in 2017 to 241.5m in 2023, the number of general seats in the National Assembly had to remain the same — 266 — as provided under Article 51(3) of the Constitution.



According to the final delimitations published by the ECP, the total general seats in NA were 266. Of them, 141 seats are in Punjab, 61 in Sindh, 45 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 16 in Balochistan and three in Islamabad.

The total has been reduced by six from the 2018 tally of 272, with seats of the ex-Fata reduced from 12 to six after its merger with KP. This was done in line with the 25th constitutional amendment which merged the tribal districts with KP.

According to Lehaz Ali, a Peshawar-based journalist who has extensively covered politics in KP, the reduction in the seats of erstwhile Fata was the result of “population rationalisation”.

“Former Fata had 12 seats [till 2018 elections]. Since it was an underprivileged area, it was given more seats compared to its population. Now Fata is part of KP, and their seat distribution has been bought at par with the remaining parts of the province.”

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