ISLAMABAD: With the Gilgit-Baltistan Assembly election now set for June 7, 2026, PML-N has begun sharpening its campaign message, and Nawaz Sharif wants that message kept simple: development first. The party’s parliamentary board met in Islamabad this week under his chairmanship to discuss candidates and strategy for the upcoming polls in the region’s 24 constituencies.
At that meeting, Nawaz told party leaders that PML-N’s record in Gilgit-Baltistan was rooted in public service and development, and he urged them to carry that case to voters as the campaign moves into a more serious phase. State media said he described the party’s performance in GB as unmatched, while recent reporting around the meeting also framed his pitch as a promise to keep the focus on roads, governance and basic public needs rather than political noise.
The timing matters. Gilgit-Baltistan’s election calendar had already been pushed back once after the earlier January 24, 2026 polling plan was withdrawn, and the Election Commission later issued a fresh schedule naming June 7 as the new polling date. That delay has given parties extra time to reorganize, cut deals, and test their narratives on the ground.
For PML-N, this week’s meeting was more than a routine consultation. The party had formally constituted a 23-member parliamentary board days earlier to oversee candidate selection for the 2026 Gilgit-Baltistan elections. The board includes Nawaz Sharif, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and other senior PML-N figures, underscoring how seriously the party is taking the contest.
That broader push has been visible in other recent moves as well. Federal Minister Amir Muqam, who handles Kashmir Affairs and Gilgit-Baltistan, has been publicly highlighting the government’s development plans in the region, including solar energy expansion, education measures and infrastructure schemes, while also trying to pull new local entrants into the party fold ahead of the vote.
The election is shaping up as an important political test for all the major players. Gilgit-Baltistan has long been politically sensitive, and campaigns there usually become a referendum not just on local candidates but on the credibility of parties claiming they can deliver funds, roads, power projects and administrative stability. Nawaz’s intervention fits neatly into that pattern. He is trying to remind voters that PML-N wants to be seen as the party of visible development, especially in areas where infrastructure and public services remain central election issues.
There is also a practical reason for the tone. Other parties have already started positioning themselves for the contest, and consultations among national political leaders over both AJK and GB elections have been going on for weeks. In that environment, PML-N appears keen to lock in a message early and avoid a scattered campaign.
