The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) is drafting a series of sweeping amendments to electoral laws, aiming to tighten oversight and streamline the voting process ahead of the next general elections. The move follows persistent criticism regarding transparency and the logistical hurdles that plagued previous cycles.
Officials familiar with the drafting process confirmed the ECP is focusing on the digital integration of voter registries and stricter reporting requirements for campaign financing. The commission intends to present these proposals to the parliamentary committee on electoral reforms by the end of the month.
The stakes are high. Previous election results faced intense scrutiny from political parties and independent observers, leaving the ECP’s credibility in a precarious position. By codifying new procedural safeguards now, the commission hopes to preempt the legal challenges that have historically stalled vote counts and triggered nationwide protests.
“We aren’t just looking at technical fixes,” said an official involved in the drafting. “We are looking at closing the loopholes that turn election night into a legal battleground.”
Key areas of reform include:
* Campaign Finance: Stricter caps on candidate spending with mandatory real-time digital disclosures.
* Result Transmission System (RTS): Replacing or significantly upgrading the failed software to ensure a fail-safe backup for ballot transmission.
* Polling Station Security: Enhanced protocols for the movement of ballot boxes, aimed at curbing claims of tampering during transit.
The ECP’s push for these changes comes as political polarization remains at a boiling point. While the commission frames this as a necessary modernization, opposition leaders remain skeptical, questioning whether the ECP can maintain neutrality while simultaneously rewriting the rules of the game.
Past attempts at electoral reform in Pakistan have often dissolved into partisan bickering, with major parties prioritizing their own interests over systemic stability. Whether this current effort can survive the parliamentary vetting process remains the primary hurdle.
The commission is expected to release a preliminary draft for public comment by next week. If adopted, these reforms will represent the most significant change to the Elections Act since 2017. For now, the ECP is racing against a clock of its own making, hoping to finalize the legal framework before the formal election schedule is announced.
