Today: 19 August 2025
19 November 2021
1 min read

Imran proves majority, sails through Parliament test

With the support of 221 votes of his party members and that of the allies, the government cruised through the session amid the Opposition’s protest…reports Asian Lite News

The joint session of Pakistan Parliament was an opportunity for Prime Minister Imran Khan to prove his majority in Parliament, which he did.

With the support of 221 votes of his party members and that of the allies, the government cruised through the session amid the Opposition’s protest, Express Tribune reported.

Despite the opposition lawmakers’ speeches, urging the National Assembly Speaker Asad Qaiser to adjourn the session so that both the sides could sit together and deliberate upon the agenda items; their hue and cry; sloganeering; surrounding of Speaker’s desk; tearing of the papers and heated arguments with him, the government moved ahead with the legislative business and passed 33 bills, the report said.

The Pakistan Opposition thought Prime Minister Imran Khan had lost the confidence of his members and the allies in the National Assembly and the Senate. However, he passed through this storm comfortably, the report said.

Last week, the government was defeated twice in the National Assembly and it had to put off the joint sitting of parliament within 24 hours of its summoning, as the allies had distanced themselves from the government.

The Opposition was hoping, once again, the government would not be able to complete the numbers and would, ultimately, fail to pass the legislation for changing the voting system. They had believed that they would have the chance to stop the government just the way they did a week ago.

However, when the votes were counted, the opposition found that its seven members were absent for varying reasons – ranging from health issues to foreign visits, the report said.

The Opposition had been putting up brave face ahead of the joint session of parliament but Wednesday belonged to the treasury.

The joint sitting passed all the required bills, including the two key ones, which deal with holding the next elections via electronic voting machines and allowing overseas Pakistanis the right to vote in the future elections.

ALSO READ: Pakistan, Taliban violating religious freedom: US

Previous Story

Outgoing spy chief holds farewell meeting with Imran

Next Story

Russia’s humanitarian aid lands in Kabul

Latest from -Top News

Pakistan’s $5bn LNG Gamble Backfires

The report says the Pak government locked into ‘take-or-pay’ contracts without demand guarantees, misjudging LNG price volatility and market risks….reports Asian Lite News Pakistan’s $5 billion investment in LNG infrastructure tied to

Modi, Putin Discuss Alaska

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday spoke with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, sharing his assessment of last week’s meeting with US President Donald Trump in Alaska PM Modi reiterated India’s consistent stance

Egypt, Palestine PMs Discuss Gaza

Palestinian Prime Minister Mustafa highlighted that the Arab-Islamic peace plan stresses reconstruction of Gaza without displacement of its people Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly and his Palestinian counterpart Mohammad Mustafa met in

One Million Gazans Face Starvation

UNRWA: Hunger is spreading fast in Gaza. Women and girls are forced to adopt increasingly dangerous survival strategies like venturing out in search of food and water at the extreme risk of

UK MPs Urge Gaza Evacuations

96 MPs warned that children in the war-torn territory are facing “imminent death” unless immediate steps are taken…reports Asian lite News A cross-party coalition of MPs has demanded urgent action from the
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Bilawal: Democracy snatched away

Targeting the Imran Khan government, Bilawal said that Pakistanis are

Opposition grills Imran over Pandora Papers revelations

The Pandora leaks have “opened a new Pandora’s Box” against