the military. It’s a pragmatic approach.”
A comment piece in The Independent said Bilawal was pushed forward to rebut those critics of the PPP who say that the party has become the “Zardari party” rather than the “Bhutto party”. It said bringing Bilawal to the forefront may be the party’s best chance at regaining mass appeal.
The Telegraph said Bilawal was used by the party to launch “a frontal attack on the country’s Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, who forced Yusuf Raza Gilani to step down as prime minister earlier this year over his reluctance to order a new corruption inquiry into his father”.
Bilawal Bhutto Zardari’s emergence as the face of Pakistan’s largest political party marks a third generation of Bhutto leadership.
“He is understood to have undergone intensive training in Pakistani political culture and the Urdu language to prepare him to lead the coming general election campaign.”
An unnamed PPP minister told the paper: “He was already shaped by being with his mother which was his learning process. Oxford polishes people very well. He has very good eye contact, he’s very pragmatic and sensible. His style is more like his mother, he’s very thorough like her. But he is respectful and humble like his father — he is not proud.”
The paper quoted Pakistani political analysts as saying that Bilawal’s elevation was a gambit to distract voters from the government’s poor record with the Bhutto family’s glamour. “Bilawal is the only card that is left with the political party that his grandfather launched. In almost five years of their rule, they have not delivered on any account. Now they are trying to make it up by introducing a fresh face. They are banking on him now,” said Rasul Bakhsh Raees, professor of political science at Lahore University.
“The party has always thrived on the name of Bhutto. It is the legacy of Bhutto and the sacrifices they made that they are trying to resell but the public has become smarter than that and this strategy will not work,” he added.