Hafeez Shaikh to become adviser again after 4 months.

ISLAMABAD -- As Finance Minister Abdul Hafeez Shaikh has lost the Senate election against former premier Yousuf Raza Gillani, he may again become an adviser to Prime Minister Imran Khan on finance, the position he held two months ago.

As per the constitution, Shaikh, who has not been elected like other parliamentarians, will no longer be able to hold the position of a minister after six months in the portfolio. In April 2019, he was appointed as an advisor to the PM on finance, after a cabinet reshuffle by Prime Minister Imran. On 11 December 2020, Shaikh was appointed as Federal Minister of Finance and Revenue.

While most ministers have to be elected representatives - i.e. members of the National Assembly (NA) or Senate - there is a clause in the Constitution that allows for short-term appointments of non-elected ministers.

According to clause nine of Article 91 of the Constitution, a non-elected person can be appointed a federal minister for six months once during the five-year tenure of the NA.

'A minister who for any period of six consecutive months is not a member of the National Assembly shall, at the expiration of that period, cease to be a Minister and shall not before the dissolution of that Assembly be again appointed a Minister unless he is elected a member of that Assembly,' reads the clause.

This means that Sheikh will have to step down in June 2021 and resume serving as the adviser to the PM on finance.

The incumbent government had decided to make Shaikh a federal minister with the intention to elect him as a Senator to handle budgetary affairs, especially the matter related to National Finance Commission (NFC), as an adviser cannot even chair the NFC meetings.

Shaikh had to win a parliament seat to continue as the finance minister after June 11. He is a key member of the government's economic policies and reforms plan, under the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) loan programme.

In a setback to the ruling party, Gillani, who was backed by an alliance of 11 opposition parties known as the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), won the vote for the Senate's seat in Islamabad. Gillani bagged 169 votes while Shaikh got 164 votes in a the neck-to-neck contest.

Earlier, Shaikh's appointment as chairman of NFC was objected to by Sindh and some political parties, resulting in the...

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