SMOKERS' CORNER: IS IMRAN KHAN A POPULIST?

In a March 7, 2010 essay for the New York Times, the American linguist and author Ben Zimmer writes, 'When politicians fret about the public perception of a decision more than the substance of the decision itself, we're living in a world of optics.'

On the other hand, according to Deborah Johnson in the June 2017 issue of Attorney at Law, a politician may have the best interests of his constituents in mind, but he or she doesn't come across smoothly because optics are bad, even though the substance is good. Johnson writes that things have increasingly slid from substance to optics.

Optics in this context have always played a prominent role in politics. Yet, it is also true that their usage has grown manifold with the proliferation of electronic and social media, and, especially, of 'populism.' Populists often travel with personal photographers so that they can be snapped and proliferate images that are positively relevant to their core audience.

Pakistan's PM Imran Khan relies heavily on such optics. He is also considered to be a populist. But then why did he so stubbornly refuse to meet the mourning families of the 11 Hazara Shia miners who were brutally murdered in Quetta? Instead, the optics space in this case was filled by opposition leaders, Maryam Nawaz and Bilawal Bhutto.

Nevertheless, this piece is not about why an optics-obsessed PM such as Khan didn't immediately occupy the space that was eventually filled by his opponents. It is more about exploring whether Khan really is a populist? For this we will have to first figure out what populism is.

According to the American sociologist, Bart Bonikowski, in the 2019 anthology When Democracy Trumps Populism, populism poses to be 'anti-establishment' and 'anti-elite.' It can emerge from the right as well as the left, but during its most recent rise in the last decade, it has mostly come up from the right.

The current prime minister is not very different from his populist contemporaries in other developing countries

According to Bonikowski, populism of the right has stark ethnic or religious nationalist tendencies. It draws and popularises a certain paradigm of 'authentic' racial or religious nationalism and claims that those who do not have the required features to fit in this paradigm are outsiders and, therefore, a threat to the 'national body.' It also lashes out against established political forces and state institutions for being 'elitist,' 'corrupt' and facilitators of pluralism...

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