The more the ministers deny it the stronger grows the feeling that general elections will soon be held in the country. The incantation that the "assemblies will complete their term" fails to drive away the ghost of the elections that has cast a long shadow over Pakistan's political scene.
The government, the opposition and all those who stand in between, appear to have lost both the direction and the nerve to trudge on for three more years. Leadership fatigue is noticeable all around.
The elections of October 2002 inspired little enthusiasm or hope. Barely one-third of the registered voters turned up to vote despite the lowered voting age and enlarged legislatures. The interest that these two factors could have inspired was visibly offset by the many arbitrary restrictions that handicapped the mainstream parties and rendered many individuals ineligible to participate in the electoral process.
As a result, fewer people turned up to vote than they had in the four elections held in the preceding decade. These too had been marked by falling attendance. There was the overwhelming doubt whether the system emerging out of the elections would endure and deliver. All in all, it was a setback, and not a fillip, to democracy.
The representative credentials of the expanded assemblies were, thus, poor from the very beginning. The governments - both federal and provincial - they threw up could not but be poorer. It had to be that way for the ministers had contested neither from a common platform nor on the basis of an agreed programme.
Whatever the calibre of the individuals, their shared trait remained desertion from their parent parties owing to the lure of office or, worse, to escape accountability. Similar, though less lucrative, motives could be attributed to the diverse elements that have coalesced to oppose the government.
More than doubtful credentials, it is the environment in which the polling took place and the constitutional changes and political regrouping that followed which have made the assemblies and the governments not just unrepresentative but even irrelevant in the current situation. The issues of domestic and foreign policy that have since arisen cry for a fresh mandate from the people.
The president and his commanders continue to administer subjects and handle most problems only because the parliament and the cabinet have not been able assert their authority or demonstrate their ability or willingness to deal with them.
The defiant tribes of Waziristan should have been handled by the provincial and federal governments as they have always been. Both left it entirely to the president who made use of his commanders and troops rather than the political agent and tribal elders through whom he enforces his authority or the government's writ.
The political agent sometimes may have to call upon the scouts or militia to help but more out of the need for a show of force than its actual use. That is how even the current situation in the area ultimately seems to be resolving itself but only after loss of life and trust which have scarred the state's relations with its own tribes, while the threat of yet another military intervention lingers on.
The nervous flutter that Shahbaz Sharif's impending return has caused betrays the government's total reliance on its penal authority and none at all on its popularity. Almost every minister, including the prime minister himself, has spoken of deporting or imprisoning Sharif if he returns, all the time wishing he does not.
The ISI director-general is reported to have gone to Saudi Arabia to stop his return. Even the prime minister's statement that the red alert at Lahore airport was to prevent a hijacking attempt and not Sharif's landing has been cynically received.
The point to ponder is whether this government despite drawing support from numerous parties and with a military scaffolding around it would be able to lead the country for three and a half more years if it fidgets at the prospect of a single dissenting politician returning from exile. Surely the government could show more patience and courage - virtues that the prime minister claims to possess in abundance - in facing him.
Besides doubts pertaining to the popular standing of the government, some new and unfamiliar elements introduced into the system also need to be judged by the people who should be given an opportunity to say how democratic their institutions are after the 17th amendment.
First on this list is the district government which has radically altered the pattern of power and patronage in the provinces and their relationship with the centre. The parties and candidates will, quite naturally, campaign for or against the new system to confirm or rescind it. The politicians should also get an opportunity to choose either the district or the provincial government for their political career. Surely some among them will find the district nazim's job more alluring than being one of scores of ministers in a province.
Second, an indirectly elected Senate, it has been proved yet again, neither improves the quality of legislation nor checks the misuse of executive authority nor gives the smaller units a greater voice in the affairs of the federation. The present Senate's most pathetic moment came when it took but a few minutes to endorse the National Security Council Act as it was passed by the National Assembly. The senators went by the party and not the territory they represent which is the purpose of the Senate. The new election should provide for election of senators directly by the people.
Thirdly, the voting for the seats reserved for women should be by all the women of the country through territorial constituencies if they are to represent the cause of the women and not of the male leaders who nominate them.
Fresh elections will bring stability of tenure for the government only if the whole electoral process is free from official interference and polls are conducted fairly by an independent commission under a neutral caretaker administration. This will remain a vain expectation unless an assurance from all participating parties is forthcoming that the Constitution in its present form (with Musharraf as president) will stand until the new parliament votes to amend it through the normal procedure.
The prime minister and his ministers may keep assuring each other that this parliament will last until it completes its tenure in 2007, but the feelings and wishes of the people are manifestly to the contrary. So is the hunch of political soothsayers. The present state of affairs is troublesome for democratic and liberal minds.
Article 58(1) of the Constitution says: "The President shall dissolve the National Assembly if so advised by the Prime Minister, and the NA shall, unless sooner dissolved, stand dissolved at the expiration of forty-eight hours after the Prime Minister has so advised." Dissolution by the president is riddled with conditions and would create a crisis as it always has in the past.
This time it would also entrench the NSC in the constitutional system. Dissolution by Mr Jamali followed by free and fair polls would earn him a mention in history books. Trundling along for three more years will not.