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Name Punjab Assembly Constituency Muhammad Siddique Khan: PP-7 Rawalpindi-VII Malik Taimoor Masood: PP-8 Rawalpindi-VIII Asif Mehmood: PP-9 Rawalpindi-IX
The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI; Urdu: پاکستان تحريکِ انصاف, lit. ' Pakistan Movement for Justice ') is a political party in Pakistan established in 1996 by Pakistani cricketer and politician Imran Khan, who served as the country's prime minister from 2018 to 2022. [23]
PTI LA-42 Kashmir Valley-III: Muhammad Asim Shrif: PTI LA-43 Kashmir Valley-IV: Javed Butt: PTI LA-44 Kashmir Valley-V: Muhammad Ahmed Raza Qadri: PML-N LA-45 Kashmir Valley-VI: Abdul Majid Khan PTI Reserved seat for women Imtiz Nasim: PTI Reserved seat for women Sabiha Saddique Ch. PTI Reserved seat for women Kausar Taqdees Gillani: PTI ...
The assembly saw the transfer of the 60 women and minorities reserve seats excluding PTI-backed SIC due to legal issues regarding the filing of nomination papers. [4] This decision by the Election Commission of Pakistan resulted in the Reserved seats case in which the Supreme Court of Pakistan officially suspended 24 reserved seats in the ...
PTI: Akhtar Khan [4] PK-6 Swat-IV: IND [a] Fazal Hakim Khan Yousafzai [3] PK-7 Swat-V: IND [a] Amjad Ali [3] PK-8 Swat-VI: PTI: Hamid Ur Rahman [4] PK-9 Swat-VII: PTI: Sultan-e Rum [4] PK-10 Swat-VIII: PTI: Muhammad Naeem [4] PK-11 Upper Dir-I: PTI: Gul Ibrahim Khan [4] PK-12 Upper Dir-II: PTI: Muhammad Yamin [4] PK-13 Upper Dir-III: PTI ...
Dissident members of PTI also supported his candidature. Meanwhile, the remaining PTI members, who were now in the opposition, boycotted the session terming it a continuation of a "foreign conspiracy". [48] A day later, over 100 PTI members tendered resignations from their National Assembly seats. [49]
In 1993, Peoples Party won the election again. In 1996, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf was formed. In 2013, PTI took part in the elections and won 35 seats in the National Assembly of Pakistan. After the 2018 Pakistan elections, PTI became the government and became one of the three major parties of Pakistan.
On 22 December 2023, the ECP decided against letting the PTI retain its electoral symbol, arguing that the party had failed to hold intra-party elections. On 22 December, the PTI approached the Peshawar High Court (PHC) against the ECP's order and hence, a single-member bench suspended the ECP's order until 9 January 2024. On 30 December 2023 ...