Job Spotlight
| Department | Punjab Revenue Department |
| Job Type | Government Job |
| Required Education | Intermediate (FA, FSC, ICS), Bachelor |
| Location Quota | All over Punjab (All Punjab residents are eligible to apply) |
| Last Date to Apply | 16 January 2023 |
Available new government Job vacancies
- Computer Operators
- Assistants
- Stenographers
- Junior Clerks
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In 2022, Pakistani politics and parliament experienced an unusual level of turmoil, even by Pakistani standards. Over the course of its 75 year history, the country's 15 National Assemblies have faced numerous challenges and controversies. For example, in the early years of Pakistan's existence, the Assembly did not draft a constitution for seven years (1947-1954) and on the day the first constitution was set to be formally adopted, the governor general was dismissed (1954). In other instances, the Assembly did not have the authority to vote on the recurring budget (1962 and 1965) and its Leader of the House was not even a member of the House for a full three years (1965-1969).
There was also a time when the chief martial law administrator (CMLA) refused to transfer power to the Leader of the House, who had a majority in the first and last National Assembly of united Pakistan and was directly elected through adult franchise (1970-1971). Instead, power was given to someone who should not have been Leader of the House at that time. After the events of December 1971, which resulted in the country being dismembered, a truncated Assembly was formed. The Leader of the House, along with other remaining members from various parties, helped rebuild and rehabilitate the country after its defeat, demoralization, and lack of direction (1973).
One Assembly was believed by many political analysts to have come into being through rigging by the incumbent government (1977). It had the distinction of being the shortest-lived Assembly in Pakistan's history (barely four months) and its leader, who had led the successful quest for a unanimously adopted Constitution in 1973, was later deposed and hanged by the military (1979). There were also non-party-based Assemblies, including one whose weak, party-less leader, chosen by the CMLA (who was president), demanded an end to martial law in his first speech (1985) and another that was created through political engineering, according to the public confession of the DG ISI at the time (1988).
Despite its eventful history, the Assembly had never passed a resolution of no-confidence against a sitting Leader of the House until 2022. Other notable events in the Assembly's history include a Leader of the House reading out a charge sheet against the president (1993), the simultaneous resignations of the Leader of the House and the president (brokered by the COAS), the dissolution of an Assembly and the handcuffing of its leader after he refused to resign as demanded by a military general (1999), the engineering of forced defections by PPP MNAs to the PPP-Patriots in order to facilitate the formation of the king's party government (2002), and the rewriting of one-third of the Constitution with the consensus of all parties (2010). In more recent years, an Assembly was besieged by a mob for 126 days (2014), the Leader of the House of one Assembly was disqualified for life (2017), and the military advised the Leader of the House to adopt "peaceful means" when he requested support to deal with violent protesters (2019).


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