The joint session of parliament has kicked off to mark the beginning of a parliamentary year after the February 8 general elections amid Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI)-backed Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC) lawmakers protests.
President Asif Ali Zardari is addressing the joint session convened by the president under the powers provisioned in Articles 54 (1) and 56 (3) of the Constitution.
This is President Zardari’s seventh address as he has previously addressed the joint session of the parliament six times before during his previous tenure as the country’s head of state from 2008 to 2013.
Additionally, the president has also summoned NA session on Friday (tomorrow) at 10:30 am in exercise of the powers conferred to him under Article 54 (1) of the Constitution.
Earlier, the joint session was convened on April 16 but was rescheduled for today.
It should be noted that this will be the first joint session following the start of the new parliamentary year in the country after both the upper and lower House members were elected.
Despite elections taking place on February 8 and former president Arif Alvi still in office, he was unable to summon a joint session as elections in the Senate were yet to be conducted.
Previously, Alvi had summoned a joint session of the parliament on October 6, 2022 — months after a coalition government led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif was governing the centre.
However, the then-president had called the session to mark the beginning of the last parliamentary year of the then-National Assembly in 2022.