Pakistan Peoples Party 'not' joining PM Shehbaz Sharif led federal cabinet: Report

They claimed that Bilawal, who was initially reluctant to join the cabinet, had agreed to become the foreign minister for the second time.

Update: 2024-05-11 07:44 GMT

Former Pakistan Foreign Affairs Minister, Bilawal Bhutto Zardarin (Image: ANI)

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) will not join the Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif-led federal cabinet before or after the presentation of the budget in parliament, The Express Tribune reported citing PPP sources.

This comes amid reports of the PPP being invited by the ruling party to join the coalition and also offered ministries for the same.

Sources also added that during a recent meeting between Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Bilawal, there was no discussion on joining the federal cabinet. Instead, the sources said Bilawal, during the meeting, stressed the need for making the purchase of wheat mandatory.

However, there were other insiders, who had recently revealed that the ruling PML-N and PPP were close to finalising a power-sharing deal and Bilawal was likely to return as the country's foreign minister.

They claimed that Bilawal, who was initially reluctant to join the cabinet, had agreed to become the foreign minister for the second time. The two sides were now working on the details and the timing of the PPP's formal induction into the federal cabinet.

Earlier this month, the premier and Bilawal had met at the PM's House to finalise the names of the governors for Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan.

According to an official statement, PM Shehbaz and Bilawal discussed the overall political situation in the country. However, a PPP leader maintained that even though the prime minister and other parties in the ruling coalition wanted the PPP in the cabinet, the party leadership had had not yet decided to change its previous stance on the matter.

The leader termed the reports suggesting that the PPP was joining the cabinet after the budget "speculative", saying that no such discussion had taken place during the meetings between the two sides.

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