The forced resignation of Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli has created a significant power vacuum in Nepal, sending the country’s political elite scrambling to contain a crisis that threatens to spiral out of their control. As protesters continue to demand the dissolution of the entire government, the establishment is faced with the challenge of finding a solution that can restore order without making further concessions that would erode their own power.
The immediate problem for the ruling class is that there is no obvious successor or political configuration that can satisfy the demands of the street. The protesters have made it clear that their anger is not with Oli alone but with the entire system. Appointing another well-known political figure is likely to be seen as a cosmetic change and could provoke even greater public anger.
This leaves the political parties in a difficult position. They can try to ignore the protesters and form a new government, risking further violent confrontations. Or they can accede to the demand for dissolution, which would trigger new elections but also create a period of intense instability and uncertainty, with no guarantee that the old guard would be returned to power.
The power vacuum has shifted the political initiative, at least temporarily, from the halls of parliament to the streets of Kathmandu. The longer the elite fail to come up with a credible response, the more the leaderless protest movement will define the country’s political direction, pushing Nepal into uncharted territory.