I believe Musharraf's days as Prime Minister of Pakistan are numbers.  
Musharraf's became unpopular with the Pakistani people; because, he was 
to closely affiliation with the Bush Administration in the war on 
terror.  Also, Musharraf was once the commander-in-chief of the Pakistan 
Military, but he resigned that position.

Here is an excerpt from the article at the end of the links below

#----------------------------------------

The president's position has never looked more precarious, the BBC's 
Chris Morris in Islamabad says.

If a new governing coalition manages to muster a two-thirds majority in 
parliament, it could call for Mr Musharraf to be impeached.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7253280.stm

or

http://tinyurl.com/2lpo8b
#-----------------------------------------

Regards,

LelandJ

Pete Theisen wrote:
> On Tuesday 19 February 2008 13:52, Leland F. Jackson, CPA wrote:
>   
>> Despite the assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir
>> Bhutto, Pakistan voters on Monday voted decidedly in favored her party
>> in protest against the Musharraf regime. This may mean the USA wasted
>> billions of dollars on Musharraf and his regime
>>     
>
> Hi Leland!
>
> Nah, shoot - M-bum will simply ignore the election. He is a *military* 
> dictator.
>   



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