Good effort indeed, but that doesn't solve the subject problem. The writer have not mention anywhere that how Jinnah got his mandate from the Muslims for his Pakistan, going by the democratic principles to convince the public and get their mandate should be the driving force behind a leader's policies. So we can conclude that he wanted both, a secular (in his personal capacity) as well as an Islamic (as a leader of the Muslims of the sub-continent) state, and so in a word he's in favour of a Progressive Islamic State of Pakistan. Regards
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"Success is not final, failure is not fatal; it is the courage to continue that counts" (Winston Churchill)
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