The caretaker system drew to an end when the Awami League, led by Sheikh Hasina, rode back to power in polls overseen by a military-backed caretaker government in December 2008. In a significant move, the Awami League government repealed the caretaker provision in the Constitution on the ground that such administrations militated against a smooth functioning of democracy owing to their unelected nature. The general elections of January 2014, despite the controversy and, in a sense, stigma attached to them (153 out of 300 lawmakers were elected without any opposition to the Jatiyo Sangsad or parliament), were thus held with the incumbent government in power. The opposition demand for elections under a caretaker or election-time government was rejected. These elections will again be held under the watch of the Awami League government, evidence that all similar demands of the opposition, now largely coalesced around former foreign minister and veteran politician Kamal Hossain, have been binned. The opposition, comprising the BNP of jailed former PM Khaleda Zia, having stayed away from the January 2014 elections, is now on the campaign trail, in what it would like people to believe is a movement for a restoration of democracy.