Pakistani lawmakers have elected a new prime minister to replace ousted Yousuf Raza Gilani.
Parliament voted overwhelmingly Friday in favor of former water and power minister Raja Pervez Ashraf, who has been hit with corruption allegations and is partly blamed for the country's electricity crisis.
Mr. Ashraf won 211 votes in the 342-member national assembly.
He is a member of the ruling Pakistan People's Party, which holds a majority in parliament with its coalition partners.
The party previously nominated the textiles minister, Makhdoom Shahabuddin, as its choice for prime minister, but he bowed out after a warrant for his arrest was issued. Shahabuddin is implicated in a scandal involving illegal imports of the drug ephedrine, at a time when he was health minister several years ago.
The Supreme Court triggered Pakistan's political crisis Tuesday when it confirmed a ruling that Mr. Gilani was ineligible for office, and had been for nearly two months. The court found the former prime minister guilty of contempt for refusing a judicial order to ask Switzerland to investigate claims of corruption against President Asif Ali Zardari.
Even before this week's developments, Mr. Zardari's government had been reeling from a combination of rolling power blackouts, rising unemployment, militant attacks and a tense relationship with the United States.
The Supreme Court's action marked the first time a Pakistani prime minister was removed by the judiciary.
Members of the opposition and others who support the court welcomed the ruling, which they see as a gesture against corrupt and ineffective government. Others feel the court overstepped its boundaries.
Since Prime Minister Ashraf likely will face the same pressure to investigate President Zardari, a number of analysts are doubtful that the switch at top levels of the government will end the country's political standoff.