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A Prime Minister for the times? PDF Print
Posted by admin   
Sunday, 12 October 2008 21:45

OCT 12 - So, Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi has finally announced he will be stepping down. While this is undoubtedly going to be greeted with cheers from many, I see no particular reason to rejoice.

John Lee is a second-year student of economics at Dartmouth College in the United States. He has been thinking aloud since 2005 at infernalramblings.com.

Abdullah is unquestionably a bad Prime Minister; this has been apparent for quite a while. But will his anointed successor, Najib Tun Razak, be much better? Can any of the men who seem likely to in turn succeed Najib be much better?

There is no reason to celebrate if we lurch from one terrible Prime Minister to another.

Abdullah's term as premier was marked by a combination of incompetency and a marked tendency to announce half-baked, constantly still-born reforms.

What sign is there that as Prime Minister Najib will reform our institutions or run the country more effectively?

Najib is far more hardline than Abdullah, that much is clear, even though Abdullah earned his fair share of brickbats for his handling of security matters. Inevitably, he would lock up lawyers, writers and activists as terrorists.

His administration was the first in Malaysian history to censor a website for political reasons. Would Najib be more liberal? It seems unlikely, to say the very least.

Is Najib a competent administrator? Abdullah was a career civil servant who happened to be a politician; he was picked by Mahathir Mohamad to succeed him as premier precisely because he lacked the political ability or base to destabilise Mahathir's regime.

Najib, on the other hand, is a career politician; he knows how to play the political game, but his ability to govern is much more open to question.

Najib has held a variety of portfolios, including the important postings as Minister of Defence and Education; he has not made his mark in either ministry. He has not led us in any significantly new direction, and his term as Minister of Defence has been marked by questionable arms dealings which some have denounced as wasteful.

As Education Minister, Najib maintained the policies of his predecessors, unwilling to break new ground or significantly reform the system in any way.

There is no promising indicator as far as administrative competency or reform ability go.

What Najib brings to the table is his political acumen and ability. He knows how to keep the Umno warlords in line, and he knows how to play the game of politics in Umno.

He might run the country and lead the Barisan Nasional coalition with an iron fist, but will do what he has to do to placate the men and women who run Umno.

He can stabilise the situation in Umno, at least for a while, and maybe even make some cosmetic changes.

However, I will be very surprised if Najib can fulfill the promises of Abdullah. The systemic and institutional factors - corruption, racism, and oppression - which led to Abdullah's near-defeat in the popular vote of the recent election will not disappear under a Najib administration.

Unless Najib goes against his background as a staunch party man and turns against his backers, instituting a fair legal system, banishing racialism from politics, and jailing the corrupt, he will not undo the tsunami which wiped out many Barisan politicians in March.

This is not a personal thing; it applies to any viable contender for the Umno presidency in the future. Tengku Razaleigh aside, every man has a history of sticking to the status quo, of being unwilling to go out on a limb and shake things up.

They do not bring a vision of governance to the table, but a hardnosed political approach based on the realities within Umno rather than Malaysian politics.

Whoever the Prime Minister after Najib may be, he will have to face the fact that his upbringing in Umno has ill prepared him to handle the issues which the Malaysian public so dearly wants addressed.

Those baying for Abdullah's blood have got what they want; they have not however procured a significant change in the direction our country is going.

A Najib administration may be less rudderless than Abdullah's, but it will not face the realities of the signal the Malaysian public sent to our politicians on March 8. Abdullah was not the right Prime Minister for our time. The problem is, neither is Najib.

Comments (13)Add Comment
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written by lamakawan, October 12, 2008 21:56:41
You are absolutely right, Najib is neither here nor there. What he wants is power. Power to be above the law. Power to turn the wheels of corruption. Power to run down the mosquito parties in BN.
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written by krising1, October 12, 2008 22:14:30
It has been said and not disagreed that the reason Abdullah failed to push through the reforms is because UMNO did not allow them - the warlords and the ministers. So the reformist (if we believe him) has been kicked out but the evil emperors are still there in control. So the evil empire will continue all the same. They have to be kicked out - lock stock and barrel.
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written by merchant222, October 12, 2008 22:57:12
Better be Abdullah than Najis, I say! Najis is the shit of Mamaak. Going to get worse for the rakyat.
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written by awakened, October 12, 2008 23:05:16
I as an ordinary Malaysian am scared....if Najis become PM. Malaysia will go on the downward trend with UMNO stripping the nation bare of her financial wealth. Nothing to remain for the rakyat except INFLATION, POVERTY, HIGH PETROL PRICES and INCREASING COST OF LIVING
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written by avj, October 13, 2008 00:08:30
Unless Najib goes against his background as a staunch party man and turns against his backers, instituting a fair legal system, banishing racialism from politics, and jailing the corrupt,

Yes, it will happen when hell freezes over,Pink Lip is only grappling for power to save his own arse and in the process screw the country up.Remember he has 2 demons for adviser,TDM and Losmah.

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written by budakindia, October 13, 2008 00:33:12
We surely don't want any UMNO psychopaths there! DSAI, when will you take over the government ar? smilies/wink.gif We are still waiting! smilies/cheesy.gif
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written by Sagaladoola, October 13, 2008 00:41:07
Anyway, I do not feel any happier .... Hope Mat Tyson / Mat Taib gets number 2 and one happy family they make smilies/cheesy.gif

Ohh gosh, now I am more worried...

I am living in solemnity now.

Regards,
http://sagaladoola.********.com
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written by willove, October 13, 2008 00:48:36
"Unless Najib goes against his background as a staunch party man and turns against his backers, instituting a fair legal system, banishing racialism from politics, and jailing the corrupt..."

Yeah sure, if he does only a fraction of the above, he'll be the one to get the wrong end of the above reforms! So will he do it? Hahahahaha smilies/cheesy.gif smilies/grin.gif smilies/cheesy.gif smilies/grin.gif smilies/cheesy.gif smilies/grin.gif

In other words, this means we must all do our very best besides commenting on MT.
Tell the people you know to go to the court to support RPK. Tell the people you know to vote against BN in the next GE.
Every right action starts with ourselves.
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written by The Hammer, October 13, 2008 01:22:55
Naji to date has not mastered any of the fields of politics. He is a Jacko of all but master of NOne! I would prefer AAB to complete his term and retire gracefuly. With naji, everything will turn upside.
Some time I wonder whether AAB wants to go into background and let Naji gets all the rotten eggs, tomatoes thrown at him instead. Now with the economy downturn worldwide I doubt Naji can handle it without the help from MMKutti! Wait untill March 2009!
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written by Dongra Dude, October 13, 2008 06:35:59
The whole world is worried about the financial crisis yet our Minister of Finance is soo confidently projecting our strong fundemental asthough nothing to worry about. He is not worry about the country's financial situation and the fear of each Malaysian folks experiencing now. After all his illgotten money fromhis Scorpane, Shukoi and recent Eurocopter deal will sustain him through generation to come.
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written by Bigjoe99, October 13, 2008 09:46:04
Well, the writer is saying the obvious which some already have said for a while especially RPK. What the writer is missing is this.

1) Najib may be here nor there but that means if he is pushed one way he goes there, if he finds room to move the other way he goes there. The man is in the job FOR HIMSELF above others. So if Dr. M keels over, he could swing either way. Its Dr. M which is going to force him to pander to the UMNO warlords.

2) Najib comes in office with more personal liabilities than anyone before him. His trail up to office is filled with scandals. Outside of UMNO, his popularity is zero. If more scandal breaks, he is a liability to UMNO. In fact as it his, he is of little use to UMNO in elections. The next few by-election will be about Anwar's credibility rather than UMNO or him. If Anwar can get over his lack of credibility over Sept 16, it will focus things back on UMNO and Najib, they will find they continue to lose grounds to PR.
If Najib cannot find relieve with Anwar's failure, he will be forced to be liberal i.e., to actually pick up Badawi's agenda. He need to have popularity and not become a liability to UMNO. Its why those who support the reform agenda MUST forget about Anwar's failures. It does not matter because its Najib's weakness that must be concentrated on...
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written by Caesar, October 13, 2008 10:11:08
This is Badawi's answer to his UMNO party's call to step down.
What a disaster for Malaysia's credibility and international staanding to have Najib as the PM!
Personally, 6 months is an aeon in politics and Najib will NOT make it.
The majority of Malaysians who are not UMNO-members are being let down by Badawi's about-turn (all along he was right to say that he was elected by a majority of Malaysians, and his right to remain PM is for ALL Malaysians, which is not to be determined by the vocal anti-Badawi UMNO camp led by the megalomaniac recalitrant).
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written by malaysian, October 13, 2008 12:18:33
Just what Malaysia needs - another racist, power crazy, myopic dictator who abuses Islam, the courts and law enforcement agencies to remain in power!

Do it now, Anwar!
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