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Beyond Tun Razak PDF Print
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Monday, 13 October 2008 20:35

OCT 13 — Of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s litany of failures, one of the least recognised yet important ones is that through his “back to the kampung base” programme, Abdullah was trying to solve Tun Abdul Razak Hussein’s problem, not his own.

Liew Chin Tong is the DAP MP for Bukit Bendera.

The ground has shifted since Razak assumed the premiership nearly four decades ago in September 1970 but this fact seems to have eclipsed Abdullah.

As the legacies of Malaysia’s first Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra al-haj were discredited within the Umno circle, despite a short stint as the country’s second Prime Minister, Razak casts a long shadow on successive Umno/Barisan Nasional administrations since his untimely demise in 1976.

Last year, at a conference commemorating Razak, Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak made a startling statement that while he was the “biological son” of Razak, Abdullah was Razak's “political son”.

At the press conference announcing his decision not to contest the Umno presidency, Abdullah remarked that he was the last of Razak’s generation in government, and now “Razak’s son takes over”.

(The fact is that while Abdullah served the government as a civil servant from 1964 and held senior bureaucratic posts during Razak’s administration, Najib entered electoral politics in 1976, two years before Abdullah.)

Nonetheless, it is time for Umno and Malaysia to look beyond Razak’s grand design.

Razak’s legacies in domestic politics are two-fold. Politically, it was Umno’s dominance built upon the vote bank of Malay rural population and agricultural settlers in Felda and similar schemes.

In the field of economics, Razak set out to create a Malay/Bumiputera middle class and elite corps that was dependent on government scholarships, jobs, contracts and licences in the name of the New Economic Policy.

The Abdullah administration runs a two-dimensional programme. On the one hand, Abdullah attempts to get into the good books of the international financial market — Abdullah has the tendency of mistaking financial games with real investment that create jobs — by having policies that look market-friendly and nominally conciliatory to the West.

On the other hand, Abdullah launched a “back to the basics/base” programme and invested considerable political capital and resources onto the rural sector, a constituency neglected by Abdullah’s predecessor Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad and who revolted against the ruling Umno in the 1999 election.

After being sworn in as Prime Minister on Friday, Oct 31, 2003 and before he addressed Parliament the following Monday, Abdullah visited flood victims in Kedah’s agricultural heartland. Many subsequent public relations moves carried the same message: Abdullah is the man of the kampung folk.

In his first reshuffle of the Cabinet in January 2004, Abdullah appointed his then key supporter Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin as the Minister of Agriculture and Agro-based Industry, with a hefty budget to play with.

The grand scheme Abdullah had for Malaysia was to carve the country’s rural areas, both on the peninsula and Borneo, into five massive “corridors”.

While the Iskandar project may just work if the government gets its act together to leverage on proximity to Singapore and the huge price differences between the two, the rest are more politically motivated than economically driven.

For instance, credible insiders acknowledged that the Northern Corridor at first by-passed Penang Island, the engine of the northern economy, and was originally planned as an exclusively agricultural endeavour.

Talk about modernising agriculture and doubling the income of farmers and planters by a certain year is at best wishful thinking, if not economically irresponsible.

There are ups and downs in the international prices of commodities and agricultural products, and a layman can see that the moment agriculture is modernised through mechanisation, the less labour is needed.

How will the government then handle the army of excess labour from agricultural modernisation if manufacturing did not grow?

Further, Abdullah wanted to be a Prime Minister for all but quickly retreated to the familiar ground of Umno through resurrecting the New Economic Policy and allowing racist slurs by Umno leaders to go without check.

The fixation with the Razak formula, which rescued Umno from oblivion in the 1970s, is a reflection of the poor grasp of reality by Abdullah and Umno.

Today, more Malays live in urban areas than in the villages. In fact, the underemployment and poverty of, and the poor welfare for, the urban Malays are the real malaise of the contemporary Malaysian economy that eventually will threaten Umno’s survival.

And, in a globalised world, it is impossible to segregate the Malaysian economy from the rest of the world, not to mention isolating a Malay economy from the rest of the country.

March 8 and Permatang Pauh showed the intensity of the urban Malay revolt and its potential, as well as the bitter pill of ignoring “the rest”.

Perhaps it would now take the son of Razak to dismantle his father’s legacy.

- The Malaysian Insider

Comments (8)Add Comment
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written by shangrilapeace, October 13, 2008 21:32:45
Beyond Tun Razak, The Minister of Defense is no more Razak and a pocketful of right thinking Malay has turned to many now, resulting in 2 losses in the 12th general election and Permatang Pauh by election.
'Beyond Razak' will wash away the ugly picture painted 40 years ago.
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written by cheekhiaw, October 13, 2008 22:06:28
As the US financial collapse show, in a globalised world even a financial lie backed by the world's largest military power lasts no longer than 30 years.

What is this thing called 'Razak's legacy' and its little crooked knife?

xxx
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written by islandjoe, October 13, 2008 22:51:10
Why doesn't the new Razak "bathe the crooked budget in some real and non-politically motivated policies"? Too much to expect an arrogant prick born with a silver spoon in his mouth that forms where his backbone should be. He's Malaysia's George W. Bush, leveraging on what Daddy did, so let's be realistic. Btw, you can apply the same to Khairy.
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written by diff2view, October 13, 2008 23:23:45
Tun Razak times, politicians gives solutions in the interest of people. That's the reason Tun Razak, Tunku Abdul Rahman are still lives in our heart. But nowadays, politician provides solution in the interest of self gain..do you think we could remember current goverment politician in our heart for the future? you must be joking bro.. smilies/grin.gif
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written by Sagaladoola, October 13, 2008 23:57:16
Dear Mr. Liew,

I am sorry but I have very low confidence (closer to none) on Razak's son.
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written by thor, October 14, 2008 00:39:09
Great man walks with humility, do u seriously think Pink Lips & company do that? Compassion and integrity are important attributes, are these qualities there? Seriously, think !!!!

GOD SAVE OUR PEOPLE FROM THE WOLVES
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written by willove, October 14, 2008 02:36:08
Thor, hope you don't mind I add another line to your opening.
True, great man walks with humility.
Even truer, great man's son walk with humiliation. smilies/grin.gif smilies/grin.gif

Nevermind the original intention, it's in their minds, we wouldn't know to what extent they really mean it when they say they want progress for the country. We can draw conclusions whether they are success or not based on the current sorry financial state of Malaysia. Please read, "Malaysia-A failed nation" in the Letter's Section.

Tun Razak gave the later TDM the excuse to further exploit the NEP, creating ultra-rich UMNOputras, then tell the poor Malay folks to be proud of their achievements. Then he was lucky enough to have the petrol money to pay for the mega projects and sustain subsidies. That's why for 20 over years Malaysians think that they live in wonderland.

Today, BN can no more cover the truth from the people. The effect of years of rampant corruption and mismanagement have crawl its way into our lives. RPK is instrumental in waking up the more informative Rakyat in recent years thus leading to the 308 tsunami.

Once we are awaken, we shall never go to sleep again. This is the time we rise to save the future of our children from criminals of BN. It's time to give PR a chance to at least prove that they are equally good at federal level just as they do at their states.
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written by ROBERTNGTG, October 14, 2008 08:36:18
Perhaps it would now take the son of Razak to dismantle his father’s legacy

OH YES, DAMN RIGHT HE HAS ALREADY DONE THAT. JUST A MATTER OF TIME LIKE BY GE13??
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