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This was more than nine years ago PDF Print
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Tuesday, 13 October 2009 17:16

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I wrote the piece below soon after the Sanggang by-election on 1 April 2000 (April Fool’s Day). The purpose of the piece, which was published in Harakah, the PAS party newspaper, was to bring to the opposition’s attention that all is not well and unless something is done about it the future would look very bleak for the opposition coalition.

THE CORRIDORS OF POWER

Raja Petra Kamarudin

SANGGANG – THE BA’s WAKE-UP CALL

Raja Petra Kamarudin

I was so sure PAS would win the Sanggang by-election that I thought it unnecessary for my presence in a town I had never even heard of until the death of the incumbent State Assemblyman. Not that my presence would have made any difference, mind you. Pahang was, after all, next on the list of victories for the Barisan Alternatif opposition coalition.

The reports I received from the ground were that it was a sure victory for PAS. The support for PAS was overwhelming. The PAS supporters were everywhere that whatever little supporters Barisan Nasional had, if there were any at all, were swamped by the sheer number of PAS supporters. The Barisan Nasional supporters had probably all left town in a hurry realising that it was futile to resist the PAS onslaught.

When the results came in, not only did Barisan Nasional win, but they also managed to increase their majority from the last time around. And it was not that long ago since the last round (just four months since the 10th General Election to be exact).

I was told that PAS was actually ahead up until the night before Polling Day. On the morning of Polling Day it suddenly turned. Why?

No doubt the impression created was that the support for PAS was overwhelming. But what ‘support’ are we talking about? Support from the crowd or support from the voters? In this case the crowd did not represent the voters.

As what the Prime Minister (then), Dr Mahathir Mohamad, said: there were so many out-of-town PAS supporters that, for the first time in the history of the town, there were massive traffic jams four kilometres long. But these were not locals and they would not be voting in the by-election.

This has always been the mistake of the opposition; be it PAS, DAP, keADILan or PRM. Anything the opposition parties do seem to attract crowds. But the crowd comprises of out-of-towners, people who would not be voting in that constituency, fence-sitters, curious people who just want to see what the hell was going on, people who just love crowds; be it a traffic accident, a fun fair, or a political rally; UMNO supporters who also enjoy opposition ceramahs for its entertainment value, UMNO supporters who want to hear what the opposition has to say so that they can counter the statements later, and so on and so forth.

In short, the majority of the crowd would either not be voting or would not vote for the opposition. The actual voters who were there to be swayed were in the minority.

The opposition always experiences this and it always fools them. We have said this before and we will say it again, “crowds do not translate into votes” -- and it is time the opposition learnt this lesson.

The opposition experienced this in 1982 and 1986, and before that in 1978. Their ceramahs never failed to attract the crowds but it did not attract the votes. The opposition needs to change its perspective of what ‘success’ is all about.

The opposition has proven it knows how to ceramah. But it has yet to prove it knows how to rule. The opposition has proven it knows what justice means. It has not yet shown it knows how to dish out justice. The opposition has proven it knows what a government should not do. It has not yet shown it can be a better government. The opposition has proven it is against corruption. It has not shown it has the formula for a better and corrupt-free government. The opposition has proven that the government’s economic policies do not work. It has not yet shown it can manage the economy better.

And the list goes on.

The opposition may feel it has all the answers. It may even actually have all the answers. But only the opposition knows this. The voters do not. The opposition may blame the mainstream media for this. They may accuse the mainstream media of being one-sided for not highlighting the good things the opposition has to say while playing up the negative issues. The opposition may even accuse the mainstream media of distorting the truth or of downright lying. But what has the opposition done to overcome this?

The opposition has plenty of opportunities to present its side of the story to the voters. There is Harakah, Suara PRM, Berita keADILan, the Rocket, and the many ceramahs conducted all year long the length and breadth of this country. But what ‘news’ does the opposition bring to the people? More of the same thing -- and this means more government-bashing, UMNO-bashing, and Mahathir-bashing.

The people know all about the excesses and transgressions of the government. They know about the corruption and abuse of power. They agree that there is no freedom of speech in this country. They agree that Malaysia is a dictatorship. In short, they know there are so many things wrong with this country. But what they do not know is how is the opposition going to put this right?

Parti Keadilan Nasional was received with great expectations the day it was launched on 4 April 1999. Finally there is a party that is genuinely multi-racial and multi-religious. But then, when they look closer, keADILan appears more and more like just another Malay party. Where are the non-Malays and non-Muslims? What they see is a handful of non-Malays or non-Muslims who could not legitimately claim to represent the other races and other religions.

That was when the non-Malays/non-Muslims decided that Malaysia was not yet ready for a fully-fledged multi-racial/multi-religious party and, until it is, they would continue to throw their support behind Barisan Nasional, which at least had the appearance of representing all the races and religions in this country.

Can you blame the voters for this? Barisan Nasional is a legally-registered party while Barisan Alternatif is but a mere ‘understanding’ that does not have a legal leg to stand on. Why, BA does not even have its own symbol and each party has to contest under its own symbol. How can you expect a non-Muslim Chinese to trust PAS overnight after distrusting the party for more than 50 years? How could a Malay now vote for DAP after considering that party an enemy of the Malays whose only mission in life is to ‘rob the Malays of their God-given rights and privileges’? And keADILan is perceived as nothing more than a party to free Anwar Ibrahim from jail. The question is: what would happen to the party after Anwar has been freed? Would the party then close down and all the members rejoin UMNO the way of Semangat 46?

There are too many old wounds and distrusts that cannot disappear overnight just because Lim Kit Siang and Fadzil Noor shook hands in public. More needs to be done before the ‘extreme’ Islamic party and ‘chauvinist’ Chinese party can be seen as united. And it will have to start with a legally registered party and common symbol.

But legally registered parties and symbols are just eyewashes. Parties can break up and parties can leave the coalition. This has happened before and it can easily happen again. How can Barisan Alternatif prove that it is a marriage of ‘till death do us part’? In today’s modern world, the divorce rate is extremely high and marriages that last seem to be an exception rather than the rule.

The main test in winning the voters’ confidence is in how the opposition can prove it can rule better than the present government. It is a sort of Catch 22. The opposition is not being allowed to rule because it has not proven it can do the job.  But it cannot prove it can do the job until it is first given the chance to rule.

This is where Kelantan and Terengganu come in. Barisan Alternatif is already ruling in these two states. It, therefore, has to show that Barisan Alternatif, and not just PAS, is ruling these states. If it appears like PAS is in total control of Kelantan and Terengganu and the rest of the Barisan Alternatif members are not playing any significant role in government, this will not impress the voters. If only PAS is in power then, at best, Barisan Alternatif can just be a regional government -- never the federal government.

PAS needs to sacrifice some ground in Kelantan and Terengganu to show that keADILan, DAP and PRM are partners in these two state governments. PAS needs to present the governments of these two states as Barisan Alternatif governments and not just PAS governments. PAS needs to show that the success in governing these two states is Barisan Alternatif’s success and not just PAS’s success.

I know it’s not easy. PAS practically monopolises Kelantan and Terengganu. It also has 27 of the 42 Barisan Alternatif parliamentary seats. But PAS has to look at the bigger picture. It needs to downplay itself to play-up the role of Barisan Alternatif. It needs to show that keADILan, DAP and PRM are equally in the driver’s seat and not mere passengers. PAS needs to do this to ensure that the Barisan Alternatif has a better chance at forming the next federal government and not remain a mere regional government.

The Shadow Cabinet has already been set up and Barisan Alternatif has already formed many bureaus that will ‘shadow’ the government ministries. But the bureaus have yet to show their mettle. The bureaus have yet to show they can do the job they have been set up to do. The bureaus may sound good. But is this all they are going to be? Sounding good without producing results?

The bureaus will need to be developed and it will take time to bring them to maturity. They will actually have to function as a shadow government or government-in-waiting without the advantage of the government machinery. It is going to be a colossal job for Barisan Alternatif but it is something that needs to be done. Not doing so would mean that Barisan Alternatif would never progress beyond Terengganu and Kelantan. And that is if they do not end up losing the two states back to Barisan Nasional.

PAS has to decide what its political platform is. Is it to Islamise the nation or to form the next federal government? It cannot be both as there are not enough Muslims in the country to support an Islamic program. This may sound blasphemous but that is the reality of Malaysian politics. If the Malays-Muslims formed 80% or 90% of the population, then maybe it would be possible.

Take note though, many of the Malays-Muslims themselves do not support an Islamic program. Many Malay-Muslim women do not support the tudung ruling. If the Malays-Muslims themselves resist Islam, what would you expect from the non-Malays/non-Muslims?

The opposition needs an immediate image overhaul. It can no longer get support based on sympathy. People are immune to the issues of kezaliman, rasuah, penyelewengan, and so on. The opposition cannot hope to win by default. It needs to get support for what it is, not for what the Barisan Nasional is not. The opposition needs the voters to vote for it not because they hate the government, but because they love the opposition.

Sanggang was good for the opposition. It showed the opposition what the voters really thought of it. It was the opposition’s wake-up call. But will it wake up?

PS: After I wrote the above, PAS launched the ISD (Islamic State Document), DAP left the coalition in disgust, and BA got slaughtered in the 2004 general election.

Comments (24)Add Comment
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written by KotaDamansara73, October 13, 2009 17:48:20
If PAS keep on focusing on banning young people going to concert, they will be isolating young people. PAS is more focus about life after death. This concept do not appeal to young people anymore. Young people wants freedom, wants to enjoy life. The young Malays feel that PAS is a backward party. Without the non-malays, PAS will never win in Selangor.

Young Malays are already trap by their own religion and their protocols. They can't do this and do that. Whereas, young people around the world, in the west, in Korea, Japan, Thailand and etc is enjoying life. PAS is primitive. PAS wants to keep young people primitive. PAS do not want their young Malay to be progressive. PAS is living in the PAST.
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written by Arowana, October 13, 2009 17:54:49
If PKR, DAP and PAS can make humongous sacrifice of their own to form Pakatan Rakyat, I do not see why the Rakyat will not vote them come GE13.

It should not only be heard, it must be SEEN as ONE entity.

Great sacrifices reaps Huge Rewards. I hope all PR leaders do take heed.
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written by amjoem, October 13, 2009 18:24:19
Good article, YM RPK!!
It is most unfortunate that PAS, PKR & DAP are trying to take short-cuts. Most of PAS and PKR members are in one way or another related to UMNO. They are of the same material as that of UMNO. The Chinese members of the DAP and the Indians at large within the DAP and the PKR are also intertwined with the MCA & MIC. Yet to the Indians and the Chinese they feel that the Ultras in PAS are pretenders trying to show that they are more Islamic than the Muslims in PAS. Any child can read that the Ultras in PAS are hypocrites and are not holy Muslims.

RPK, you have read them well. How better can an article be written then the way you have done in this article that was written way back on 1st April 2000. The Opposition is not ready to assume the Powers at Putra Jaya because they are not matured but only attempting to put up a false front to the people. UMNO knows this and they are preparing their guns for the next GE. At this rate they can win much more than the 2/3s majority in Parliament. They can even capture Kelantan.

In order for the Opposition to get on to the right track, YB Nik Aziz must first clean up his house by sacking all the bad elements led by YB Hadi Awang. Only than can the Opposition come out of the doldrums into the limelight and regain the confidance of the voters.

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written by bobdylan, October 13, 2009 18:28:12
Dear Pete,

Many sacrifices have to be made but are the PR leaders willing to make them? LGE aka cuci tangan, Hadi , Sing is King must go but they can still be advisers. People like Zaid should helm the PR. Now everyone is blaming PAS when PR collectively caused the damaged. They should have a PR charter and code of conduct since day 1. KBP and LGE was disgusting, the name calling was terrible.
Dont they know how to make friends. I suggest the head of indians should be a Malay, the head of Chinese a Malay and the head of Malays a Chinese. Ethinic races shouldn't need to speak up for themselves other races should do it for them. Thats where Malaysia starts! I'm stopping short of asking Anwar to go because he has a lot to offer. His oratory and administrative skills will come in handy.By yesterdays account only Perak and Kelantan will remain in the opposition next G.E., and thats only because Perakians re fed up with what happened. Opposition heads should be meeting every week and discuss about the latest happenings in the country...they must be seen and photographed togather. This will give confidence to the rakyat. If they go about minding their own business we the rakyat dont know what to think.
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written by hellosunshine, October 13, 2009 18:28:14
We should take a leaf off the USA's democratic 2 party system where there are checks and balances. Dissolve all the many racist and religious parties and form 2 parties only. Instead of Democrats and Republicans, we can have Demoncrats (formerly known as BN) and Republicans (PR) in Malaysia. smilies/wink.gif smilies/grin.gif
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written by wahyu9, October 13, 2009 18:42:49
And just like after that article, in 2013 BN will win big. (history backs this)

In 2018 BN will again be arrogant and hated. Alas; the Chinese and Indian voters will by then be 25% in total and we will watch from the sidelines PAS and UMNO having a go at each other, upping the ante on who is more 'teror'ly Islamic.

Wait, maybe this is what PAS really wants. Maybe they really don't want a truly democratic 2-party setup in the country.
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written by user1001, October 13, 2009 19:18:23
If 42% non-Malay voted for Bagan Pinang ISA, then lets have a fresh poll at perak!
I am sure BN will win also.. Lets do it! Comon have guts to do a fresh poll and I am sure BN will sure win! I would like to see if BN can take this challenge or not!
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written by justice6, October 13, 2009 19:53:16
..I think there will be a Perak state election soon...as most of the road in city and major town are being resurfaced.. normally when this happen, election will be coming soon... maybe by this year end...
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written by PRman, October 13, 2009 20:29:25
The infighting between PAS, PKR and DAP is certainly being magnified by the media in 10 folds. But who can they blame? They knew all this while that the mainstream media is extremely hostile to the oppositiion to say the least. PR should have a common agreed principle at soonest possible, so Malaysians will understand their standings as a coalition, rather than understanding their positions as individual parties. If they don't get their act together asap, there is little we can do to stop our beloved country to become bankrupt, drained, full of crimes and brain drain. Yet, these opposition parties will still be fighting with each other. Their enemies should be the policies that are harmful to the country and people.
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written by Fart Fart Wah, October 13, 2009 20:38:11
The issue I have been hammering is that PAS cannot and must not take on the Islamic mantle aggressively. People now are more informed. They can check things out easily. You have samys, priests, imams, and muftis under the microscope. They preach but we can see and hear loudly their lifestyle today.
Talking about this 90% of the Malay students under government sponsorship overseas do not return to MALAYSIA. This itself tells you that the young are rejecting the kind of government here which borders on corruption, cronyism and emphasis of Islam is becoming a burden to them. They want to practise Islam spiritually...not religiously with all the impositions and don'ts that come with whipping and all that crap...People are sick of the double standards. Leaders get away with murder, adultery and rape. The powerless become victims of show.
So PAS has to wake up and check the figures and stop forcing religion down peoples throats. As I always say if you have not seen God do not force it..on
No one has seen him...not even the so called prophets...Even Musa did not claim so... go back to real Koran..which comes before the other books that have become more important than the Koran...where all kinds of do's and don's are added to burden the faithful...God loves a voluntary heart not a forced heart...PAS cannot force nor can UMooNO with cowheads demos.
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written by cheekhiaw, October 13, 2009 21:30:25
Normal people learn but idiots from the Dark Ages never...

xxx
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written by Daryl, October 13, 2009 22:26:04
Just my two cents....

People keep harping that the PR cannot rule. But to rule you will need money and those money majority of them come from Federal Government. So, if rakyat is smart or really want change than vote PR in so we can have a feel on their actual rule not having to go through the evil BN that only know how to ruin a democratic process. If not than STOPPED saying they don't know how to rule this and that. Change can be achieved if we use our vote wisely. If not shut up and just take it from behind and look at people die on the street, in PDRM custody, judges give out dubious ruling, corrupt politicians thinks is their right to ask for money, politician get away with murder.... should I go on and if you don't understand where I am going you deserved to pay for corruptions and all the illness that comes with it. Keep on working hard and hope 1MAlaysia will keep you paying for your formula 1 team and also the best race relationship in the world.
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written by BennyG, October 13, 2009 22:32:40
Deja vu.

History repeating itself.

Idiots never learn.

Then again idiots are better than corrupted geniuses who stole billions!
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written by freedom to speak, October 13, 2009 23:31:39
MELAYU MUDAH LUPA! (yes, you PAS included!)

DAP, PKR and PAS get ready to be slaughtered at the next GE13
Keep up your (half past-dead) thinking and we will send you guys to oblivion.
The RAKYAT has just found their voting powers at GE12. You guys are playing with RAKYAT sentiments. Heads will roll and also your butts will burn, if you don't listen!! (methaphor OK!)
All I can say is BYE-BYE good for nothing QUIT-TERS.
Not disappointed with the loss at B.Pinang but disgusted with they way you guys can't work together. Just pack up and leave now. Don't bother waiting for GE13.
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written by Adrian, October 13, 2009 23:59:47
PAS leaders should visit Dubai and Turkey, or even Indonesia and remember to return to Malaysia with open mind and ideas to lead Malaysia. You need to catch up wiht times in order to attract young generations to vote for you. Just look at Spore PAP, yesteryear - you can not do this and that, now everything CAN! just do break the law. Semua OK!
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written by sltemp, October 14, 2009 00:30:56
I fear that creating a cohesive PR will be near impossible. The present crop of leaders from DAP, PKR and PAS have their own agendas and influence within their respective parties. All of them will want to be in the central leadership of PR because that is where the power center is. Members of the central leadership will be virtually assured of ministerial posts when PR forms the government.

However, not all of the party leaders can be in the central leadership. The posts are limited whereas the number of people eyeing for the posts are 3 times (since there are 3 political parties). Negotiations and trading of posts among the parties will begin to determine who will be the President, Deputy President, and so on.

But in the end, not everyone will be happy with what they get. Some will see their influence as being eroded or restricted. Will they give way for the greater good or will they fight back for what they see as rightfully theirs?

The entire process will be very delicate and messy at the same time. RPK has indicated Zaid Ibrahim has been tasked to mould PR into a cohesive coalition with common purposes, objectives and mind. I wish him all the best! Frankly, I think it will take the next generation of leaders from the 3 parties to work closely together. The present crop are too set in their minds and ways, and may be too stubborn to change.
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written by lynn, October 14, 2009 02:56:11
PR has one BIG problem which has not been looked at - money, endless funds which BN has access to - when u analyse a constituency, u hv to determine who are the voters. If they are poor people, impoverished, neglected & deprived, a rice cooker gift would win umno votes - money gifts of RM100 to RM300 to these voters are welcome. These are simple folks, who are 'obligated' once they have taken these gifts. This was a fact in Bagan Pinang - how umno could win. If they try this tactic in the Klang Valley, people are more demanding. We all have one or two rice cookers at home already. Give me cash? Nah, no thanks. You have to consider this point.
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written by James Loh, October 14, 2009 06:41:23
Didn't DAP provide us a budget alternative?
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written by quietguy, October 14, 2009 10:48:57
RPK, from your article:
PAS has to decide what its political platform is. Is it to Islamise the nation or to form the next federal government?
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PS: After I wrote the above, PAS launched the ISD (Islamic State Document)...

Well, there you have it. You asked a question, and PAS gave an answer that couldn't have been more clear. Their objective is to to Islamise the nation, and not to form the next federal government. Forming the federal government is only a means to an end, which is, has always been, and will always be, to establish an Islamic state on earth.

This is something that for some reason, you doesn't seem to understand. And you wonder why your suggestions to PAS seem to fall on deaf ears. You need to understand that to PAS, any action they do should bring them closer to their objective. They would rather lose elections rather than win, if the win means compromising on their principles. This goes for all genuine PAS leaders, whether they are so-called moderates or conservatives. Their methods might be diferent, but their aim is still the same.


P.S. It took ages for me to be able to post this comment. To the site admin, can you please fix the way the site handle the login cookies, because it keeps telling me I'm not logged in even though I am.
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written by DontPlayGod, October 19, 2009 19:55:33
Although my heart is with the PR coalition, I still have grave doubts about PAS. I wrote earlier that PAS will be a stumbling block in the PR coalition. It is best for PR if PAS "gabung" with UMNO, and let PAS do their worst there. After all, UMNO is now getting more Islamic now.
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