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Politicians of all shades should adapt and stop bickering PDF Print
Tuesday, 08 April 2008 08:35

After 1 month: Interview with Khoo Kay Peng, a keen observer of local politics

The problem is with the whole Malay rhetoric. Umno should have become a national party and should be able to show the way forward.

The Malaysian Insider 

The first is that we have not reached a stable point yet. The second is that the outcome of the general elections was not well-received by the politicians on both sides.

The first part does not augur well for the country economically. We don't have much time to lose now. There is the risk of the recession in the US, which could spread and affect the rest of the global market, and to have this compete with what is happening here now is not good.  

People from outside are looking in and wondering if there's any point in investing in our country. Stability can exist even without a 2/3 majority. It will not bode well for the country if the politicians do not settle this fast.

The second point is that many people are asking, "Who can be the next prime minister who can govern the country?" The uncertainty over this political issue appears on both sides, definitely it is a big question on the BN's side. 

Logically, they should look at the BN formula again. They should look at why people in the 4 most industrialised states and Wilayah (the Federal Territory) voted for the Opposition.  

They should stop bickering and look into the weaknesses that lie in the BN formula and learn how to adapt, change and reform. But what we are seeing are internal factions forming not just in Umno, but all the BN component parties. We do not see the inter-party cooperation, which is what is needed for BN to make a comeback.

BN is being tested. They (the BN) can work together. But, to put it in terms of a football match, they cannot reuse the same strategy to score. They need to adjust, to enlargen the alliance model and to incorporate the other component parties and perhaps to form a single BN party for all ethnicities, to make it really possible for the survival of BN. As an observer, what I see people would want is this.  

The sentiments from the other component parties, Gerakan, MCA, MIC is clear. They see it as Umno's fault for the defeat in the general elections. So for Umno to ask them to go back to the same old model again, where Umno has more authority than them, they will reject it. If Umno does not change...  

Umno may have lost the opportunity, but they have not lost entirely. Umno has the power to truly become a national party. Look at how the Cabinet has formed over the years.  Unfortunately, the leaders choose only to rule a Malay party; they're not moving away from a pro-Malay mindset, and are giving the impression that they are not interested in taking care of others.  

The problem is with the whole Malay rhetoric. Umno should have become a national party and should be able to show the way forward.

MCA, since 1969, has not been able to claim rule over the Chinese voters. The same goes with the other Chinese-dominant parties: Gerakan, DAP, SUPP. Like MCA, they have not changed their call. They want to play the race card but they are not able to deliver.

That's why the people are punishing them for it. MCA has always been welfare-oriented. After their big defeat in '69, they have still not recovered from their loss. They rejected the opportunity to merge with Gerakan and take similar steps forward.

Since '69, the people have been moving slowly away from race-based politics, especially in the urban areas. They are not worried about who's protecting their welfare. They are concentrating on controversies, corruption, the politics of threat and the arrogance of power. They are put off by these issues.

People are voting for good governance, although sentiments sometimes causes them to get carried away. What happened at the recent elections is a good example of the direction of the voting trend.

Comments (4)Add Comment
...
written by krising1, April 08, 2008 08:59:05
Throwing water on ducks backs. Casting pearls before swines. Bring a horse to water......

For BN and UMNOputeras, winning all is big money. They key states are gone and the pie has gone smaller. All castles that were built in the air are evaporating. So they have to scheme and scheme to get around the problems. Problem of less money. Problem of crony companies in trouble in Penang and Selangor. Problems of skeltons jumping out of the cupboards. Probem of wolves baying for their blood. So problem, problem problem.
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written by cwy, April 08, 2008 09:27:40
While other professionals are working to contribute
as much as possible to nation building in Malaysia,
quite a lot of 'smart' people are earning 'easy' money,
'undue' recognition and even 'misinterpreted' power just
participating in Malaysian politics.
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written by technoboy, April 08, 2008 10:13:31
BN politicians are a selfish lot, they are fighting to protect their own political interest even when the ship is sinking.
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written by mykantree, April 08, 2008 13:16:55
The current tussle within UMNO by the various factions to outblame each other for the election debacle is not unexpected.The result of the election only intensifies it, and brings out the worse that existed in UMNO long before this. Looking at the leaders of all these factions, I do not see anything new, that is positive, coming out of it. All these same leaders has been part and parcel of the problem in UMNO, recent past and present. For UMNO to play any positive role in the governace of this country, it has to completely replace its very reasons for its existence in the first place.Ditto for MCA and MIC.
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