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Leaving Umno the Mahathir way: Mahathir and Abdullah PDF Print
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Friday, 06 June 2008 15:18

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The Malay Rulers have asserted their power more strenuously than at any time since 1984, his fight with them forgotten in an Umno chorus to rally the Malays around their rulers. For Mahathir, indeed, ‘Umno is no longer respected by the Malay Rulers.’

THE CORRIDORS OF POWER

Khoo Boo Teik, Aliran Online

The BN sorely requires reinventing, not least because the MCA, Gerakan and MIC have blamed Umno’s arrogance and excesses for their defeats, writes Khoo Boo Teik, in the second of a three-part series. While Mahathir has gone for broke, Abdullah can neither assuage Umno’s partners’ demoralisation nor reduce Umno’s power within the BN, without which there can be no revitalisation.

Strategically, that might have been why Mahathir quit UMNO – to rally the led from the outside when even disgruntled divisional and higher leaders won’t or can’t openly dissent for fear of swift retribution from the incumbents’ camp.

Everything's lost

In fact, Mahathir loses nothing by doing so because he’s lost everything since he retired. Nothing that Mahathir demanded throughout his big quarrel with Abdullah – from the reversal of project reversals to the latter’s departure – has he obtained.

Mahathirism, that bold, even inspiring ideology of economic nationalism and the remaking of Malaysian society, is routinely rubbished for cronyistic corruption, institutional wreckage, and personal diktat.

At their General Assembly in June 2002, many leaders of his Umno had begged Mahathir not to retire abruptly. Within four years, however, they’d vulgarly gutted his grandiose vision of a Bangsa Malaysia. Now, ‘Lingamgate’ may ensnare him (along with Tun Eusoff Chin, Tun Ahmad Fairuz, Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor, Tan Sri Vincent Tan Chee Yioun, and Datuk V K Lingam) in official investigations over suspected manipulation of high judicial appointments.

Everyone's returned

It must unnerve Mahathir that those whom he’d defeated have all bounced back. The impeached, sacked and suspended judges of 1988, recently rehabilitated, are public heroes, he the remembered villain.

The Malay Rulers have asserted their power more strenuously than at any time since 1984, his fight with them forgotten in an Umno chorus to rally the Malays around their rulers. For Mahathir, indeed, ‘Umno is no longer respected by the Malay Rulers.’

His old Team B foes – Razaleigh and Abdullah, and Tun Musa Hitam – are respectively active politicians and an elder statesman, he a cantankerous Old Man, or, as Musa described him, a ‘thorn in Umno’s flesh’ that had voluntarily removed itself.

Sabah, whose regionalist dissent he quashed, and whose peninsula-styled Umno-dominated politics he imposed, is again restive but now holds the key to Umno’s survival in power. Even the mass media pour scorn on him, he whose words and pictures they’d slavishly used to adorn their front pages, once upon a time in Malaysia.

And the worst of all possible scenarios has come with a vengeance. Anwar has returned, morally vindicated via Lingam-gate, politically resurgent, riding the crest of the tsunami.

Mahathir once said, ‘I couldn’t care less whether people remember me or not. What does it matter if I [have made] history or not when I’m dead … You can’t determine what kind of judgement history is going to pass on you.’ Yet, he must suspect at this moment that History might have little good to say of ‘Mahathir’s legacy’, in contrast to the sycophantic accolades he received on the eve of his retirement.

If he can't have it

For Mahathir, Umno had ignored him after he retired, stopped him from being elected a delegate of Kubang Pasu division which he’d headed for 22 years, and wouldn’t back his call to revolt against Abdullah.

In the assessment of Mahathir, whom Maznah Mohamad once described as the ‘last Malay rebel’, Umno was simply not brave enough to assert itself even when its survival was at stake. Hence, he was ‘compelled to leave a party that was known as Umno but was actually no longer Umno’.

In effect, he disowned it, leaving himself party-less for the third time in his political life. The first time was his expulsion from Umno in 1969–72. The second was a mere legalistic interlude in 1988, between Umno’s deregistration and Umno Baru’s formation. This third time is a self-imposed exclusion that will remain unless and until Abdullah is replaced as Umno President.

One might say that, as usual, Mahathir’s offered ‘leadership by example’. He’s urged Umno’s elected representatives and leaders to follow him out of the party to force Abdullah out of the leadership. He wants those embittered by 8 March, disenchanted with Abdullah, or courted by Anwar not to hop over to Pakatan Rakyat. They should exit Umno, stay independent, wait for someone ‘braver’ to replace Abdullah, and then return to Umno to reconstitute the BN government.

What a tortuous tactical option that is!

It ill befits the man’s reputation as a master of manoeuvre. What with one son, Mokhzani, quitting, but another, Mukhriz, remaining in the Umno Youth Exco, if there is method to this madness, nonetheless it is madness of a sort.

Still, Mahathir makes a crucial point. He’d made the point thrice before – in 1969 when he attacked Tunku, in 1988 when he permitted Umno to be deregistered, and in 1998 when he smashed Anwar: if he can’t have the party, he’s prepared to have no party.

Detecting no clues

Against that singular resolve to go for broke, Abdullah pales, clueless as to how to get others to work with him, let alone work for him. He’s blithely played down the scale of BN’s electoral setback, the erosion of Umno’s legitimacy and the disquiet among Umno’s BN partners. That doesn’t stanch the leakage of confidence in his performance as Umno President and as Prime Minister.

Rebuffed by many quarters, he alternates between keeping an ‘elegant silence’ and making flip-flop responses that observers regard to be evidence of a multi-dimensional disconnect from reality.

Abdullah yielded to the royal rejections of his nominees for Menteri Besar in Perlis and Terengganu. But he makes a show of directing the Attorney-General to investigate Karpal Singh for allegedly making seditious statements over the Perak Sultan’s prerogative in matters of Islam.

Abdullah concedes that Pakatan won the ‘cyberwar’ in the general election. But, mistaking the medium for the message, he bypasses the deep, deep grievances that sustained the cyberwar to begin with.

As before, he warns everyone, including Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng, not to play ethnic politics. As in past years, he’s unwilling or unable to curb Umno’s more and more aggressive ‘defence of Malay rights’.

He tries to appease the Sabah parliamentary bloc he needs to keep the BN government intact. For his pains, he meets rising regionalist demands in the ‘crossover’ sandiwara (drama).

No reform or reinvention

When he embarks once more on reform as the solution to voter unhappiness, he runs aground in different ways. By now, it’s evident he lacks a vision – for better or worse, something like the 2Ms’ vision, as Musa himself intimated – to ennoble his reform measures. As the composition of his Cabinet shows, Abdullah also lacks a paragon of propriety who can credibly lead a reform drive.

As such, when Abdullah refurbishes his 2004 promise of reform, talks of unshackling the judiciary, or speaks of tackling corruption, it’s mostly too little too late, as if he’s largely mounting a convenient counter-attack against Mahathir.

The BN sorely requires reinventing, not least because the MCA, Gerakan and MIC have blamed Umno’s arrogance and excesses for their defeats. But Abdullah can neither assuage Umno’s partners’ demoralisation nor reduce Umno’s power within the BN, without which there can be no revitalization.

Fearing impending irrelevance, Umno itself badly needs change. It could start by abolishing the nomination quota and liberalising its party election procedures to allow an infusion of new, young and untainted blood into its leadership. A move in that direction, however, is likely to lead to Abdullah’s own exit.

Comments (29)Add Comment
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written by doggone, June 06, 2008 15:37:34

In short, with leaders like these two, we are screwed whether we wear shorts or not !!!
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written by malgal, June 06, 2008 16:12:19
looks like we are caught between a sock and a fart place, a mocked and a hard head. while these dance their unstylish duet, the rakyat is forking out more to keep the power brokers in power.
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written by megahyper, June 06, 2008 16:30:39
50 years! we have had enough.

And nobody seems to know what the govt. policies are! One day its no increase in fuel, next day you must fill up by 12am! one day its no election, next day the nomination date is fixed next week.
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written by malaysianohope, June 06, 2008 16:33:56
CheDet took a long 22 years of indigestion to shit out a can of worms!

Bodowi says Thank You and went back to sleep for the next 4 years.

In the fifth year he got jolted out of slumberland on 0803 and then proceed to piss the Rakyat with an increase in price of petrol by 41%, diesel by 63% and electricity by 18%

And then went back to sleep with his new wife.
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written by megahyper, June 06, 2008 16:40:24
The ship is sinking and running low on fuel.

The Captain orders every crew members to paddle to save fuel for other "purpose".

Already low on calories, the crew have no choice but to paddle even harder to stay afloat. And everyone is paddling like hell!

Just one problem though: which way to paddle? The captain keep changing direction!

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written by Trueandfair, June 06, 2008 16:52:37
IF it is true, then whatever Tun M has done in the past (the misdeeds) may now be making a comeback to haunt and torment him in the various forms esp the vanquisheded by him mercilessly - the chief is DSAI !!!
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written by novrising, June 06, 2008 17:08:51
I am ashamed that the our forefathers (parents, uncles, aunties, teachers, granny, etc. etc) merely stood by and watch all of this being passed down to the next generation.

Do you want your offspring to be ashamed of you? We arguing with petty little issues, like a school kids uniforms, etc. etc. Do we really want the next generation to know this is the kind of issues debated in a national level.

Please la.. lets change our mindset...
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written by novrising, June 06, 2008 17:48:44
To add on to my earlier comment.....

For 40 years, no matter how highly or lowly educated we can be... the laymen can feel that there is something wrong with this country's leadership deep down in their guts.
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written by malsia1206, June 06, 2008 17:57:35
I have this much only to say. TDM has, at most, a mere mention in the footnotes only. And any reference to his successor is best carried on the next edition in the footnotes too. Neither deserve any place in the preface, opening chapters or last page of our history texts. Best forgotten so we can get on with our lives.
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written by coolandy, June 06, 2008 18:16:11
Che Det's biggest mistake is not to learn from Lee Kuan Yew to stay on as Minister Mentor! He must be regretting it and more so LKY seems to me one or two up on him everytime.

It is true that Team B is now in power and there is nothing much that Tun can do about it. Tun himself forgot about points taught in the art of war by Sun Tzu.

TDM, nasi sudah menjadi bubur. Retire graciously because there isn't enough years beats left in your old dying heart. Mind willing but body's not.

Pakatan Rakyat and the younger generation will decide the future and yes, we have a lot to learn from tiny Singapore about good government etc.
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written by BennyG, June 06, 2008 19:21:14
Beautifully summarised. I really wonder if TDM will have a chance to fight back. So far, noises, strategies that seem to cause some damages but not enough to effect the changes. Somehow I was wondering where is that black book he kept on all his cronies or rather his cronies had been put in more worse situation than before.

A question though, could Malaysians wait for the UMNO results or PR must take action before the effects of the combination of stagflation and inflation (caused by higher petrol prices) could no longer be controlled?
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written by sarawakian, June 06, 2008 19:44:54
NEWSBREAK!

after the two day retreat to ponder on what is to be done;

1. Badawi resigns as President and PM of Malaysia.
2. 20% of UMNO leaders cross over to PKR and PAS while the rest flee the country.


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written by Richfyf, June 06, 2008 19:45:04
Najib said kalau harga minyak turun Kerajaan akan bankrupt. Well now Pak Lah have assured that "Kerajaan won't be Bankrupt" . Very soon there will be many that cant pay their installments, rent etc.... So much for a BN govt taking care of. So much for "Yes we hear what the voters say and will work hard for the Country" If increasing fuel price is working hard, Hey I too am qualified to be the next P.M and President of UMNO.
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written by Motherchell, June 06, 2008 22:24:56
Sarawakian, you're right buddy, in its genesis as a beholder of rights of the indigenous . They raped and sodomized the Country lock stock and barrel. Conniving with divisive tactics and ends!!!!
For sure the balance of the left over hoodlums have to flee the Country as theres too much taint. UMNO has reached its limits of survival. The advent of the net has inculpated them.

The reasons for these is their own doing . Why i say so ?? , they set themselves into their own entrapment with little IQ. A merit they presumed was for subservience of the general masses. In layman's language one would say "like giving a rose to a monkey"

The same masses whom they incubated had no IQ to act intelligently after fleecing the Nation.
Some examples are 1)the former Deputy CM of Penang. The statements he made when asked about the stained land deals 2) The sudden exit of the Chairman of ABAD Naluri.

RPK, from humble beginnings ,started with simple truths and opinions when MT was still in its infancy. There was so much UMNO could have corrected in its attitude for its survival by even lending a ear to his intimations. But RPK's warnings in the new media were smothered as revolutionary and an enemy of the STATE. ----Paradoxically at a time when UMNO was telling the world about Cyber Jaya and the Information Super CORRIDOR.

The British are not upstarts to knight his grandfather with a SIR. This gives us the insight into the credibility of his his lineage and that they are made of an illustrious class. It also tells us why RPK ,his father and his grandfather had apprehensions about their associations with UMNO and its agenda at its incept.

Can we call the Leaders we have servants of the Rakyat???????? NO! What they thought was their niche .Actually was unwittingly a foundation to their destruction and downfall!
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written by Motherchell, June 06, 2008 22:30:51
To quote Tom Clancy---in context to UMNO , ----------

"" Those who were not Empire Builders were self-righteous meddlers"""
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written by Angel, June 06, 2008 22:32:41
We cannot reverse time but am glad that the youngsters of today, perhaps being more knowledgeable through cyberspace, are a more adventurous lot who are couragous and willing to fight for ideals they uphold eg justice, equality, anti corruption, transparency etc. I was encouraged to see many young people at the ceramahs i attended being so active in politics. Their political consciousness have definitely heightened compared to our days.

I believe we were so brainwashed by the BN and made to fear PAS which we now realise is not as bad as made out to be. We welcomed our PAS parlimentarian with open arms when he initiated visiting his constituents in church. Stepping into a church did not make him less holy or make him lose his faith!!

Well, with divine intervention we have all seen the light and saw things we never expected to see. The outcome of the last GE was indeed a MIRACLE!! Let's continue to pray for guidance for our blessed land, NEGARA KU!
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written by tuahjebat, June 07, 2008 01:08:24
It is times like these that I like to ponder and share what our Malaysian National Laureate Datuk A. Samad Said wrote years back...

Tetamu Senja ~ A. Samad Said

Kita datang ini hanya sebagai tetamu senja
Bila cukup detik kembalilah
Kita kepadanya
Kita datang ini kosong tangan dada
Bila pulang nanti bawa dosa bawa pahala

Pada tetamu yang datang dan
Kenal jalan pulang
Bawalah bakti mesra kepada
Tuhan kepada Insan
Pada tetamu yang datang
Dan lupa jalan pulang
Usahlah derhaka pula
Pada Tuhan kepada insan

Bila kita lihat manusia lupa tempat
Atau segera sesat puja darjat
Puja pangkat
Segera kita insaf kita ini punya kiblat
Segera kita ingat kita ini punya tekad

Bila kita lihat manusia terbiar larat
Hingga mesti merempat ke laut biru
Ke kuning darat
Harus kita lekas sedar penuh pada tugas
Harus kita tegas sembah
Seluruh rasa belas

Kita datang ini satu roh satu jasad
Bila pulang nanti bawa bakti padat berkat
Kita datang ini satu roh satu jasad
Bila pulang nanti bawa bakti padat berkat

~ A. Samad Said

For indeed those at the corridors of power in Malaysia are a greddy lot. It is of no surprised that the citizens are now being crunch further with the rising cost of living. Soon to follow will be the rising in criminal activities as some people may see it as the only way out to end their misery. What a pity for us and for our NATION.
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written by Eskay Lim, June 07, 2008 13:51:12
PM Bodowi, with his so often "flip-flop" decisions obviously lacks vision & direction to maneuvre Umno. Umno at present is like a sinking ship being subjected to threats of many elements; high waves, strong winds and undercurrents, all going in different directions and of course, this ship is being piloted by a half-past 6 captain.
It's not going to be smooth sailing, that's for sure.
But what Bodowi can do now is to do a "thorough house cleaning" within Umno; getting rid of all tainted baggage in a cabinet reshuffle. This would be a risky business due to unpredictable loyalty & a possible mutiny as shown by calls for Bodowi to step down as President of Umno.... and PM of the country.
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written by cheekhiaw, June 07, 2008 23:13:16
GREATNEST THAT COULDN'T LAST

Samad Said also had praises for Che Det whose 'achievements' could not even last 5 years. What a great man...

"Kau pengingat bangsamu yang sering benar pelupa;
penyedar satu perjuangan yang belum selesai;
juga penghayat tanah airmu yang sungguh damai.
Kau sempat menjadikan ramai manusia gigih,
di alaf damai, mereka menyemai benih ilmu;
di musim permai, mereka membisik kasih syahdu.
Kau gelorakan kejutan yang sebesar-besarnya
dan mendorong rakyat menjerit "boleh" segalanya!
Kutahu, kau sentiasa benci kerja yang bebal,
lebih kau sanjung tiap pencapaian yang global."

- Dirgahayu Dr. Mahathir -

xxx
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written by T Rex, June 08, 2008 01:27:32
T REX test posting

MT admin
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written by kinistau, June 08, 2008 02:24:39
Najis Mongolia said kalau harga minyak turun Kerajaan akan bankrupt....
Nasi Malaysia says kalau harga minyak naik kedai-kedai rakyat akan bankrupt...

But Najis has stronger smell, he won.

Brace yourself fellow Malaysian for definite inflation and possible recession.
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written by Rozlan, June 08, 2008 08:40:42
In the assessment of Mahathir, whom Maznah Mohamad once described as the ‘last Malay rebel’, Umno was simply not brave enough to assert itself even when its survival was at stake. Hence, he was ‘compelled to leave a party that was known as Umno but was actually no longer Umno’.


Yap.They dont have the guts.A spoon feed party...
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written by TWOG, June 09, 2008 14:05:07
DSM Criteria

A pervasive pattern of grandiosity (in fantasy or behavior), need for admiration, and lack of empathy, beginning by early adulthood and present in a variety of contexts, as indicated by five (or more) of the following:

1) has a grandiose sense of self-importance
2) is preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love
3) believes that he or she is “special” and unique
4) requires excessive admiration
5) has a sense of entitlement
6) is interpersonally exploitative
7) lacks empathy
smilies/cool.gif is often envious of others or believes others are envious of him or her
9) shows arrogant, haughty behaviors or attitudes

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diagnostic_and_Statistical_Manual_of_Mental_Disorders

smilies/angry.gif smilies/angry.gif smilies/angry.gif smilies/angry.gif smilies/angry.gif
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written by roadbarra, June 10, 2008 16:24:17
deei deiii mamak , pii lah buat teh tarik bagi saya....
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written by bananachinese, June 10, 2008 23:58:56
This is what is being said by real Malaysians:

http://mylivingwall.com/v3/ind...d-Sad-Dogs

Do the politicians really understand?
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written by semut, June 16, 2008 23:06:18
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written by arazak, August 26, 2008 01:10:16
Tun Mamak Kutty had left UMNO. . ., allright, we all knew that. But for Bodohwi, leaving UMNO would be impossible.. . ., cos' after Sept 16, there will be no more UMNO. So what is that to leave from something that has ceased to exists from the surface of this earth???

RPK had rightly put it . . ., UMNO will be thrown in the Indian Ocean!!! smilies/grin.gif
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