Malaysiakini : The first thing that strikes the mind is that DAP contributed to and
helped along actively the fatal flaw of working with Dr Mahathir Mohamad
and his Bersatu despite widespread mistrust of the man and his history
of persecuting Anwar Ibrahim, Lim Kit Siang and Lim Guan Eng. Mistake
number 1.Now, if they do work with Umno, it will be mistakes
compounded twice, making one believe that the DAP has a sinister motive
for the party to contribute to the disintegration of a viable
alternative to BN which will last for the longer term.
Perhaps
secretly or within the confines of the inner circle of its own party,
they are rather afraid that multiracialism as espoused by the PKR and
its single party concept which promises a place for everyone in Malaysia
may eventually result in either DAP’s demise or its absorption into the
PKR fold, making DAP irrelevant in the grand scheme of things.
Why
would otherwise savvy politicians such as Loke and Lim make such
ridiculous statements on the eve of GE15 when it should be actively
consolidating its relationship with its partners to come up with a
strategy to win the hearts and minds of Malaysians for a newer and
better future based on equality and justice for all? Why would DAP
actively jeopardise Harapan’s chances at the polls?
Loke’s statement dissected contains two major elements - one that the
DAP has no confidence that Harapan can win GE15, hardly the state of
mind to go into a major battle.
Anwar’s position is a bit more practical when it comes to working with Umno. He said:
“He (Loke) has discussed this issue extensively with me. If you read
his statement in the full context, we are entering the election (GE15)
to win.”
“But in the worst-case scenario, these are some of his
considerations. My position differs slightly… The issue of who we will
negotiate with post-election does not arise.”
That’s reasonable
and clear enough to see but DAP seems to be blind to it or is attempting
to leverage its stay within Harapan for maximum gain by announcing that
it is prepared to consider other options - almost any other option
available.
A new version of MCA?
Really,
what could be worse for DAP, and what could completely destroy and make
it a non-entity as a political party, is to work with its sworn enemy
from day one - Umno. What role would it play after that, a new version
of MCA? But MCA is already there and sucking up to Umno.
Remember
in the early 70s, after the May 13, 1969, racial riots and the New
Economic Policy, Najib’s father Abdul Razak Hussein had taken over from
Tunku Abdul Rahman who was forced out by the young Turks within Umno,
including Razak.
Razak forced the opposition - that had flourished
in the 1969 elections - into the new Barisan Nasional coalition
expanded from the Alliance. The only one who resisted and declined was
Lim Kit Siang’s DAP then.
I quote him here when he made his speech at the first reconvening of
Parliament post the 1969 riots on Feb 20, 1971: “As democratic
socialists, we are dedicated to the abolition of poverty and economic
backwardness regardless of race. We support any measure which will help
better the lot of the Malay poor. But we are strongly opposed to the use
of Malay special rights to enrich the new Malay rich to make them
richer, while the mass of peasantry and poor are exploited as ever.”
That
was good enough for Lim to keep DAP out of any coalition that did not
serve the people. It was a brave decision considering the pressures Lim
faced then, including detention for riots in which he played no part at
all. In the last half a century or so, the DAP has changed considerably
and is now considering working with Najib and Umno!
If DAP is
actually threatening its Harapan partners for greater influence within
the coalition now, it would be completely lost if its partners decide to
call its bluff. Umno will reject it simply because it will cause its
support base to erode.
Umno and DAP need each other so that each
can condemn the other endlessly and thereby ensure their continued
support from the Malays on one hand and the Chinese on the other in a
land badly polarised by race politics. They really do feed off each
other but desperation leads to poor choices.
Which brings us to
the second element of Loke’s stance - his unabashed willingness to let
DAP work with a party with which it has been at loggerheads for almost
all its life - Umno - to get into the winning side. Is that something
which will benefit either side? Not at all.
Is there then any
further ulterior motive to all this? There is one possibility - Loke’s
predecessor Lim Guan Eng faces yet another charge of corruption
following the earlier one over the purchase of a bungalow at a lower
price which was withdrawn after Harapan came to power.
If Harapan
does come to power again, DAP of course will stay on in the coalition
and reap the benefits, including perhaps a review of Guan Eng’s
corruption case. If it does not, why not work with Umno instead and
perhaps there is a possibility of a review of the case the way Guan
Eng’s case was reviewed earlier.
Would DAP allow itself to be
compromised for Guan Eng’s sake? Judging from what the elder Lim and
Loke said - the elder Lim is prepared to work with a convicted felon
while Loke wants to work with Umno - the answer looks like yes.
One
thing is very clear: DAP’s ambivalent stance over GE15 can potentially
cost it and Harapan victory at GE15. It's time that DAP and its partners
realised that and closed ranks before it's too late.