Malaysiakini : Meanwhile, Housing and Local Government Minister Nga Kor Ming announced
that the government plans to allocate RM5.21 million to upgrade public
infrastructure facilities under the supervision of the Hulu Selangor
Municipal Council (MPHS) and the Chinese New Village Project in Kuala
Kubu Baharu.
I guess targeted voter strategies are perfectly Bangsa Malaysian but only for a specific ethnic group.
Never
mind that when BN pulled this horse manure back in the day and when
Bersih and other pressure groups raised a hue and cry, Harapan jumped on
the bandwagon. But now, of course, Harapan and its supporters contort
themselves attempting to justify such strategies and vilifying the
pressure groups they once supported.
This is the problem with this
unity government. What it has effectively managed to do is neutralise
government watchdogs which would make them even more ineffective when
this country reaches theocratic status.
This by-election is the
perfect example of why we desperately need third-party candidates. For
decades, what the legacy parties have done, as they do all over the
world, is demonise and isolate third-party candidates. Partisan politics
demands allegiance which should be unquestioning.
Voter anger and apathy
This
is not really an “Indian issue”. The Indians in Kuala Kubu Baharu are
just being used by political operatives to further whatever agendas they
think best serve the Indian community but in reality, just serve
themselves.
The focus should be that this Harapan government is
squandering the opportunity for reform and that the establishment
parties are merely attempting to replicate strategies that have failed
this country.
In politics, anger is something that can be dealt
with, with the appropriate realignment of policy and agenda. What is
worse, and which could eventually destroy Harapan, is apathy. This is
the real danger facing Harapan.
What
some folks are pissed off at is how the Harapan government is not only
sliding back into BN-era practices but the people who want reform are
made to look as if they are the problem.
Harapan is always blaming
the past government for every single thing going wrong in this country
while colluding with the forces that are bringing this country to its
knees. Harapan’s problems are self-inflicted.
How do voters
exercise their democratic rights when all available options are
detrimental to the country? How do voters hold their elected
representatives accountable?
You see DAP becoming the running dog
it accused MCA of being and you understand that if you are non-Malay,
your vote means very little to the coalition you support because they
are too busy fulfilling the expectations of those who did not vote for
them.
You get sick and tired of going on social media and reading
anonymous partisan trolls who mock and vilify those who are trying to
get Harapan to do the right thing. You are disgusted by rather dumb
excuses like “Rome wasn’t built in a day” when the house of cards is
slowly tumbling down.
You
fear that your vote would eventually be the path to a theocracy because
you assumed that the party you voted for would be the bulwark against
such an encroachment.
You are worried that Harapan is taking you
for granted. Harapan political operatives will smugly assume that,
especially if you are non-Malay, you do not have a choice.
Unpalatable options
Once
the base starts realising that a change in a government does not mean a
change in policy, people will stop participating in the process. What
are people dissatisfied with Harapan regardless of their ethnicity
supposed to do?
I sincerely hope there will be third-party
candidates in this by-election and not just candidates who are proxies
for the establishment.
But what if there are no independent
candidates to vote for and the choice is between PN and Harapan? Then
you have to make a choice of voting for PN or staying at home to make a
point to Harapan.
Both
are unpalatable options because one is a continuation of the
transgressive religious policies that a certain section of the polity is
resisting while the other merely doubles the voting power of those
supporting PN.
Maybe this is the real lesson, that in a democracy,
the rakyat need genuine options and it is the agenda of mainstream
parties to limit those options.
A point still needs to be made though.