Rudyard Kipling"
“When you're left wounded on Afganistan's plains and
the women come out to cut up what remains, Just roll to your rifle
and blow out your brains,
And go to your God like a soldier”
General Douglas MacArthur"
“We are not retreating. We are advancing in another direction.”
“It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.” “Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.
“The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and be the deepest wounds and scars of war.”
“May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't .” “The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
“Nobody ever defended, there is only attack and attack and attack some more.
“It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.
The Soldier stood and faced God
Which must always come to pass
He hoped his shoes were shining
Just as bright as his brass
"Step forward you Soldier,
How shall I deal with you?
Have you always turned the other cheek?
To My Church have you been true?"
"No, Lord, I guess I ain't
Because those of us who carry guns
Can't always be a saint."
I've had to work on Sundays
And at times my talk was tough,
And sometimes I've been violent,
Because the world is awfully rough.
But, I never took a penny
That wasn't mine to keep.
Though I worked a lot of overtime
When the bills got just too steep,
The Soldier squared his shoulders and said
And I never passed a cry for help
Though at times I shook with fear,
And sometimes, God forgive me,
I've wept unmanly tears.
I know I don't deserve a place
Among the people here.
They never wanted me around
Except to calm their fears.
If you've a place for me here,
Lord, It needn't be so grand,
I never expected or had too much,
But if you don't, I'll understand."
There was silence all around the throne
Where the saints had often trod
As the Soldier waited quietly,
For the judgment of his God.
"Step forward now, you Soldier,
You've borne your burden well.
Walk peacefully on Heaven's streets,
You've done your time in Hell."
COMMENT - This was never about Puad By Mariam Mokhtar
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Malaysiakini : Within hours of Puad’s allegations regarding royal influence in Johor
political affairs, the discussion shifted with familiar speed. Police reports were made. Investigations began. Public debate hardened.
Almost
immediately, the focus moved away from the constitutional question,
which is the central issue he raised, and shifted instead to his
motives.
Motive besides the point
Was he bitter? Was he denied political reward? Was this internal party frustration repackaged as a principle?
This
was never about whether Puad was right or wrong. It was about whether
the constitutional question he raised could be openly discussed at all.
What is striking is not disagreement, but how disagreement is handled.
Instead of confronting the constitutional issue, the instinct is to dissect the man himself: ambition, resentment, opportunism, disloyalty.
The individual becomes the story. The institution vanishes.
This
may be politically effective, but it is constitutionally corrosive
because it teaches repeatedly that sensitive questions are not answered.
They are neutralised.
Johor
is widely discussed in public reporting as a state where the boundary
between constitutional form and political reality is not always easy to
separate.
Past
changes in menteri besar leadership and public statements from both
political and royal figures have reinforced a perception that political
outcomes cannot always be understood through electoral arithmetic alone.
Whether
one sees this as constitutional discretion or political influence
depends on interpretation. But what matters is this: the lack of shared
clarity has become part of the political environment itself.
Thus, where clarity is absent, perception fills the space.
Silence doesn’t resolve anything
It is essential to separate two things.
First,
the truth or falsity of any individual allegation, including those made
in current political disputes, is a matter for evidence, institutions,
and due process.
Second, and more important here, is the
structural issue: how constitutional questions are handled in public
life once they are raised.
Our discussion is about the second.
History shows that when direct criticism becomes difficult, it does not vanish, but it changes form.
Jonathan
Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travels” is a classic example. Beneath its
fictional worlds and absurd rulers lay a sharp critique of political
systems and human authority, expressed in metaphor because direct
language carried risk in its time.
Allegory became the language of survival.
Then, as now, people turned to satire and allegory not out of comfort, but out of caution and self-protection.
In
recent years, individuals who raised sensitive political or
constitutional questions faced investigations or legal consequences.
The case of activist Ali Abdul Jalil, who later left Malaysia and sought asylum in Sweden, is frequently cited in this context.
Walking on eggshells
Whether one agrees with his views is secondary.
The
constitutional issue is the perception such cases create: that certain
topics carry consequences beyond normal political disagreement.
When that perception spreads, speech does not disappear. It narrows.
Ordinary
citizens who raise complaints involving powerful individuals or
sensitive institutions often find themselves unsure of the consequences
of speaking out, not only about their complaint, but about themselves.
What matters is not consistency, but perception: that some lines feel riskier to cross than others.
And where that perception takes hold, participation shrinks.
In pre-revolutionary France, criticism of royal authority could lead to imprisonment or accusations of treason.
The problem was not only suppression itself, but the absence of safe, legitimate channels for grievance.
Over time, unresolved pressure did not disappear. It accumulated.
Systems that cannot absorb criticism do not become stronger. They become brittle.
Tensions will continue unless resolved
This is why the Puad episode matters, not because of Puad himself, but because of the pattern it reflects.
A constitutional question is raised. It becomes personal. Then moral. Then political. Then it disappears.
The
immediate issue is contained. The underlying ambiguity remains, but it
will return, disguised in another case and another controversy.
Puad
may be right. He may be wrong. He may be acting from conviction or
calculation, but none of that resolves the issue, because the problem is
not the individual.
It is the absence of a shared, explicit understanding of how constitutional monarchy and political authority interact in practice.
Yang di-Pertuan Agong Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar opening a session of Parliament On Jan 26, 2026
So,
until that question is addressed openly, this will repeat with
different names and different triggers, albeit with the same structure.
Constitutional ambiguity does not disappear when avoided, but it returns when tested.
The moment the debate became centred on Puad the man, the constitutional question had already been lost.
COMMENT - Selangor exco's low-price ploy is a costly political interruption by R Nadeswaran
Malaysiakini : Restaurants serving warm or iced water use 25 cubic centimetre
containers, dropping the cost per serving to a microscopic 0.000735 sen.
Yet, consumers are routinely charged 60 sen (in some places RM1 or more) for plain water or iced water.
Where is the justification? There is no justification - only the reality that consumers are charged simply because the market allows it.
Who
decides the percentage of profits a trader can make? Experience has
shown that this is impossible for various reasons. The mathematics of
overheads further dismantles the argument for price caps.
Standardising
profit margins has proven, time and again, to be an unworkable policy.
There is no law - written or otherwise - that compels the uniform
pricing of goods or services.
Successive governments have wisely refrained from interfering in the free market, allowing supply and demand to dictate prices.
Except
for a handful of essential goods (sugar, cooking oil, flour, etc),
prices remain unregulated. (During festive seasons, a dozen other items
go on the list.) Teh tarik and black tea have never made that list.
The
principle is simple - the consumer decides. If you want to drink your
tea in a conducive environment where you want to be noticed by the
Joneses, or pretend to be in the class of “nouveau riche” (those who became rich recently), be prepared to pay the price.
But if price is a factor, by all means pull up a stool and sit under the withering sun at the stall.
Selangor govt’s pledge
According to a report by The Star
two days ago, the Selangor government said that local councils will be
tasked with ensuring food court traders maintain reasonable prices,
justified by the financial support already given to them.
“Local
authorities will be directed to monitor food court operators and traders
renting premises under council management, with a focus on pricing
practices and compliance with existing regulations,” state Local
Government and Tourism exco Ng Suee Lim said at a press conference on
the sidelines of the Selangor state assembly sitting in Shah Alam last
week.
Yes, anyone can monitor prices, but what action can be taken against those who increase prices?
Ng Suee Lim
The
trader can charge what he likes if he complies with the requirement
that the consumer knows the price he must pay. Hence, a price tag or a
list of prices (including restaurant menus) will suffice.
So, Ng’s charade of “stop the price increases” must stop. It is best left to the adage “caveat emptor” - let the buyer beware.
Ng
said the state’s order was not intended to impose price controls but
rather to encourage ethical business practices and prevent excessive
profiteering, particularly in premises that benefit from public support
and subsidised facilities.
“If operating costs are reduced through
government assistance, they should keep prices under control and, where
possible, offer more affordable prices to attract customers,” Ng said
when winding up the debate at the assembly.
Then again, who and what defines “excessive profiteering”?
Does state govt have the power?
While
councils can issue summonses for littering or hygiene breaches, only
gazetted officers from the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Ministry
have the statutory power to investigate and prosecute price-related
offences. Council staff are legally toothless on this issue.
But
then again, who can forget Ng’s role on the issue involving the
privatisation of street parking in four districts in Selangor? Didn’t he
utter a series of fibs to defend the unpopular decision before the
truth emerged?
If
Ng believes this announcement will placate Selangorians, he is gravely
mistaken. The rakyat have not forgotten the past debacles.
This
sudden concern over prices feels less like economic policy and more like
a desperate attempt at damage control to distract from a sinking
credibility scorecard.
When demands for the four DAP exco members
to explain their roles in approving such draconian regulations are met
with resounding silence, grandstanding about food prices rings hollow.
Grandstanding not working
Ultimately,
the state’s grandstanding on the so-called “excessive profiteering” is
not a genuine consumer protection strategy; it is a populist distraction
that undermines market confidence and insults the intelligence of the
people.
In a free market, price tags and menus aren’t just labels -
they are built-in safeguards. They empower consumers with the
transparency they need, making regulation redundant.
By posturing
over a 60 sen glass of water while remaining muted on substantive
governance failures, Ng is not defending the poor; he is merely doing it
for the headlines.
Selangorians are knowledgeable. They
understand that a government that cannot manage parking, forestry, or
religious harmony has no business dictating what a stall should charge
for rice and curry.
If the exco truly wants to prevent "excessive"
behaviour, it should start by curbing its own excessive appetite for
populist distractions.
Because when silence falls on real issues,
and noise rises on non-issues, the ballot box has a sharp way of
restoring balance - and that is one price the politicians know that they
cannot afford to ignore.
What’s next? Halal train seats?
Halal toilets? Halal blood donation? Will some people stoke fear of
pork molecules in non-Muslim blood?
Back
in 2012, fast-food chain A&W rebranded its “Coney Dog” and “Root
Beer” to “Chicken Coney” and “RB” as the Islamic Development Department
(Jakim) deemed that certain words would “confuse” Muslims.
Yet
A&W had been in Malaysia since 1963, and Muslims drank root beer for
over 50 years, knowing full well it had nothing intoxicating, except
too much sugar.
In fact, the Malay dessert of fermented tapioca, or tapai, probably has more alcohol.
In
2017, a “halal laundry” in Muar refused to serve non-Muslims. Johor
ruler Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar, as the head of state of Islamic
matters, called this “extreme” and a “narrow mindset”.
He pointed out that ringgit notes may have also come in contact with pork or liquor.
Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar
“Will the government then have to produce Muslim-friendly money?” asked His Majesty.
“Think for yourselves. What about seats in public places that may have been licked by dogs? This will never end.”
Islamisation of Selangor
Some
people grumble online that Selangor is slipping into an Islamic state
by stealth - not via PAS but under the so-called “moderate” Pakatan
Harapan.
In an earlier column, I wrote that the PKR-led state government had scored three own goals before the coming elections - restrictions to temples/churches, secretly selling forest land cheaply to cronies, and claiming there was “no land” for a public hospital in Petaling Jaya.
The
fourth own goal is that “No Pork, No Lard” signs may be banned in
Selangor, as they may “confuse” Muslim customers into believing they are
halal.
The “halal waste” issue counts as the fifth own goal. It
was left to Lee Chean Chung, the outspoken MP for Petaling Jaya, to
reveal this and the church/temple issue.
He is still in PKR but will probably soon move to Bersama for the next election.
Petaling Jaya MP Lee Chean Chung
Ng
Suee Lim, the state exco for local government, then claimed that the
policy on halal and non-halal waste separation in Selangor has been
around since 2010.
He explained that due to “confusion and questions”, its implementation will be “reviewed” to ensure that they are “more practical, clear, and in line with current needs”.
The review will include “getting views from NGOs, industry players, local councils, and relevant agencies”.
Yet,
the question remains, why did the four DAP state exco members not
object to this silly policy? And is the government only seeking views
from stakeholders after the rubbish has hit the fan?
Deeper problems
Malaysians
generate around 8.3 million metric tonnes of food waste annually, or
roughly 260kg per person. Food waste makes up 40 percent to 45 percent
of all daily waste sent to landfills. No wonder garbage disposal is big
business.
I
see many Malaysians, including Muslims, leaving lots of perfectly good
food uneaten at cafes. They don’t even bother packing it to eat at home.
Yet in Islam, wastage is a sin, and offenders are deemed as “relatives of Satan”.
I wish that halal was something that unites us - as a symbol of quality, like say the “organic” label.
Halal
is supposed to mean compliance with Islamic principles of hygiene. But
what about halal restaurants that are dirty? Or halal food packed with
harmful preservatives and nitrates?
Most importantly, are we getting bogged down in micro details while missing the big picture?
Former
minister Rafidah Aziz said in 2024 that authorities should focus on
combating corruption, which was “non-halal money”, instead of “causing
inconvenience” by enforcing rigid halal rules.
Thus,
rather than getting fixated about halal garbage, we should examine if
politicians, top civil servants, plus corporate/GLC leaders got their
wealth in halal or haram ways.
Legislate against unexplained riches
Former Klang MP Charles Santiago said this can be done easily if the government has an Unexplained Wealth Law (UWL).
So
if a civil servant with a RM10,000 salary has seven luxury cars and two
huge mansions, the UWL can compel such jokers to explain how they
acquired such massive assets.
If they cannot justify it, the
government can quickly seize illicit wealth without dragging cases
forever in court, said Charles. This will stop the “systemic corruption
among the elite”.
But I do wonder if his strong, uncompromising stands were what caused DAP to drop him as the Klang parliamentary candidate in the 2022 general election, even though he was an immensely popular MP?
Former Klang MP Charles Santiago
Authorities
have every right to spend immense time and effort checking cafes for
the slightest mistakes on their halal status, for example, a menu
listing “hot dogs”.
But perhaps more energy should be spent on doing “halal tests” on suspected corrupt wealth using a UWL.
After
all, the biggest threats to Muslims and Malaysians are the 3Rs of
“rempit, rokok, rasuah” - reckless motorcyclists, smoking, and
corruption.
These 3Rs are what really harm lives, health, and society - not the other R - a lack of halal rubbish bins.
COMMENT - The 'other Malaysia' and plight of Indians By Charles Santiago
Malaysiakini : In every society, there are people who complain about problems. There
are people who analyse problems. And then there are those rare
individuals who dedicate their lives to building solutions.
Selva belonged to that third category.
The
great historian Eric Hobsbawm warned against the illusion that history
is made solely by heroic individuals. Yet, Malaysian politics often
encourages exactly that illusion. Every few years, we are told that a
new leader will save us. A new coalition will rescue us. A new slogan
will transform us.
We pin our hopes on personalities while
neglecting the institutions that actually determine whether communities
grow and advance.
Selva understood better. He knew that when a community becomes dependent on personalities, it becomes vulnerable.
Selvarajoo Sundram
Communities
become strong because they have strong institutions. They have
businesses. They have networks. They have educational opportunities.
They have organisations capable of opening doors for the next
generation.
That is why he devoted so much of his life to moulding
young leaders, including establishing Gopio. He understood that Indians
across the world shared common aspirations. They wanted dignity. They
wanted opportunity. They wanted a future for their children.
Most importantly, he understood that no community can survive on political promises alone.
And that is why his legacy remains so relevant today. Because there is still “the other Malaysia”.
The
phrase comes from Michael Harrington’s famous book “The Other America”.
In the early 1960s, Harrington exposed a reality that many preferred
not to see.
While politicians celebrated prosperity and progress,
millions of Americans remained trapped in poverty and exclusion. They
were invisible to those in power.
We have our own “other
Malaysia”. A Malaysia that exists beyond official speeches and political
slogans. A Malaysia that does not appear in glossy government
brochures. A Malaysia that is seen during election campaigns and
forgotten immediately afterwards.
It
is not hidden. It is not invisible. It exists in plain sight. The
tragedy is not that we cannot see it. The tragedy is that we have become
accustomed to it.
Lived reality
For many Indian Malaysians, this “other Malaysia” is a lived reality.
It is the child attending an under-resourced Tamil school while politicians boast about national achievements.
It is the graduate who discovers that hard work alone does not always translate into opportunity.
It is the small entrepreneur struggling to obtain financing, contracts and support.
It is the family trapped in cycles of economic insecurity despite generations of sacrifice.
It is the plantation worker’s grandchild who was promised social mobility but still finds too many doors closed.
This is not about victimhood. It is about reality.
Let me share some numbers, and they are damning, and they have been damning for decades.
Indian
Malaysians, who make up approximately 6.5 percent of the national
population, account for roughly 22 percent of the prison population and
22 percent of the inmates on death row.
Gangsterism
among Indians. According to Bukit Aman’s data, 71.75 percent of all
identified active gang members in Malaysia are of Indian descent. This
is what happens when young men grow up with no credible path forward; no
matriculation quota, no business grant, no government contract, no
civil service fast track.
Economist Muhammad Abdul Khalid says Indian Malaysians earned, per capita, some 76 percent more than the Malays in 1970.
However,
by the mid-2000s, the advantage narrowed to 27 percent, and for the
bottom half of the community, it has since collapsed. The Indian story
is therefore not one of uniform poverty, but a catastrophic downward
mobility for those at the bottom.
Only nine percent of Indian
candidates received interview call-backs compared to 44 percent of
Chinese applicants, thus creating an additional barrier to fair wages,
career progression and most importantly, employment.
A 2021
Discrimination in Education Survey revealed that nine in 10 Indian
students felt discriminated against because of their ethnicity. About 73
percent of these students were discriminated against by fellow
students, and 74 percent of Indian students were discriminated against
by their teachers.
And unless we are prepared to confront reality, we cannot change it.
Hope is not weakness
For
decades, Indians have been told to wait. Wait for development. Wait for
reform. Wait for inclusion. Wait for opportunities. Wait for the next
policy. Wait for the next government. Wait for the next election.
We
have waited through different administrations, different coalitions and
different political eras. Yet many of the structural challenges facing
Indians remain stubbornly familiar.
Our educational inequalities
remain. Our economic vulnerabilities remain. Our underrepresentation in
key sectors remains. The question is no longer whether politicians
recognise these problems.
The question is whether they are willing to solve them.
Many
Indians placed tremendous hope in the reform movement that eventually
brought Pakatan Harapan to power. They believed a new political culture
would emerge. They believed long-neglected issues would finally receive
sustained attention.
Those hopes were understandable.
Hope
is not a weakness. Hope is what drives democratic participation. But
hope must eventually be measured against outcomes. And many ordinary
Indians today are asking difficult questions.
Where is the comprehensive economic strategy for Indian entrepreneurs?
Where is the bold plan to build Indian-owned businesses capable of competing nationally, regionally and globally?
Where is the transformation in educational outcomes?
Where are the institutions that can uplift communities regardless of who occupies Putrajaya?
Where is the structural change that was promised?
Many
Indians voted for reform. What they received was often administration.
They voted for transformation. Too often, they got management. They
voted for structural change. Too often, they got announcements.
These
are not questions born of hostility. They are questions born of
disappointment. There is a difference. Criticism is not betrayal.
Accountability is not disloyalty.
Democracy demands that citizens
ask difficult questions of those who seek their votes. And Indians must
ask those questions now more than ever. Because one of the greatest
mistakes any community can make is becoming a guaranteed vote bank.
The moment politicians believe your vote belongs to them automatically, they stop earning it. They begin assuming it.
And
when votes are assumed, accountability disappears. Politicians start
believing that symbolic gestures are enough. A speech here. A photo
opportunity there. A committee. A task force. An announcement. A
promise. Another promise. And another.
Meanwhile, communities continue struggling with the same challenges year after year.
Influence in democracy
There
is another reality we must confront honestly. Today, Indian Malaysians
make up roughly 6.5 percent of the population. Some hear that figure and
see weakness. I see leverage.
In a democracy, influence is not
merely a matter of numbers. It is a matter of organisation,
participation, purpose and vision. A community that votes strategically,
builds institutions and contributes to national life can exercise
influence far beyond its numerical size.
But we must also confront
an uncomfortable reality. We may not always be 6.5 percent. One day, we
may be five percent. Perhaps less. When that day comes, our future will
not depend on how many we are. It will depend on how organised we are.
That
is why the next generation matters so profoundly. Young Indian
Malaysians cannot afford political apathy. They cannot afford to
withdraw from public life or believe that their voices do not matter.
They
must become entrepreneurs, professionals, academics, innovators, civil
servants, community leaders and elected representatives. They must
organise, participate and lead.
The future will not be secured by
nostalgia for what previous generations achieved. It will be secured by
what young Indians build from this moment onward.
Selva built platforms. Our younger generation must build power.
The
question facing us is therefore not whether our community will become
smaller. The question is whether it will become stronger.
Selva
understood this. As a visionary leader, he understood results and
outcomes. He knew that intentions alone do not build companies and
communities. Vision alone does not create jobs. Good speeches do not
generate wealth. Only execution does.
The same applies to
politics. Governments should not be judged by slogans. They should be
judged by outcomes: How many businesses were created? How many young
people were empowered? How many opportunities were opened? How many
barriers were removed? How many institutions were strengthened?
These are the measurements that matter.
Because
the future of Indian Malaysians cannot depend on political patronage.
It cannot depend on waiting for favours. It cannot depend on hoping that
someone else will solve our problems.
It must be built upon
entrepreneurship. It must be built upon education. It must be built upon
economic participation. It must be built upon institutions.
Vote as investment
That
was Selva’s vision. He believed in connecting people. He believed in
creating opportunities. He believed in building networks that could help
future generations succeed. He understood that economic empowerment is
not a luxury. It is the foundation of dignity.
A community that
controls its own economic destiny speaks with confidence. A community
that depends entirely on others speaks with uncertainty.
And so,
as we approach the next general election, I believe Selva would have
asked these questions: Who is building institutions? Who is helping
small businesses grow? Who is investing in entrepreneurs? Who is
creating opportunities for young people?
Who understands that
communities need empowerment rather than dependency? Who is thinking
about the next generation rather than the next election? Who is prepared
to do the difficult work of nation-building instead of merely
campaigning?
Those are the questions that matter. Not personalities. Not slogans. Not tribal loyalties. Not fear.
For
too long, Indian Malaysians have often been encouraged to vote out of
fear. Fear of one coalition. Fear of another coalition. Fear of
instability. Fear of losing what little we have.
But fear has
never built a school. Fear has never built a business. Fear has never
created wealth. Fear has never transformed a community. Only vision can
do that. Only leadership can do that. Only courage can do that.
This
election, our votes matter not because politicians need them. Our votes
matter because our future depends on how we use them.
Every vote
should be treated as an investment. And like every investment, it should
demand returns. Not in the form of handouts. Not in the form of
tokenism. Not in the form of symbolic recognition. But in the form of
genuine opportunities.
Selva did not spend his life building Gopio
so that future generations could become spectators. He built it because
he believed Indians could be participants. Builders. Employers.
Leaders. Institution-makers.
The “other Malaysia” does not have to
remain the “other Malaysia”. But that will require courage. The courage
to ask difficult questions. The courage to reject empty promises.
The
courage to demand accountability. The courage to think beyond the next
election. And the courage to take responsibility for our own future.
Because in the end, communities are remembered for what they created. They are remembered for what they left behind.
Selvarajoo Sundram built. The question before us is simple: Will we?
COMMENT - How is Zaid going to carry water for PAS? By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Malaysiakini : Zaid is free to choose his political affiliations, and for me, the
only thing interesting about this whole affair is how long it will take
to end and exactly how much trouble he will cause to his relationship
with PAS.
Indeed,
Zaid has always played the gadfly to any party he has represented,
taking up positions that adhere to the party’s principles or not in
Umno’s case, but which were at odds with the realpolitik of the
situation in DAP’s case. All this is a matter of public record.
From critic to supporter,but…
The
quote that opens this piece is exactly what gets Zaid into trouble. In
urging young Malays to leave this country for England, no less, he said:
“The people who talk about Islam in Malaysia are low-grade scholars,
and many are mouthpieces of the ruling party.”
“They are
sycophants, not of the same calibre as the Mu’tazillah, the jurists, and
theologians of the Abbasiyah period who debated religious issues, such
as the concept of ‘tawhid’ or unity of God.
“They
discussed the inherent difficulties of reconciling reason and
revelation. They were not preoccupied with beer festivals or dress codes
for women, or separate laundrettes for Muslims, although the revelry
and festivities of the caliphates were well known.”
Furthermore,
when Zaid now says: “On the contrary, PAS is the only Malay-majority
party with the strength and resolve to do away with inequality,
hegemony, and class preferences. The essence of Islam will be the
governing principle.”
“You will not have under the PAS rule where we are described as equal, but some are more equal than others.”
However, the grand poobah of his party, Abdul Hadi Awang, obviously does not agree with him.
PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang
Remember, Hadi thinks non-Muslims are not equal to Muslims. He has said it, and it is a matter of public record.
“Islam has to be the leader and ruler; those who are not of Islam must be followers (pak turut).
“Let’s not place religion and politics in separate corners.”
Hadi also thinks that non-Muslims are the source of corruption and economic and political malfeasances, which affect the majority community.
Of course, this is why Hadi really likes the idea of an all-Malay cabinet, which PAS had to clean up.
“Here, Hadi’s message clearly states that Islam is very open to non-Muslims for wizarah al-tanfidz ministries… unlike other political systems, which only accept those with the same ideology.
“Instead,
he was stressing the importance and need for Malay-Muslims to be the
core of Malaysia's political system and administration,” said PAS leader
Nasrudin Hassan when defending Hadi’s proposal.
He knows what the issues are
In an interview some time back, Zaid clearly articulated the problem with theocratic rule.
“It’s
not Islam that has intruded into the public sphere. It is the
proponents of tyranny and fascist leaders who have used religion to
control the apparatus of the state. Democracy and the rule of law are
endangered when you allow such leaders to continue to rule.”
Think
about this for a moment. Muslim potentates would decide policies, of
which there is enough empirical evidence to suggest that these policies
are detrimental to non-Muslims.
But at the same time, non-Muslims
are told that they are “lucky” enough because this is “unlike other
political systems, which only accept those with the same ideology”.
Zaid,
of course, is intelligent enough to know that this isn’t solely about
how a theocratic state treats non-Muslims with regard to “moderate”
Islam.
“Whether Pakatan Harapan is a moderate voice, we have to
wait and see. The test is not whether they allow non-Muslims sufficient
freedom; that’s easy, but whether they will be ‘moderate’ to Muslims.”
This
is exactly why I consider extremism an existential threat to this
country, because once the majority is co-opted into this religious
enterprise, it is game over.
What separates Hadi from the rest of these Malay uber alles
parties is that the PAS base believes that they have a shot at truly
influencing the direction of this country, and Madani has been extremely
helpful in this.
Folks
who vote for PAS do not view what Hadi says as malicious or bigoted,
but rather ideas which they believe are embedded in the Federal
Constitution.
So what will Zaid do?
The question is, how does someone like Zaid spin such undemocratic ideas?
And really, it is not only in this country where Hadi is viewed with scepticism or downright hostility by rational people.
Remember
that Hadi was the vice-president of an Islamic organisation, the
International Union of Muslim Scholars (IUMS), which has been disavowed
by the House of Saud and was described by a prominent West Asian
journalist as follows.
“IUMS members justified violence and
started an intellectual war with muftis and traditional Islamic
scholars, undermining them in their home countries and ridiculing their
religious edicts.”
Hadi, of course, went into conniptions and dissed the whole of West Asia.
“The
Arab civilisation was respected because of Islam, but is now crumbling
under the weight of their own crimes by recognising the Zionist regime
and neglecting Palestine and its rights.
“They are now driven by
their belief and admiration for the Zionist Jewish powers-that-be, more
than to trust in God, Islam, and their fellow Muslims.”
I have concentrated on Hadi in this piece because he really does not care about how minority communities perceive him.
Meanwhile,
what he says and the very effective propaganda machine of PAS run by
true believer technocrats and useful idiot influencers is shaping the
religious and political narratives of this country.
Now, Zaid is
part of this. His job, if PAS gives him the opportunity, is to convince
rational Malaysians that PAS can lead this country, which is going to be
difficult considering PAS has made it clear that rational people are
the enemy of religious hegemony.
It remains to be seen whether Zaid can effectively carry water for PAS or if he will eventually throw it in their faces.
Debt servicing charges: In the
first six months, these reached approximately RM33.9 billion, reflecting
the burden of accumulated public debt (federal government debt hovering
around 64-65% of GDP, with broader general government debt higher).
iseas.edu.sg
Fuel
subsidies: Over RM20 billion disbursed in the first half. Monthly costs
spiked dramatically earlier in the year (peaking near RM7.5 billion in
April) due to higher Brent crude prices but have since eased to around
RM3.5 billion per month (roughly RM2 billion for RON95 and RM1.5 billion
for diesel) as oil prices moderated.
Policy Constraints and Trade-offs
Cutting
or significantly scaling back fuel subsidies is politically and
socially challenging. The government has committed strongly to
maintaining affordable fuel prices for citizens through targeted
mechanisms like the Budi MADANI RON95 (BUDI95) programme, which provides
subsidized RON95 at RM1.99 per litre (with quotas) to eligible
Malaysians. Blanket or broad subsidies remain sensitive, as any sharp
removal risks inflating living costs for lower- and middle-income
households.
This stance limits immediate fiscal flexibility. While
targeted rationalization (e.g., income-based adjustments or quota
reductions from 300 to 200 litres in some periods) has been explored or
implemented, full liberalization appears off the table in the near term.
The Need for a Supplementary Budget
Given these pressures, issuing a supplementary budget appears necessary. This would allow the government to:
Reallocate or trim non-essential operating expenditures.
Adjust development spending priorities, and
Seek additional revenue measures or financing without derailing core growth initiatives.
Failure
to adjust could widen the full-year deficit beyond the 3.5% target and
strain the medium-term goal of reaching 3% by 2028, as outlined in the
Public Finance and Fiscal Responsibility Act (Act 850). Debt levels are
already approaching or testing self-imposed ceilings (around 65%
statutory limit for certain borrowings), with debt servicing consuming a
growing share of revenue (projected near 17% in some estimates).
Positive Offsets: Growth Narrative vs. Fiscal Reality
The
government and Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) continue to project resilient
economic performance. Malaysia’s economy expanded 5.4% in Q1 2026, with
full-year growth forecasts in the 4-5% range, supported by domestic
demand, private consumption, exports (especially electrical &
electronics), and foreign investments in data centers and strategic
sectors.
Strong GDP growth, export performance, and FDI inflows
provide a buffer and are frequently highlighted in official
communications. However, critics argue this optimistic narrative can
sometimes overshadow underlying fiscal vulnerabilities. High subsidies
and debt servicing risk crowding out productive spending in education,
healthcare, and infrastructure if not managed carefully.
Time for Transparent Discussion
Malaysia’s
fiscal position remains fundamentally stronger than many emerging
markets, thanks to diversified revenue streams, a credible central bank,
and ongoing reforms in tax enforcement, digitalization, and subsidy
targeting. Yet, the early overrun in 2026 underscores the need for
greater transparency and proactive adjustment.
A national
conversation on sustainable public finances, balancing welfare
commitments with long-term debt prudence is not just timely but
essential. Without course corrections, repeated supplementary budgets
and rising debt servicing could erode investor confidence and limit
fiscal space for future crises or growth-enhancing investments.
The
coming months will reveal whether the government can steer the deficit
back toward target through prudent management or if more decisive
structural reforms are required. Malaysia’s economic resilience offers a
window of opportunity—best not to squander it.
Malaysia’s Middleclass Losers The middleclass is under stress By Murray Hunter
Murray Hunter : New Tax Measures are eroding middleclass incomes. The 2025 budget
introduced taxes impacting the middle class, including a 2% tax on
dividends exceeding RM100,000 and an expanded Sales and Service Tax
(SST) covering services like insurance, financial planning, and private
education. These taxes, initially aimed at the wealthy, have hit urban
middle-class families who rely on these services, increasing their
financial burden.
The rising Cost of Living is eroding a family’s
ability to spend. Urban middle-class households face higher living
costs, with incomes barely covering essentials in cities like Kuala
Lumpur or Johor Bahru. For example, an M40 household earning
RM7,000/month may struggle in urban areas due to high housing,
education, and healthcare costs.
Many M40 households face
“lifestyle inflation,” juggling rising costs and family obligations,
such as supporting B40 relatives. A single financial shock, like a
medical bill or job loss, can push these households toward financial
instability, as they often lack a sufficient savings buffer. This is
especially the case after the Covid era, where many families and
proprietors of MSMEs are still facing debt repayments. M40 households
are facing rising costs inhibiting their ability to save for when they
need money to cover unexpected expenses. The relative ease that M40
households can obtain credit cards has played a role in pushing them
into a debt lifestyle. The bottom line is households are not saving,
they are paying off debt instead.
One of the major challenges to
the Malaysian economy today are stagnant wages. Despite Malaysia’s
economic growth (projected at 4–4.8% in 2025), wage growth lags behind
inflation and productivity gains. The benefits of economic growth are
not being passed onto M40 households. The middle class, particularly
young graduates, struggles to find high-skilled jobs, with 42% of late
primary-school children showing poor learning outcomes, limiting future
workforce competitiveness. This compounds financial strain as
aspirations for upward mobility and thus higher wages are unmet.
Malaysia
has not been immune to pressure on the Ringgit. The ringgit’s
volatility, despite a 0.8% appreciation against the US dollar in Q1
2025, increases costs for imported goods, which hit urban middle-class
households harder due to their consumption patterns. Global trade
tensions and higher shipping costs (e.g., due to Red Sea disruptions)
further drive-up prices, squeezing budgets. The rise of the cost of
goods in many categories is greater than the official inflation rate.
Malaysia
has fallen victim to the “Middle Income Trap”, where middleclass
families are unable to transition into the upper-middle class. This is
partly a result of stagnant productivity and the failure of corporations
to more equally share their profits to their respective labour forces.
While
the government has been focusing on programs for the poor, the middle
class feels pinched by policies that disproportionately affect their
disposable income and limited safety nets. The government’s income
classification system is not picking up this problem (or politicians are
ignoring it). Malaysia’s statistical system needs an overhaul to better
reflect regional cost-of-living differences and multidimensional
poverty. The B40-M40-T20 classification system fails to account for
these disparities, leaving urban M40 households feeling squeezed.
As
a result, many families have been forced to curtail spending decisions.
This means deferring holidays, going out less for dinner, wearing old
clothes for longer, not buying consumables, and even cutting down on the
food they buy outside the house. Come the end of 2025 and into 2026,
aggregate household spending will no longer be a major driver of the
economy.
With pensions not rising according to the Consumer Price
Index (CPI), tolls rising, more taxes coming, and living costs rising,
the middleclass is being squeezed. This is happening at the same time
the T20 is getting a ‘free ride’ from the government. Taxes on the T20
have not risen proportionally to the middleclass.
Politically, the
middleclass is a powerful voting cohort for Pakatan Harapan. Pakatan
relies on the middleclass vote in urban areas, where it holds many of
its seats. Failure to address the above problem will logically cost
Pakatan dearly in the seats it holds.
The government still has
three annual budgets to address this mostly unidentified issue.
Overlooking the middleclass will be an electoral disaster. Budget 2026
needs to be a budget for the middleclass to get them back onboard and
maintain a robust economy in 2026.
COMMENT - Is it Anwar's last hurrah? By P Gunasegaram - Anyone BUT Anwar and PIS
Malaysiakini : There’s a lot to absorb in mere weeks following the long seeming calm
after Anwar renewed ties with Umno and Sarawak, making promises to both
as he cobbled together a loose alliance, stable on the surface but with
deep undercurrents beneath post-15th general election in November 2022.
Despite
appearances of calm, there was dissension waiting to bubble up at the
right time. Anwar’s excessive comfort cost him as Umno showed its hands
despite many concessions given, dissolving the Johor state assembly and
promising to contest all seats in the state.
It has been a rocking, roiling month for politics in May as Umno announced
on May 16 it will contest all state seats in Johor, throwing the
fragile Madani coalition headed by Anwar into chaos and for the PM to
give a sharp rebuke to Umno at a Harapan summit the following day.
As
if that was not enough, even as the Harapan summit was in progress and
Anwar with his hands full with Umno’s intransigence, former PKR
ministers and MPs Rafizi Ramli and Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad dropped a
bombshell.
The duo exited
PKR and Parliament, uniting under the dormant Bersama to push a fresh
agenda for Malaysians, vowing to ally with no other party and fighting
for a new agenda which was announced in some detail on their website.
Anwar’s woes continue
Anwar’s woes continued into June when PAS ended its dalliance with Bersatu, terminating political ties
after six years. It was announced by its president Abdul Hadi Awang on
June 9 on the back of continued wrangling between the two parties.
Not so bad for Harapan and PKR, but PAS seems amenable to making political pacts
with other parties, including Umno, which should worry the Madani
coalition a lot about what Umno is up to, even if now that is with
regard to Johor only. Nothing says it can’t happen for parliamentary
elections too.
And then former Bersatu deputy president Hamzah
Zainudin, who has fallen out with the party president Muhyiddin Yassin,
announced he has formed a new party called Parti Wawasan Negara.
It’s
a mystery how it was formed so fast and whether they have the necessary
approvals, but the party will be aligned to the Perikatan Nasional
coalition.
What is significant is that the new party has the
support of PAS, whose president Hadi was present to lend his support. In
fact, Hamzah said the party’s name was approved by PAS’ leadership,
including Hadi, who was at the so-called “Reset” gathering. Hadi even
launched the meeting.
Also
present were PN chairperson Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar, Gerakan president
Dominic Lau, and Kelantan Menteri Besar Nassuruddin Daud. Significantly,
Samsuri is a rising star within PAS and vice president.
It
is often speculated that either he or Hamzah may be prime ministerial
material if PAS should be asked to form the next government.
Hadi
also announced in his officiating speech at the so-called “Reset”
convention on Saturday that PAS and its allies within PN have decided to
retain Hamzah as its parliamentary opposition leader.
Now, this
coalition seems rather strange considering that PAS and Bersatu are the
main parties in it and PAS has announced they are cutting political ties
with Bersatu. But it looks like if the PN coalition remains, it will be
controlled by PAS and Wawasan Negara, sidelining Muhyiddin.
Hamzah’s
Wawasan Negara has the backing of 19 previous Bersatu MPs, leaving six
with Muhyiddin. Together with PAS’ 43, they form the backbone,
accounting for 62 of PN’s 68 seats. The other two parties, Gerakan and
MIPP, don’t have any seats.
PAS in strong position
And then on Saturday night too, former Umno member and minister, lawyer Zaid Ibrahim, joined PAS.
He said in a Facebook post on Sunday: “Last night I was welcomed as a
PAS member by its top national leaders. They're warm, sincere, and
friendly.
Lawyer Zaid Ibrahim (right) has joined PAS
“I
will repay their faith. I will work hard to dispel the image of PAS as
an extreme anti-democratic party, not suitable for a multicultural
Malaysia.
“On the contrary, PAS is the only Malay-majority party
with the strength and resolve to do away with inequality, hegemony and
class preferences. The essence of Islam will be the governing principle.
“You
will not have under the PAS rule where we are described as equal, but
some are more equal than others. That's why PAS will govern Malaysia
together with like-minded progressive MPs after the next GE.”
That’s
a coup of sorts for PAS: a Malay liberal who has previously been a
member of Umno, DAP and PKR - the three other major parties in Malaysia
besides PAS - has unequivocally endorsed PAS. A feather in PAS’ cap even
if one thought of Zaid as an itinerant party hopper.
The
developments perhaps favour PAS most, which seems to have a more
coherent strategy going forward than the other three major parties, PKR,
DAP and Umno/BN. Bersatu had previously rode on PAS’ robes to gain 25
seats but is now left with six.
By
aligning with Wawasan Negara, PAS hopes to have some semblance of
multiracialism and moderation. That is helped by Zaid coming into PAS
and extolling its virtues, including an endorsement as the only party
which might work for all.
Together with the groundwork that it has
been doing to strengthen its position and extend its support base, PAS
is probably the strongest, best organised party going into the polls and
stands the best chance of getting the greatest number of seats for the
second time in a row.
Umno is all gung-ho about Johor, but as with
previous polls, it has no standing in the Malay heartland where PAS and
its allies reign supreme. Even if it retains Johor, it is not likely to
do much better elsewhere.
PAS is too smart to ally with Umno in
areas where it is dominant, although Umno may make overtures in that
direction. Umno’s performance is likely to be middling or even worse at
GE16 for Parliament. It has nothing new to offer.
With Chinese and
non-Malay support, DAP will still likely pull through but probably
could lose seats because of its voicelessness on important issues and
the rising support for the Bersama duo, Rafizi and Nik Nazmi, where they
are likely to take some urban votes from DAP.
Bersama leaders Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad (left) and Rafizi Ramli
The
party most likely to be wiped out in the next election is Bersatu, and
with it the exit of Muhyiddin from politics. Its standing of 25 seats in
the last election is most likely entirely due to aligning with PAS.
They could lose all their seats.
Uncertain future
Anwar’s
PKR faces a rather uncertain future from Bersama, which is mounting a
credible, coordinated and early challenge to almost all of PKR’s seats,
with 10 MPs already in the bag by some counts.
Peculiarly, any
support that Anwar may have through Harapan post GE16 may continue to
come from DAP, the largest party in the coalition with 40 seats compared
to PKR’s 31 and Umno/BN’s 30.
It’s hard to see how Anwar can win
enough to ensure the largest number of seats for Harapan to ensure he
gets a chance to form the government again. That is likely to pass on to
PAS.
It’s unlikely that even if there was some kind of electoral
pact with PAS, the Islamic party will give up an opportunity to get its
own prime minister. Anwar must be able to see this and therefore will
likely go for a full term and announce his resignation before the polls.
As
for dark horse Bersama, it is likely to make a significant impact by
taking seats in urban areas previously the domain of PKR and even DAP.
They may do very much better than expected, but even if they don’t, they
will likely set a base for the future by retaining their deposits.
As
the only party which has nothing to lose and everything to gain, the
possibility for significant upside surprise for Bersama cannot be
dismissed. They are, so far, acting true to their intentions, asking for
a review of Selangor’s controversial guidelines for places of worship of non-Muslims, for instance.
One
thing for sure, this is not an election that Malaysians are going to
sit out. Expect participation to increase even if early polls are not
called.
Official
figures reveal the mismatch. Between 2010 and 2024, Malaysia’s real GDP
grew substantially (around 82% cumulatively in some measures), yet
median monthly wages rose only modestly, from roughly RM1,300 to RM1,864
in real terms, with average wages showing similar subdued gains.
Productivity improvements have not translated into higher worker
compensation. Much of the growth stems from capital-intensive sectors,
resource extraction, or efficiencies captured by top firms that fail to
scale benefits broadly across the community.
Public sector wage
hikes, often politically timed, create a demonstration effect that
private employers resist. Meanwhile, the informal sector, estimated to
comprise a massive portion of economic activity, operates outside
minimum wage protections, with low capitalization, minimal innovation,
and seasonal or precarious employment. Graduates and young workers
frequently drift into this sphere, underemployed and disillusioned.
Comparisons
with Thailand underscore the issue. Similar basic wages exist although
there are differences in labor market flexibility, foreign worker
policies, and export orientation. Malaysia’s reliance on low-cost
foreign labor in plantations, construction, manufacturing, and services
keeps domestic wages anchored at the bottom. Employers prefer migrants
for “3D” (dirty, dangerous, difficult) jobs that locals shun at
prevailing pay rates, creating a segmented labor market that discourages
wage competition and productivity-enhancing investments in local
workers.
Patronage, GLCs, and the NEP Legacy
Malaysia’s
economy is not a level playing field. GLCs dominate key sectors,
controlling significant market share and prioritizing dividends to fund
government budgets over broad-based development. These entities, often
shielded by regulations, monopolies, or preferential access, exemplify
rent-seeking rather than competitive dynamism. Private firms, especially
SMEs and informal operators, face barriers including licensing
restrictions, equity requirements rooted in the New Economic Policy
(NEP) framework, and patronage networks that favor the connected.
The
NEP originally designed to address ethnic economic imbalances, evolved
into a tool of social engineering and discrimination that has outlived
its utility in many respects. It fostered a privileged elite often
intertwined with political families, bureaucracy, and royalty, while
stifling genuine entrepreneurship and innovation across communities.
Race-based policies deter foreign investors seeking scale, discourage
local firms from upgrading (due to equity dilution fears), and channel
resources toward low-value, low-productivity activities.
This
creates a three-tier labor market. At the bottom, foreign workers in
precarious conditions with limited rights. In the middle, Malaysian
workers in semi-skilled or service roles with limited career ladders. At
the top, public sector, GLC management, and connected professionals who
benefit from announcements and networks. The informal sector sits
outside, invisible to official statistics but central to survival for
many.
Productivity remains low because value addition remains
weak. Firms stick to copying, low-tech methods, and short-term coping
rather than innovation. Education emphasizes rote learning and religious
studies over STEM and critical thinking, producing graduates mismatched
for high-value roles. The brain drain is stripping the country of
talent seeking better opportunities abroad. Logistics, cabotage
policies, and infrastructure gaps further hinder rural and regional
enterprises, particularly in Sabah and Sarawak.
The Middle-Class Trap and Inequality
The
middle class, which expanded during the boom years of the 1990s and
early 2000s, is now squeezed. Rising costs of housing, education,
healthcare, and daily essentials outpace wage growth. Many families are
“too rich for assistance, too poor to thrive” where people are unable to
access targeted subsidies yet struggling with debt and eroded
purchasing power. This stagnation risks turning aspiration into
resentment.
Income inequality metrics have worsened in periods,
with the Gini coefficient reflecting concentration at the top. The B20
(bottom 20%) capture a tiny share of national income, while the T10 take
a disproportionate slice. Corporate and civil service elites, often
overlapping through patronage, capture gains from GDP growth, leaving
workers behind. This is not shared prosperity but a zero-sum dynamic
masked by aggregate figures.
Foreign workers, while filling gaps,
have externalities such as remittance outflows, social tensions, and
depressed wages that discourage locals from certain sectors. Without
comprehensive reform, better enforcement, levies that truly incentivize
local hiring, and pathways to skills upgrading, the dependency persists,
locking the economy into a low-wage, low-productivity equilibrium.
Technology, Unions, and Future Risks
Industry
4.0 and AI promise transformation but currently threaten displacement
more than upliftment. Automation in manufacturing, services, and even
white-collar tasks (banking, retail) hits the middle tiers hardest
without corresponding creation of high-skill jobs accessible to average
Malaysians. The education and training systems lag in preparing the
workforce.
Trade unions face societal and institutional headwinds.
Historical preferences for harmony over confrontation, combined with
restrictive laws and ethnic fragmentation, weaken collective bargaining.
Without stronger worker voice, employers hold the upper hand in wage
negotiations. The political economy compounds the problem. Elite
families and networks dominate decision-making, prioritizing control and
distribution among insiders over systemic reform. Narratives of
supremacy or protectionism obscure the need for merit, competition, and
inclusivity. Corruption and favoritism raise business costs and deter
efficiency.
Pathways Out of the Trap
Solving wage stagnation requires more than minimum wage tweaks or one-off bonuses. Fundamental shifts are needed:
Labor
Market Reform: Reduce over-reliance on foreign workers through stricter
levies, skills thresholds, and enforcement. Pair this with incentives
for training and productivity-linked pay.
Boosting Value
and Innovation: Ease regulatory burdens on SMEs, reform equity rules to
encourage investment and scaling, and refocus education on practical
skills, creativity, and STEM. Support genuine R&D and
commercialization rather than patronage-driven projects.
GLC
and Governance Overhaul: Shift GLCs toward efficiency, innovation, and
multiplier effects rather than rent extraction. Reduce barriers to
private competition.
Inclusive Growth Policies: Address
the informal sector with access to finance, markets, and formalization
support that does not choke small operators. Targeted cost-of-living
measures and progressive taxation could help without distorting
incentives.
Social Compact Renewal: Encourage
constructive unionism and tripartite dialogue. Tackle brain drain by
improving opportunities and reducing discrimination.
Without
these reforms, Malaysia risks prolonged middle-income entrapment. GDP
may rise, but if wages lag, social cohesion frays. The “middle-class
trap” becomes self-reinforcing: squeezed households consume less, invest
less in human capital, and demand more from a fiscally strained state.
Malaysia possesses resources, strategic location, and a young population
(though aging).
The question is whether policymakers can move
beyond patronage, ethnic lenses, and short-termism toward a genuine
Malaysian economy where productivity gains are shared. The alternative
is growing polarization, talent loss, and unfulfilled potential—a nation
richer in aggregates but poorer in lived experience for most. The
window for reform narrows with each passing year of stagnation.
COMMENT- Green Wave politics and limits of non-Malay influence in M'sia By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Malaysiakini : Furthermore, it was Anwar, through his religious czar, who was pursuing the Federal Territories Mufti bill, which would have radically transformed the powers of the religious far right in this country.
Islamic Development Department
This is something that PAS dreamt of. This is something the deep Islamic state has been preparing for.
The bill was best defined
by SIS Forum - “The Mufti bill, which grants unelected officials the
power to legislate without transparency or due process, exemplifies the
dangerous erosion of democratic principles and constitutional rights.
“Such
laws risk undermining the fundamental freedoms of Malaysians, fostering
a culture of control rather than empowerment, and silencing diverse
perspectives crucial for a progressive society.”
This country has
been run by Perikatan Nasional before, and it was a time when Malaysia
went through so many prime ministers; it was difficult keeping track of
who was in charge of the circus.
Also, as we can see, the only thing these Malay uber alles
types love more than making alliances to defend race and religion is
breaking up that alliance for perceived slights and infractions, which
merely means that various potentates were not getting their due.
Non-Malays
voting for Harapan, which Leong acknowledges is not the coalition that
got the most Malay votes, means that everything Madani does in terms of
policy and optics is to appeal to the Malay community, which is what PAS
does already.
Selayang MP William Leong
Keep
in mind that for decades, the non-Malays voted for BN and demonised the
opposition using pragmatism as a rallying cry instead of institutional
reform. And to be fair, for decades, the non-Malays prospered while
their Malay/Muslim brethren were short-changed by the Malay uber alles party they voted for.
Umno collapse drives PN surge
Three years ago, former DAP MP Ong Kian Ming agreed with Umno man Khairy Jamaluddin that the Green Wave narrative was a “lazy shorthand”.
Ong
wrote: “It diverts attention from the main reason for the increase in
votes for PN: a disastrous collapse in support for Umno in all states in
Peninsular Malaysia, except for Negeri Sembilan and Johor.
“It
was this unhappiness with Umno and specifically, the leadership of
Zahid, that enabled PN to benefit from the groundswell of
dissatisfaction.”
What most politically correct observers do not
want to publicly acknowledge is that if the dominant polity that voted
for PN really wanted an alternative, they would have chosen PKR and
Harapan.
After all, Harapan-controlled states were run more
efficiently than BN states and were drawing local economic migrants from
less developed states.
Now, of course, in Johor, Umno is in
ascendancy, and with this comes all sorts of political opportunities
which make anything the non-Malays do mean bupkis.
Umno members
There
really is nothing stopping Umno, PAS, and Bersatu from joining forces
or any kind of political alliances which shut out non-Malay power
brokers. They have done this before and imploded spectacularly.
While
Zahid may say that there will never be another pact with its sworn
enemy, PAS, can any rational Malaysian take his word for it?
Folks
got their knickers in a twist when PN candidate Goh Gaik Meng said the
non-Malays cannot stop the Malay tsunami - “I actually want to tell the
people of Selangor... the Chinese cannot stop this Malay tsunami. A
so-called tsunami within the Malay community has been set off.
“As
a minority ethnic group with only 20-30 percent (of the population) in
this country, we cannot stop this so-called Malay tsunami.”
PAS strategy and Malay political unity
However,
the reality is that the mainstream Malay political establishment, from
the royal institution to a significant segment of the vox populi, wants
some sort of Malay unity.
Do not for one second think that I am
downplaying the threat of the Green Wave. PAS has very clear ideas about
how to use democracy and legislation to suppress the non-Malay vote.
PAS
will lead the effort to disenfranchise the non-Malay vote even more and
perhaps make the non-Malay vote meaningless. This is the plan, and PAS
has been very open about it.
In 2021, then-PAS central committee member Khairuddin Aman Razali said, “There are long-term (needs) that require us to win the next general election with a two-thirds majority.
“(Upon achieving this), the electoral boundaries need to be changed to benefit Muslims.
“We also need to increase the number of parliamentary seats in Malay-majority areas.”
Former minister Khairuddin Aman Razali
Keep
in mind, two years ago, folks were going on about “coalition politics”
as if it were the new normal. The reality is that there really wasn’t
any real coalition give and take, but rather Madani rearing snakes in
their tent while carrying out policy-making initiatives which put a
smile on the visage of the Green Wave.
Have you noticed that,
especially among PN supporters, there really is no central figure
standing in opposition to Anwar? The theocratic state-in-waiting
understands they have no need for prime ministers in the sense of
someone leading the country. All they need is a figurehead.
The
fact is that what Madani is doing is making it easier for PAS when it
eventually takes over. We are not dealing with differing political
ideologies here. What Muslim disunity has achieved is the suppression
and dismantling of progressive ideas and personalities in the majority
community.
The Green Wave is the existential threat facing
rational Malaysians, but it is not simply about not voting for PAS, as
the facts demonstrate. Non-Malays haven’t been able to stop the Green
Wave, and PAS is merely a fait accompli.
What non-Malays need to do is to vote for Malaysians who are not too concerned about spooking the Malays.
The first
problem is that this is not a non-Malay issue. Malays are frustrated
too, as are Chinese, Indians, Sabahans, and Sarawakians.
The cost of living
does not ask your race before emptying your wallet. Corruption does not
ask your race before damaging public trust. Poor governance does not
ask your race before affecting your daily life.
So why are we still talking about frustration through racial lenses? Leong should know better.
For
decades, politicians told us that we are one nation. Yet whenever
problems arise, we are immediately divided into Malay concerns, Chinese
concerns, Indian concerns, and non-Malay concerns.
Perhaps one reason Malaysia struggles to move beyond race is that our politics keeps dragging us back into it.
Then
there is the economy. Leong points to gross domestic product (GDP)
growth, foreign investment, a stronger ringgit and record tourist
arrivals. Good to know these, but ordinary Malaysians do not live inside GDP statistics.
They
live in the space between payday and the next bill. They see the
economy every time they buy groceries, pay rent, settle their utility
bills, or wonder whether their income will stretch to the end of the
month.
A mother buying groceries cannot pay with GDP
growth. A retiree cannot settle his electricity bill with foreign
investment figures.
Alwaysgetting there but not quite there
His
article also asks for patience, that reforms take time, coalitions are
complicated, bureaucracies are slow, and institutions resist change.
All
true, but Malaysians did not elect a government to explain obstacles
with endless spin. They elected a government to overcome them.
Coalition
politics may explain the delay. They do not excuse it. Institutional
constraints may explain the difficulty. They do not replace delivery.
At
some point, a reason stops being a reason. It becomes an excuse, and
that is why many voters are asking a simple question: Where are the
reforms?
We don’t need the endless speeches,
announcements, and promises of reform because reform cannot permanently
exist in the future tense. It cannot always be “coming soon”.
Madani’s reforms are like a bus that is always about to reach the next stop, but never does.
Pussyfooting around racial issues
The
same applies to religious and cultural issues. Citizens are told these
matters are sensitive. We know they are, but sensitivity cannot become a
substitute for fairness.
When temples are relocated, when non-Muslim places of worship face restrictions and when questions arise over whether a church or temple should be lower than a mosque, citizens have every right to ask why.
Why
should the height of another person’s building threaten the strength of
one’s faith? A confident faith does not require a tape measure.
Right to ask questions
And while we are on the subject of questions, citizens also have every right to question government decisions, especially about public spending, procurement, governance, or competence.
That is not extremism. That is simply citizenship.
Democracy is not strengthened when people stop asking questions. It is strengthened by answers and facts, not debates, police reports, and enforcement language.
Take the littoral combat ships project. Billions of ringgits were spent, years passed, deadlines missed, explanations offered, and then even more explanations followed.
The public kept asking the same question: Where are the ships? Unsurprisingly, the answers have always been more “explanations”.
A US Navy LCS
Then
there is Boustead Naval Shipyard Sdn Bhd. Taxpayers’ money is not a
bottomless pit of bailout money. Citizens are entitled to ask why money
intended for national defence appears entangled with corporate rescue
exercises and debt problems.
We are justified in asking at what point does public money stop serving the public and start serving institutional failure?
Then
there is corruption. Ordinary Malaysians are repeatedly told nobody is
above the law, but high-profile cases often seem to end with acquittals,
discharge not amounting to acquittals (DNAA), reduced sentences, reduced fines, compounds, or pardons.
Each case may have its own legal explanation, but public trust is built on consistency, which many people feel is missing.
The same applies to concerns about powerful networks operating behind the scenes. Take your pick: Corporate interests, political patronage, procurement ecosystems, cartels, and cases that fade away.
Whether these concerns are justified or not, they exist, and ignoring them will not make them disappear.
Many Malaysians share legitimate concerns about extremism, but fear cannot become a government’s permanent campaign strategy.
A government cannot endlessly ask voters to support it because the alternative may be worse.
So we will ask this question. “What have you done with the opportunity we already gave you?”
We
deserve an answer, and we do not need another warning from politicians,
because the biggest mistake they make is assuming public frustration
comes from misunderstanding.
More often, it comes
from understanding perfectly well. We understand what was promised, what
was delivered, and the gap in between.
Explanations
are not achievements, and when the same explanations are repeated year
after year, they stop sounding like explanations. They are excuses.
Leong
said that we are voting for ourselves and our children, and that not
voting means surrendering our power to those who may not have our best
interests at heart.
That is the theory, because our
experience is simple: votes are repeatedly used to return to power
people who later prove they do not have our best interests at heart.
COMMENT | Non-Malays must give up the idea of governing By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, June 08, 2026
Malaysiakini : For the non-Malays in this country, this merely means baseline democratic norms.
Nobody
is questioning the position of the religion of the state, the role of
the monarchy and of course the entitlements of the majority.
What
we want is not to be persecuted using the religion of the state, the
weaponisation of the royal establishment and being marginalised by the
entitlement programmes of the majority.
We
expect the leadership of our chosen political parties to look after the
interests of the people, specifically the non-Malay communities.
Mind
you, what the non-Malays value in terms of economic posterity and
political stability are policies which would benefit all Malaysians,
hence mainstream non-Malay politics are utilitarian in nature.
Malay
rights have been weaponised to the point that the Madani regime would
rather not carry out any utilitarian policies that would benefit
everyone, especially the Malays, because they are the majority, for fear
of the opposition claiming that Malay/Muslim rights are being sidelined
because of the DAP.
The lesson of the failure and failings of Madani is that the non-Malay community must give up this idea of governing.
Damned if you do, damned if you don’t
Even
with the best of intentions, non-Malay political operatives are
hampered by the mainstream political dogma of all parties, which is
grounded in ethnic and religious superiority.
Non-Malay
political operatives say one thing to the base and do the exact
opposite when they sit down and formulate policy, either on a state or
federal level.
Campaign promises are discarded, or their failure to implement them is blamed on the deep state.
Non-Malay
politicians act as if they have no power, or when they attempt to use
it, they are vilified by being labelled anti-Malay, at which point they
fold and conform to official state and federal religious and ethnic
narratives of superiority.
In Pakatan Harapan’s brief tenure in
the federal government, former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad
publicly castrated Lim Guan Eng when he said that Lim had to run
everything through him before he made any important decisions.
There was a concerted effort to give the Malays more at the expense of the Chinese community, but nothing could be said at the time because this would upset the DAP’s non-Malay base.
What
the author describes in his piece is what the Malay establishment wants
from its non-Malay partners. What they want is subservience.
Aminuddin
is gleeful of the fact that the MCA only survived because Umno breathed
life into it, and bemoans the fact that even though the MCA relies on
Malay-dominated polities, they continue insulting the Malay uber alles
government with the interests of the community they represent.
He even makes the point that the MCA, in order to get back Chinese support, mimics the DAP.
“Pada
PRU 14, MCA sebenarnya sudah mati tetapi diberi nafas kembali oleh
Umno. Ini kerana lebih 90 peratus daripada masyarakat Cina sudah
menyokong DAP melalui PH dan menolak MCA. MCA yang memang sudah sekian
lama terdesak mahu memenangi kembali hati pengundi Cina, mereka sanggup
berbuat apa sahaja termasuklah ‘berperangai’ seperti DAP.”
(In
GE14, MCA already met its end but was given a new breath of life by
Umno. This is because more than 90 percent of the Chinese community is
already supporting DAP through Harapan and has rejected MCA. MCA has
indeed long been desperate to win back Chinese voters’ hearts; they are
willing to do whatever it takes, including ‘acting’ like DAP.)
Ideals clash with reality
The
non-Malay political narrative post-May 13 has been one of
backpedalling, reversals, sycophancy, and Orwellian doublespeak because
the weight of expectations collided with the realpolitik of Malay rule.
Deputy Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Liew Chin Tong’s description of how the DAP gave everything
to then-home minister Muhyiddin Yassin, but it wasn’t enough, points to
how non-Malay political operatives were desperate for some sort of
consensus or compromise, but this still made them targets of opportunity
for the Malay establishment.
Muhyiddin Yassin
The
DAP, which should have been an outspoken political bloc in the regime,
is neutered by Umno and sidelined by the chief executive because Prime
Minister Anwar Ibrahim understands that the very appearance of relying
on them or defiance from them would be bad optics for the voting base he
wants to cultivate.
We see all these non-Malay political
operatives in government at the state and federal levels, but what
changes have they made to the way this country is governed?
Partisans
have this really dumb line about how non-Malay politicians are “hard
working”, and you have to ask yourself what exactly they are working
hard for, or better yet, who are they working hard for?
Some
non-Malay partisans are contributing to the racist narrative that
non-Malay politicians ab initio are hardworking compared to their lazy
Malay counterparts. The reality, of course, is all these politicians are
doing is nurturing a conducive ecosystem of political and corporate
malfeasance.
These days, the DAP seems to be the connective
tissue between the mainstream Malay establishment and the plutocratic
class rather than the connective tissue between democratic ideas and
their non-Malay base.
What other choice do we have?
The
reality, of course, is that all these politicians are doing is
nurturing a conducive ecosystem of political and corporate malfeasance.
During
election season, all these non-Malay political operatives start banging
the drum when it comes to issues facing the non-Malay communities, and
of course, the threat of the Green Wave is shouted from the rooftops of
Putrajaya and urban and semi-urban centres.
Anwar is very well
aware that although non-Malays rant and rave on social media, the
reality is that when it comes to the ballot box, they will vote for his
proxies because they believe that, as flawed as he is, there is no
alternative.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim
Rational
Malaysians have to understand that it is pointless to be in any kind of
supremacist government because the price of admission is subservience.
Better to be on the outside on your feet than inside on your knees.
The
problem is, being on your knees inside gets you paid. As it is,
non-Malay governing seems more like gaslighting for entrenched
supremacist interests.
I truly believe when non-Malays realise
that it is better to have a strong opposition voicing baseline
democratic ideas and not be involved in the current swamp of
policymaking and becoming contributors to the swamp, there will truly be
a movement of reform for rational Malaysians, regardless of race,
religion or class.