Vibes : One cannot help but wonder at the alliance, but it looks like it is motivated by self-interest rather than altruism.
IN Malaysian politics now, common wisdom seems to
suggest that no established coalition, including Pakatan Harapan (PH)
and Barisan Nasional (BN), will, on its own, garner enough seats in the
next election to rule.
Arising from this “wisdom”, whether it is
correct or not, there is a scramble from ambitious people to form
alliances of sorts, to ensure they have a chance at some sort of
representation, be it by becoming a minority prime minister to a major
lynchpin à la Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad or by dominating youth support.
So, that is what the axis between former Umno
veteran Datuk Seri Mohd Shafie Apdal and the young, ambitious Syed
Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman of Muda currently revolves around – it is about
a mutually beneficial alliance to strengthen each other’s positions,
not about idealism, but about furthering their own interests.
It encourages people like Shafie, who wants
to become prime minister in a hurry, and it encourages young people like
Syed Saddiq – in a hurry to rise, but too young to rise too fast. One
follows the Dr Mahathir model of wanting to become prime minister with a
small number of seats via political posturing, while the other wants to
become a force to be reckoned with by pandering to the youth.
Recently, both Shafie and Syed Saddiq, in addition to pushing the alliance between them, have been talking about moving away from race-based parties to multiracial parties. Why? Because it suits their current narratives and political ambitions.
Multiracial parties are already there – and
they are to be found within the PH coalition, with the main component
PKR, a Malay-dominant multiracial party with a good mix of non-Malay
MPs. PKR’s roots go back to the reformasi movement of 1998 – when Syed
Saddiq was five, some 23 years ago.
The second most dominant party within PH is multiracial but
Chinese-dominant, DAP, and is even older. Having been formed in 1965, it
is 51 years old. I last counted seven Indian MPs from DAP and there are
Malay ones, too. It is a bit late in the day for Shafie and Syed Saddiq
to be talking about multiracial parties.
Their history shows that both of them have
not been multiracially inclined, being part of racially exclusive
parties. Take Shafie – he comes from Sabah where acceptance, no,
celebration of different races and religions is legendary.
But he was part of that racial party called
Umno, which has had a toxic and negative impact on Sabah politics. It
was only when he was unceremoniously booted out of Umno that he realised
the value of multiracialism.
Syed Saddiq entered politics by riding the
coat-tails of one of Malaysia’s most racist politicians, Dr Mahathir, by
joining Bersatu – its full name, Parti Pribumi Bersatu
Malaysia – which, in itself is racial in nature, and membership is
expressly limited to Malays, like Umno, raising anew the spectre of
racialism even after 61 years of independence in 2018.
Dr Mahathir not only gave Syed Saddiq a seat
to contest but made him youth and sports minister in the cabinet after
PH won, upsetting PKR, many of whose leaders deserved that seat more
than him by the sheer weight of experience compared with Syed Saddiq.
When Dr Mahathir was ousted from Bersatu and
formed Pejuang, Syed Saddiq followed suit. When it was clear that Dr
Mahathir’s fortunes had irrevocably waned, he left to form Muda, a party
for the young. Apparently, he also, somewhat ominously, received Dr
Mahathir’s blessings for the move and is still in touch with the
Langkawi MP.
But it was not clear why he could not have formed a youth division
within Pejuang, for instance, as he did in Bersatu. Do we really need a
separate party for youth? What about the old then, women perhaps,
disabled etc, and, yes, races, too? That would be going back to square
one.
The answer is that Syed Saddiq spotted a
chance to get into a separate market, which was, at the same time, quite
large and would give him an opportunity to get some clout if some
larger coalition was silly enough to give his young, unregistered party
some 10 or 20 seats to contest.
Under current circumstances that could mean
power or not between battling coalitions – and with party-hopping still a
legal game, there is much to negotiate in terms of representation,
power and, yes, money.
Talking about corruption and governance – neither Shafie nor Syed Saddiq has been vocal about these beyond saying that the emergency might lead to another 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB).
Their own personal records have not been great – Shafie had a case of RM1.5 billion against him dropped in August 2018 after he joined the PH Plus arrangement.
In Syed Saddiq’s case, he reported to police
that RM250,000 was stolen from his safe in March last year, raising
puzzling questions as to why so much money was kept in his house. He said that it belonged to his parents.
It looks like Shafie and Syed Saddiq’s
newfound penchant for multiracialism is opportunistic rather than a
quick reversal in previous ideologies. If they are so interested in
multiracial parties and one that is dominated by Malays, PKR is the
obvious choice and has a 23-year record. And the PH coalition has a
religious, non-racial party to boot, too – Amanah.
For Shafie and Warisan, PH needs to set the
ground rules – the coalition will work with Warisan in Sabah, but not if
Shafie spreads his wings to the peninsula. And there is no argument
about the prime minister – the PH presidential council has decided on
Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim if it wins. No more minority prime minister.
If Syed Saddiq likes youth and multiracialism, let him join PH and go up the ranks – no deals.
Otherwise, let his Muda contest, but not as
part of PH, but on its own if he manages to get Muda registered or as
independents. Talk to him if he gets a significant number of seats or
not at all.
PH is unlikely to make the same mistake it
made with Dr Mahathir, letting his minority party and him become
kingmaker. Dr Mahathir spoiled the opportunity that PH had for reform.
Now, it is time to go at it alone. Do not risk taking in traitors. Stick to old friends.
Oh, and do not do deals with Umno – it is
a racist party past its time, and most of its MPs are tainted with 1MDB
money anyway. Go head-to-head against Umno and BN. After all, it is
clear that Umno wants to contest on its own with its partners, MCA and
MIC.
Fight the good fight, win or lose. – The Vibes, April 22, 2021
I cannot agree with Gunasegaran. You cannot assume the site Syed Siddiqe has RM25000 at home he is guilty, not can you assume the Shafie was charged for RM 6.2 Bil corruption charge that was dropped, you cannot assume they were guilty.
Her we have NJib CONVICTED of a crime, sentence to prison and fined. The high Courd in his appeal confirmed the Guilt and the sentence and Najib is still free.
How can you call Syed Sidfiqe and Shafie corrupt and ignore Najib.
Sorry your comments are biased by your employment.