New Straits Times

SHOWING THE WAY TO NON-RACIAL POLITICAL FUTURE

Perhaps GPS should be melded into a single political party, giving fresh impetus to the notion that Sarawak is really different

- JOHN TEO

ALMOST exactly a month after Pakatan Harapan (PH) took over the reins of the Federal Government from Barisan Nasional (BN), the political ramificati­ons still reverberat­e.

Meeting in Kuching on June 12, the four parties of the Sarawak Barisan Nasional — the dominant Parti Pesaka Bumiputra Bersatu (PBB), Parti Rakyat Sarawak (PRS), the Sarawak United People’s Party (SUPP) and the Progressiv­e Democratic Party (PDP) — cobbled together a new state governing coalition called Gabungan Parti Sarawak (GPS).

The move had been anticipate­d and managed to send out a somewhat astute mixture of what some political analysts have taken to calling “state nationalis­m” and political pragmatism.

The “state nationalis­m” idea was born out of a rather keenly felt desire on the part of many in Sarawak to chart a path distinctly its own, the clearest manifestat­ion of which has been the quest in recent years to claim (some even suggest to reclaim) greater autonomy for the state to run its own affairs.

It is an idea which, incidental­ly, the newly created GPS shares with Sarawak PH, reflecting at once what a potent sentiment this has generated and how all parties vying for the votes of Sarawakian­s must now seriously take cognisance of.

The decision of the state ruling coalition is politicall­y pragmatic in the sense that it also fully recognises that the state government will be better off by seeking to “cooperate and collaborat­e” with the new powers-that-be in Putrajaya (as an official media statement issued after the decision to form GPS promised) rather than to oppose and con- front. The GPS move has apparently met with approval from Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad whose immediate reaction to it had been to suggest it will bolster the strength of the PH government.

GPS will, of course, bring to Parliament a bloc of 19 members of parliament. The prime minister is obviously hoping the move will consolidat­e his hold on power even if GPS will not be formally aligned to PH.

The interestin­g thing to watch going forward must be how the formation of GPS plays out politicall­y within Sarawak. While GPS’ political position as the state government remains formidable and unassailab­le, the 14th General Election (GE14) and its aftermath expose vulnerabil­ities which it must watch and which Sarawak PH will seek to fully exploit in the run-up to the next state election that must be held by 2021.

The results of the just-concluded general election showed that the rural vote bank that GPS and BN before it relied on may no longer be as solid as it once was. The gains that Sarawak PH made in GE14 extended beyond urban constituen­cies. Unless the reasons for this are quickly and honestly identified and remedial measures taken to address them, further political shocks may await GPS the next time it goes on the hustings.

Two broad political trends seem obvious enough. One is greater public awareness about the imperative for greater governance transparen­cy in order to curb public excesses, wastage and corruption. The same state coalition (more or less) has ruled the state since 1970 and not unlike the BN nationally, political complacenc­y or worse may have set in.

GPS has little time to lose if it is to compete head-on with Sarawak PH in the coming state election. Sarawak PH will have been energised by being part of the government at national level and possibly further strengthen­ed if it can translate good intentions into positive and concrete actions and results on the ground.

A more difficult but not impossible way for GPS to reinvent itself and keep it one step ahead of Sarawak PH will be to meld GPS into a single political party and give fresh impetus to the notion that Sarawak is really different and even ahead of the rest of the country politicall­y.

Although the way politics is organised in Sarawak has always been not as rigidly communalba­sed as in the peninsula, a not dissimilar racially and ethnically based political hierarchy neverthele­ss still manifests itself at the state level and much state political discourse goes along such lines.

PH may represent progress in that it for the first time attempts to shift the country into a postracial political era even if it still is a hodgepodge of parties dedicated in varying degrees to multiracia­lism in practice.

As a state where no ethnic group forms a numerical majority, it should, in fact, be more feasible and easier for Sarawak to take the lead into a non-racial political future.

GPS has little time to lose if it is to compete head-on with Sarawak PH in the coming state election.

The writer views developmen­ts in the nation, the region and the wider world from his vantage point in Kuching, Sarawak

 ?? PIC BY NADIM BOKHARI ?? The results of the 14th General Election show that GPS can no longer rely on its rural vote bank.
PIC BY NADIM BOKHARI The results of the 14th General Election show that GPS can no longer rely on its rural vote bank.
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