The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Umno-PAS alliance won't work — Azmin

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KOTA BHARU: PKR deputy president Datuk Seri Mohamed Azmin Ali said yesterday the Umno-PAS cooperatio­n announced yesterday will not work.

He said the people are unlikely to support Umno which he said had done much damage to the country, especially by way of corruption.

“This (Umno-PAS cooperatio­n) is a political strategy but, believe me, the people had decided to reject Umno in the last general election.

“How can a party rejected by the people forge an alliance with PAS? However, the choice is theirs,” he told reporters after a meeting with Kelantan PKR leaders here. Also present was Kelantan PKR chairman Datuk Seri Supardi Md Noor.

On Tuesday, Umno and PAS announced they had formalised their cooperatio­n for the sake of uniting the ummah (community).

In Sintok (Kedah), Bersatu Supreme Leadership Council member Wan Saiful Wan Jan said the Umno-PAS cooperatio­n is seen as a desperate move to face every by-election and he believed that it will not last until the next general election.

He also said that the cooperatio­n raised questions as to whether it is actually forged on the basis of political struggle or because there was a flow of funds from Umno to PAS, in reference to the RM90 million Umno allegedly gave to PAS leaders.

“If the cooperatio­n was for the betterment of the country, why was it not forged during the last general election and only now when they are desperate?” he told reporters after a talk show on the nation's future at Universiti Utara Malaysia, here.

Wan Saiful said he is sure that many PAS supporters will be disappoint­ed with the Umno-PAS cooperatio­n.

Neverthele­ss, he said, Pakatan Harapan cannot take this cooperatio­n lightly and should always strive to strengthen cooperatio­n among its component parties.

Parti Amanah Negara deputy president Datuk Salahuddin Ayub said the alliance will only lead to a fracture in his former party PAS, with many grassroots members unable to reconcile the Islamist party getting in bed with its bitter nemesis of decades.

“I'm waiting for them to break apart. Those who truly hold on to the PAS ideology and understand the party's history and how it was establishe­d will not be able to accept (this alliance).

“It is their nature,” the Agricultur­e and Agro-based Industry Minister told Malay Mail.

Salahuddin said this would be more evident with PAS supporters from the east coast states such as Kelantan and Terengganu, where the enmity between the two party's supporters is fierce.

He said the collaborat­ion, which was formalised Tuesday (March 6), has now given voters a clear picture of where the two MalayMusli­m majority parties stand.

“It's alright. Before this, we faced a bigger challenge,” he said, referring to the 14th general election.

“We had three-cornered fights all over the place. That was harder and we overcame that. The voters now are no longer confused and everything is as clear as the high noon.”

Former Umno MP Mohamed Tawfik Ismail voiced a similar opinion, pointing to the differing ideologies between the two parties, with Umno focusing more on developing economical­ly advanced and educated Malays, and PAS seeking the establishm­ent of an Islamic state.

He observed there is approximat­ely four generation­s worth of bad blood splitting communitie­s and families in the east coast among hardcore party supporters, who had branded each other infidels in the past just for their party allegiance.

At the same time, Salahuddin also sarcastica­lly “congratula­ted” his political rivals over their “marriage” as coined by Umno deputy president Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan.

Mohamad had said that the two parties will not be contesting under the same banner, but will work together in an unconditio­nal political cooperatio­n especially for by-elections in the interest of uniting Muslims and Malays.

“I want to congratula­te them on their marriage because now everything is clear. When Amanah was formed, we were accused of many things and some called us hypocrites. But we left PAS because we knew there were secret meetings between Umno and some PAS leaders.

“We knew this in 2008, when I was the party's vice-president but they denied it. It's alright, the truth is out now,” said Salahuddin.

Meanwhile, his PKR colleague and Subang MP Wong Chen also remained optimistic about PH's outlook when it comes to the upcoming Rantau by-election as well as the 15th general election (GE15), adding the coalition has the advantage of being in power for the next four years.

The PH backbenche­r pointed out that the vast majority of voters are not active members of any political party and are instead economic voters who remain mostly neutral.

“The key to winning any election therefore lies with these economic voters. Ideally, Pakatan must deliver economic results and since we are constraine­d by finances, then we must at least deliver hope in the form of anticorrup­tion and political reforms.

“So we need to move up a gear with the promised good governance reforms this year, and then these will subsequent­ly generate economic growth,” he said.

At the same time, he also warned that the Umno-PAS alliance is a shot across the bows of PH, and that they should prepare for bigger electoral challenges in Rantau and GE15.

“There are two areas that will require closer study: What percentage of PAS supporters will actually vote for a BN candidate, and what will happen to the level of Umno support from MCA and MIC members,” he said.

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