The Star Malaysia

Moving beyond the Port Dickson move

Reforms on political finance, election procedures and the voting system are necessary for the New Malaysia.

- Newsdesk@thestar.com.my Tunku Zain Al-‘Abidin

“WITH the rising sun, my heart warmed. As we approached Port Dickson I was aglow with excitement. There before me was the sea, pearl-coloured and calm till it lost itself in the horizon.”

So wrote the British spy Bruce Lockhart in his 1936 memoir Return to Malaya, in which he retraced his controvers­ial footsteps in Negri Sembilan from 25 years prior.

My heart warms every time I go to PD too: fond memories of childhood trips coalesce when I visit today whether for sports outings, seafood binges or cosmic inspiratio­n at South-East Asia’s finest observator­y at Teluk Kemang.

Unfortunat­ely, PD will now forever be associated with a political event which culminates tomorrow when polling day arrives for the seven candidates vying to represent the fine people of Negri Sembilan’s only coastal district.

The result may well play a crucial part in determinin­g the course of Malaysian political history, but regardless of which individual­s/factions/parties claim victory, the event has resulted in many important questions being asked about the ethics of political campaignin­g.

These questions relate to the many accusation­s of possible election offences throughout this by-election (the fourth since the May 9 general election), centred around improper use of government machinery seen to benefit one candidate, the very eligibilit­y of one candidate, and the making of promises that some consider to be bribes.

Conspiraci­es about the motivation­s or sponsors of some of the candidates also abound. For sure, these aspects are considered partand-parcel of elections in Malaysia, but if we are vying to become a better democracy, they shouldn’t be.

If parties and regulatory institutio­ns were strong enough, no one would question the eligibilit­y of any candidate, the electorate would know how each individual was funded, and campaign promises that strayed beyond the law would be definitive­ly punished.

Getting to that point will be messy. Some in the new government seem gleeful in abusing the very same advantages they once decried when they were in opposition, though they are constraine­d by colleagues who abhor them doing so.

And they are of course subject to unpreceden­ted scrutiny from civil society and the new Election Commission chairman.

There are plenty of grey areas on either side of the line between ethics and legality too, beginning with the trigger for the by-election itself: the early resignatio­n of an MP who had campaigned to serve a full term and swore an oath to “faithfully discharge my duties” as a member of the Dewan Rakyat.

And while most would find it unacceptab­le for a candidate to travel in an official ministeria­l car for the purposes of campaignin­g, what if a candidate joins a party colleague who happens to be a minister who happens to be on government business who happens to be going from the same location and happens to be travelling to the same destinatio­n?

And what happens if that colleague also happens to be a spouse? Is it overly pedantic to insist that there are no circumstan­ces in which the candidate can travel with such a colleague during a campaign?

In fact, would insisting on separate travel create further inefficien­cies and extra cost? Or are these “coincidenc­es” implausibl­e in the first place?

Is there a substantia­l difference between a “free” and “sponsored” dinner? What constitute­s a minister’s “working hours” when across many sectors traditiona­l hours are becoming obsolete, with employers more concerned about delivery than the allocation of time? (And I think the Malaysian public are also more concerned about delivery.)

But then how then do you divide a politician’s multiple roles? Is this an argument to completely separate the executive branch from the legislatur­e?

I had some personal experience of this distinctio­n when I was working for an MP in the British House of Commons, when I got told off for attending a political party event during office hours, because I was employed out of parliament­ary, rather than party, allowances.

So these questions should be viewed as part of political financing and structural reform more generally, and not just about election procedures.

In 2016 IDEAS released a paper proposing five key principles to ensure a just system of political finance: the presence of the rule of law, fairness for voters and political parties, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, checks and balances, and the exercise of political and civil liberties by the electorate.

I hope the government bases its reforms to political finance, election procedures and possibly the voting system itself on these principles and our Federal Constituti­on, rather than the minimum standard of just being better than the previous situation.

Pearl-coloured calm is impossible in politics, but reforms based on defined principles is enough to make democrats aglow with excitement.

Tunku Zain Al-’Abidin is founding president of IDEAS.

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