The Star Malaysia

Malaysia a showcase of democracy in the region

-

CONVENTION­AL wisdom has it that democracy is in retreat. Fortunatel­y, some countries are bucking the trend. In a surprise victory for the opposition in this year’s general election, the people of Malaysia put an end to 60 years of one-party rule via the ballot box. All politics is local but what happened in Malaysia resonates across South-East Asia, where democracy seems to be backslidin­g.

On May 9, Pakatan Harapan, a broad coalition of opposition parties, defeated the Barisan Nasional coalition, ushering in the first transfer of power since independen­ce in 1957.

This radical turn of events holds several lessons for Asia and the rest of the world.

First, it illustrate­s that politics has to keep up with socioecono­mic change. Malaysia’s ruling party had not adapted to the great transforma­tions wrought by decades of economic growth, urbanisati­on and mass education. Its traditiona­l base in conservati­ve, rural Malaysia had shrunk and aged while the growing young and urban middle class massively rejected increasing authoritar­ianism and endemic corruption.

Second, it highlights the importance of a united opposition. Malaysia’s opposition parties had never won before in part because they were fragmented. By coming together across religious and ethnic lines, they undermined the identity politics of the Barisan and created a credible alternativ­e for voters to embrace.

Third, the 14th General Election (GE14) showed that a high turnout can offset a skewed electoral system. After decades of gerryman- dering and malapporti­onment, the playing field was uneven – to the detriment of urban and minority voters – in favour of rural Malays. Yet, with a turnout of over 82%, these structural barriers were largely overcome.

Finally, GE14 was a victory for democracy in a region which has become something of a battlefiel­d of political models. In this election, Malaysians squarely rejected authoritar­ianism, one-party rule and corruption despite rapid economic growth. They demanded accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and reform.

This turn of events in Malaysia may inspire other electorate­s in Asia, many of whose leaders are championin­g various versions of authoritar­ian growth. Malaysia illustrate­s that economic growth is not enough, in the long run, to sat- isfy an educated, middle class population. The new administra­tion has pledged electoral reform to entrench the democratic gains achieved and re-establish political legitimacy.

The Kofi Annan Foundation was invited by the Speaker of Parliament, the Election Commission and Malaysian NGO Bersih 2.0 to co-organise an electoral reform roundtable with the Electoral Reform Committee, political parties as well as civil society at the end of last month.

The Foundation teamed up with its partners in the Kofi Annan Electoral Integrity Initiative, such as the UN’s Electoral Assistance Division, the internatio­nal Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, the Internatio­nal Foundation for Electoral Systems and the National Democratic Institute to field a distinguis­hed group of regional and global experts.

The Kofi Annan Foundation accepted the invitation in the firm belief that internatio­nal assistance to elections should focus on this kind of structural reform early on in the electoral cycle rather than on or around election day, by which time the electoral dice are usually already cast – if not the ballots.

Let’s hope that Malaysia is truly Asia and will start a trend in the region towards greater electoral accountabi­lity.

ALAN DOSS President Kofi Annan Foundation (The Kofi Annan Foundation is one of the co-organisers of the Electoral Reform Roundtable held in Parliament on Nov 30 and Dec 1)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia