New Straits Times

OPPOSITION TALK OF REFORMS RINGS HOLLOW

The group’s aim is not looking any clearer this time

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ELECTIONS in Malaysia often provoke disproport­ionate interest for a country of just over 30 million. This time, though, the polls due on May 9 have aroused particular focus because they will pit the incumbent Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak against his predecesso­r but one, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, who not only owes his political career to Najib’s father (Malaysia’s second prime minister), but was also the country’s leader for 22 years until 2003. He would also be the world’s oldest prime minister if he won at the age of 92, having jumped ship and become the opposition’s candidate for PM.

Western analysis of Malaysian politics has long been over-simplistic. The decades-ruling Barisan Nasional coalition is considered to be conservati­ve, overly attentive to special interests and, especially during Dr Mahathir’s period in office, marked by a strong authoritar­ian streak.

The opposition, by contrast, are painted as liberal reformers, particular­ly since the 1998 sacking and subsequent jailing of Dr Mahathir’s then deputy, Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, after which Anwar became the opposition’s leader and, to boosters like the noted neo-con Paul Wolfowitz, a human rights icon.

The truth is more complex. BN is a coalition of race-based parties led by Umno. Since all parties on both sides are more or less dependent on a particular ethnic vote, BN has practised a more communal, communitar­ian and less liberal politics than Western critics might like, but it is one that Malaysians have consistent­ly voted for neverthele­ss.

That aside, as BN leader and in office since 2009, Najib has a track record on which he can be judged — and he would like Malaysians to do so. He points to the creation of 2.7 million jobs, growth of nearly six per cent last year, the nearelimin­ation of poverty and a host of other statistics that explain why the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund issue such glowing reports every time they visit the country.

Voters and internatio­nal investors know what they will get if BN is returned — the kind of probusines­s policies that led AirAsia’s Tan Sri Tony Fernandes to dub Najib “the father of low-cost travel”; an emphasis on innovation and female empowermen­t; a strong relationsh­ip with China and an outward-facing foreign policy and a determinat­ion to counter radicalisa­tion and terrorism that India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has described as “an inspiratio­n for the entire region”.

What can be expected if the opposition wins is unclear as they have never won a general election, although their predecesso­r has governed the wealthy states of Selangor and Penang reasonably competentl­y since 2008.

Anwar was leader of the opposition until very recently (even though he has been in prison for sodomy since February 2015) and managed to project a moderate, modern image to internatio­nal observers willing to overlook his past as an Islamist leader and his long-term associatio­ns with the likes of Yusuf Al Qaradawi and Tariq Ramadan (the latter frequently accused, as was Anwar, of presenting one face to Western audiences and another more radical one to non-Western ones).

The trouble, however, was never far below the surface. The alliance contained Anwar’s Malaydomin­ated PKR, the leftist Chinese DAP and the Islamic Pas. They each had their own appeals, but all had very different and contradict­ory visions for Malaysia. As the left-wing columnist and author Martin Jacques put it, this was “a combinatio­n of incongruou­s, incoherent and uneasy bedfellows. The opposition’s credibilit­y is seriously flawed”.

Eventually, DAP broke up the pact in opposition to Pas’ desire to strengthen syariah laws. A new party, Parti Amanah Negara, splintered from Pas and joined PKR and DAP. Then Dr Mahathir, who had been trying to eject Najib as prime minister for several years (long before anyone had heard of 1MDB), crossed to the opposition and founded a new party. Contrary to the muchtouted multiracia­lism of the opposition, however, Dr Mahathir’s new vehicle was for Malays only.

So the new pact contains Malay supremacis­ts, Chinese progressiv­es, moderate Islamists, Indian socialists, as well as a contingent of disaffecte­d exUmno politician­s. The incongruit­y and incoherenc­e remain.

There are idealistic and impressive politician­s in the opposition. But overall, their talk of reforming institutio­ns rings hollow when the opposition is now led by Dr Mahathir, the man whom the opposition accused of underminin­g them in the first place. Economists have widely derided their manifesto, with a subsidiary of Fitch saying “all of its promises” were “populist”, detrimenta­l for the country and “could strain ties with China”.

And above all, there is the fact that many of Dr Mahathir’s new allies were imprisoned under his rule. Both he and his fellow leaders have a very long history of calling each other racists, accusing each other of enriching their cronies and of vehemently opposing each others’ policies.

Less than five years ago, DAP supremo Lim Kit Siang was writing “Mahathir wants me dead”, accusing him of “gutter politics of the most despicable and immoral kind”. Three years later, Dr Mahathir was complainin­g of Anwar’s “immoral behaviour” and said that at 68, Anwar was too old to become prime minister.

Now, the three are apparently the best of friends and will secure Anwar a royal pardon should the opposition win so that he can take over the top job from a 92year-old.

Opinion polling is sparse in Malaysia, and the next election is further complicate­d by the fact that Pas is putting up candidates in more than half the constituen­cies, turning these polls into an unpredicta­ble three-way contest. But if it is true that “opposition­s don’t win elections — government­s lose them”, it is quite possible that Malaysia’s forthcomin­g vote might prove the opposite. Not for nothing did one sympatheti­c commentato­r once label Malaysia’s opposition “the gang that couldn’t shoot straight” — and their aim is not looking any more accurate this time.

Voters and internatio­nal investors know what they will get if BN is returned — the kind of pro-business policies that led AirAsia’s Tan Sri Tony Fernandes to dub Najib

‘the father of low-cost travel’...

The writer is a senior fellow at the Institute of Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies Malaysia

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 ??  ?? Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s new allies, Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim and Lim Kit Siang, have a very long history with him.
Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s new allies, Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim and Lim Kit Siang, have a very long history with him.
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