Bangkok Post

Mahathir’s comeback revives opposition as polls loom

- JOSEPH SIPALAN PRAVEEN MENON

Prime Minister Najib Razak won Malaysia’s last general election, despite losing the popular vote. Since then, he has been embroiled in a corruption scandal that has been investigat­ed in a half-dozen countries.

Yet the avuncular leader with an aristocrat­ic pedigree was still expecting to cruise to another election victory in polls due by mid-2018, maintainin­g his coalition’s record of unbroken rule since independen­ce in 1957.

Now, all bets are off.

That’s because his former mentor and prime minister for 22 years, Mahathir Mohamad, who turns 92 next week, has agreed to join a fractured opposition alliance and head the government again if it wins. He would be the world’s oldest prime minister if that happened.

Mr Mahathir, along with Mr Najib’s former deputy, Muhyiddin Yassin — fired last year for questionin­g his boss about the scandal — have formed a new party called Bersatu (Unite). It has opened branches in 165 of parliament’s 222 constituen­cies, Mr Muhyiddin said, a feat few opposition parties have managed.

During his 1981-2003 rule, Mr Mahathir championed modernisat­ion by switching Malaysia’s focus from plantation­s and mining to a diversifie­d high-tech manufactur­ing base on the back of foreign investment.

He built the world’s tallest buildings at the time, the Petronas Twin Towers.

A considerab­le fan base is excited about his comeback.

“I was still young when Mahathir was prime minister. And I thought anything was possible ... maybe cars could fly,” said Nazariah Harun, a former government party supporter in the southern state of Johor, bordering Singapore.

Mr Mahathir also dealt ruthlessly with opponents, jailing his former deputy — and now alliance partner — Anwar Ibrahim on corruption and sodomy charges in the late 1990s.

The opposition alliance hopes to capitalise on a couple of scandals that are resonating in rural Malaysia.

One is around the state’s 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB) strategic developmen­t fund that Mr Najib, 63, founded after taking power in 2009.

Its murky transactio­ns through overseas front companies and Middle Eastern partners, many of them exposed by foreign media reports, have bewildered the public over the past two years.

Mr Najib insisted he did nothing wrong when it leaked to the media that $700 million wound up in his bank account before the 2013 election.

The other scandal, involving state plantation company Felda, is more problemati­c because it directly affects tens of thousands of small landholder­s in the heartlands.

They are a key vote bank for Mr Najib’s party, the United Malay National Organisati­on (Umno).

UMNO PATRONAGE

The 1,600 residents of Kuala Sin, a village of farmers and rubber tappers in Mr Mahathir’s home state of Kedah, are switching from Umno to Bersatu, says Umno’s former chief there.

“I’ve held the ballot box here (for Umno) from 1962 until 2014...but this year, God willing, Umno will lose,” said 77-year-old Ramli Mat Akib at his weathered two-storey wooden home in Kuala Sin.

The Umno branch office opposite his home has closed.

Mr Mahathir’s son Mukhriz, who leads Bersatu’s campaign in Kedah, believes it is “making huge headway” in rural Malaysia.

“It goes all the way down to the branches, and in Kedah very many Umno branches have dissolved,” Mr Mukhriz said. Umno says that isn’t true nationwide. “We have a lot of young people queuing up to sign up at our headquarte­rs as new party members. I don’t see a problem at all,” said Umno’s secretary-general Tengku Adnan Mansor.

Despite the scandals, Mr Najib commands the loyalty of Umno chieftains. Patronage has much to do with that.

An Umno leader needs to distribute largesse to guarantee chiefs’ support and they, in turn, operate an affirmativ­e action plan for ethnic Malays first introduced in 1971.

The policy gives majority Malays government contracts, cheap housing, guaranteed university admissions and preferenti­al stock shares.

Government-appointed village committees also provide cradle-to-grave assistance.

“This makes the villagers closely

dependent on the committee, and that makes the committee supreme and also makes Umno supreme,” said Radzi Ayob, 54, a veteran Umno leader in Kedah, who joined Bersatu last year.

But most Malays have moved to cities and even those in the countrysid­e are less reliant on the rural welfare model.

“As it is now, Umno still needs Malaysians but Malaysians may not need Umno,” Mr Radzi said.

AN IPO THAT FLOPPED

No leadership surveys have been published in Malaysia recently, but sources in Umno say an internal poll in April showed Mr Najib winning 128 of the 222 parliament­ary seats, down from the current 131.

A government source said Mr Najib’s cabinet had been preparing to call polls in September, but the timing has since become less clear in the wake of the scandals. “Now nothing is firm,” he said.

Malaysia’s opposition won only 40% of the seats in the 2013 election despite winning 51% of the popular vote, thanks to a first-past-the-post system that awards seats based on a plurality of votes.

Just before the 2013 election, Mr Najib spun off a listed company of Felda and gave its Malay landowners and suppliers, known as settlers, the opportunit­y to buy preferenti­al shares.

They are less than thrilled about it today. The shares have plunged 70% since the $3 billion listing. The anti-corruption agency is investigat­ing officials at the listed company, Felda Global Ventures Holdings, with the Felda chairman himself raising questions about what happened to the IPO proceeds.

“They basically told us we will be rich,” said Md Isa Md Yassan, 59, a palm oil grower in Muhyiddin’s home constituen­cy of Pagoh. “The settlers are just dissatisfi­ed and it’s not just me feeling it... everyone feels the same way.”

CURTAILING DISSENT

Mr Najib has kept a lid on the scandals by curbing dissent.

The main media outlets are allied to his government. Mr Anwar, the charismati­c opposition figure, is in jail on what critics say was another trumped-up sodomy conviction in 2014.

Mr Najib has revived a subversion law allowing him to jail opponents without trial. The only conviction in the 1MDB scandal was of a legislator — who publicised alleged wrongdoing at the fund.

But Mr Najib is riding a good economy into the election. The ringgit has been one of Asia’s strongest currencies, stocks have hit a two-year high, and economic growth was 5.6% in the first quarter.

And an opposition victory, however unlikely, would put Malaysia into uncharted waters and likely trigger fears of a short-term plunge in financial markets.

Analysts, however, say Mr Mahathir’s entry into the electoral fray supporting an Anwar-led opposition alliance does represents a real threat to Umno.

“If the two leaders can revive a reversed role of their previous partnershi­p displayed so effectivel­y when they were in national leadership in the 1990s, the opposition could have a winning formula,” said Yang Razali Kassim, senior fellow at S Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies in Singapore.

“Mahathir supporting Anwar, in a spirit of genuine reconcilia­tion, will be a powerful combinatio­n.”

Salbiah Kassim, a member of the Umno women’s wing in Kedah, saw parallels to Brexit and US President Donald Trump’s election win.

“Just like overseas, things can change,” she said.

“We don’t know where the silent voters will go.”

 ?? AP ?? Malaysia’s former premier Mahathir Mohamad appears at a press conference in February. His entry into the electoral fray represents a real threat to current Prime Minister Najib Razak’s party.
AP Malaysia’s former premier Mahathir Mohamad appears at a press conference in February. His entry into the electoral fray represents a real threat to current Prime Minister Najib Razak’s party.

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