The future of UMNO-Malay Mail
May 12- United
Malaysians National Organisation.
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Without
this, all else is meaningless. When all the traditional political promises of
clean governance and an inclusive, just society have been coopted and ascribed
by the people to the other side, what remains for UMNO and BN?
The fact
that Dr. Mahathir has already signaled a strengthening of Malay rights and a
continuation of an openly racist and regressive style of governance provides a
glimmer of an opportunity to the left of the leadership of PPBM in the PH
coalition.
A truly
egalitarian, colour blind, secular party that is committed to social and
economic justice, one that champions the cause of the underdog and that
acknowledges its past mistakes while learning from them could pose a real
challenge to the new incumbents in Putrajaya.
The fact
that MCA, MIC, Gerakan, PPP etc. have been shown the door by voters should help
the process of uniting all of these under the UMNO for Malaysians umbrella. It
goes without saying that for the “new” UMNO to be credible, there needs to be a
purge of its current senior leadership that is widely seen as being complicit
in the various alleged acts of corruption and bad governance over the last
decade.
PH is
untested in terms of governance and is in power largely because of an anti BN
wave. It will make mistakes and will suffer from the pressure of stratospheric
expectations put on it by a populace thirsting for change. This is where the
opportunity lies.
The ‘new’
UMNO needs to go back to voters with humility but a sense of belief that it has
been an integral part of a lot of the nation building of the last 60 years. It
still has very strong support in many parts of the country, and it needs to
reiterate that Dr. M did not build this country by himself. It needs to spend
the next five years reforming itself while playing the role of an effective
check and balance to the missteps of the coalition in power.
Possibly
the only one of the current crop of leaders that could accomplish this
difficult challenge while unifying the various components of BN under one
umbrella is the UMNO youth chief, Khairy Jamaluddin. He is young, personally
popular, well-educated and gracious in defeat. He is not believed to be party
to any of the alleged scandals of other leaders and has for the most part
avoided race baiting and religious demagoguery. His stewardship of the KL SEA
games was competent and showcased Malaysia well.
However, whether
it is him or someone else who is up for the challenge, it is by no means going
to be easy. UMNO is still a very wealthy, powerful organization with very
strong entrenched interests that will resist almost all of the ideas suggested
above because they threaten and undermine the very basis of their survival
within the current system of patronage.
Equally
though, this is when the party and the coalition are at their weakest and the
time is ripe for someone to take the bull by the horns and create an UMNO that
is part of the 21st century and a worthy opponent to the Pakatan
Harapan coalition.
Voters need
a credible choice for democracy to work. Can UMNO reinvent itself to become
one?
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