The Politics of Vendetta. What comes after? - Malay Mail
18 May, 2018- ABU or
Anyone But UMNO, or Asalkan Bukan UMNO.
For the
long Najib years amid the rise of Pakatan Rakyat, its demise and the rise of
Pakatan Harapan (PH), people having to justify the many weaknesses within the
opposition had only this slogan to fall back on.
The logic
being that however ridiculous Rafizi’s Kajang move may have been, or DAP’s
verbal calisthenics over justifying its alliance with PAS may have looked, it
was nothing in comparison to the excesses of the BN administration under Najib.
However unwieldy the opposition coalition, it could not be worse than the
current regime.
When Dr.
Mahathir broke with Najib and UMNO and wanted to join the ranks of the
opposition, nobody even blinked, because of ABU. Past enmities, jailings under
ISA, his well-known authoritarian streak, clearly racist outlook on Malaysian
society, crony capitalism and dislike of a free press and criticism generally were
seen to be lesser evils than the monumental corruption symbolized by 1MDB and
the attendant national shame.
While the
declining ringgit, GST, increasingly draconian measures to silence oppositional
media and the ostentatious lifestyle of those in power also contributed to the
rakyat’s anger, it was the brazenness with which the ruling coterie thought
they could get away with all the plunder was the final straw that united the
most unlikely bedfellows into a cohesive bloc.
Specifically,
mocking the rule of law in sacking the previous AG, classifying the auditor
General’s report under the OSA and closing all 1MDB investigations. Taking away
Dr. Mahathir’s security and outriders, ridiculing him in mainstream media and
deregistering his party were just tying the bow to the gift of zero opposition
to Najib’s GE 14 plans.
While GE 14
was won by PH, so far it is only Dr. M who is calling all the shots. He
announced three people to his cabinet including Muhyiddin Yassin, but promptly
put Guan Eng’s appointment on hold. No other appointments have been announced
but for an advisory council which has his old buddies, including Daim Zainuddin
and Zeti Akhtar in it.
Which is
why it’s no surprise that almost all the actions taken by him in the first week
of gaining power have been about his primary motive for joining the opposition;
cutting Najib and his abettors down to size. There is certainly a certain
symmetry to Najib and Zahid’s police aides being taken away and Dr. M’s
restored, and now Zunar can fly but Rosmah cannot.
To that
extent he is living up to the ABU promise and taking actions that the majority
of those who voted for him will support, especially if they are taken
scrupulously in line with the law.
What is
less clear is where he stands on the rest of the PH agenda and manifesto. Apart
from wanting revenge against Najib, he has not demonstrated any real desire to
move away from the Malay first PPBM to a Malaysian Malaysia DAP or even the
superficially multiracial PKR. Already he is equivocating on repealing the fake
news law and if and when he will hand over power to Anwar.
Was this
election won on the back of supporters of the old UMNO under Dr. M, but those
who could not stomach the new UMNO of Najib and chose PH because Dr. M was in
it? Or was it a victory of ABU believers, but who also wanted a more forward
looking, progressive government which believed in equality, rule of law and
accountable governance with strong institutions like a free press to check the
powers that be?
What really
matters is what Dr. M thinks. If Dr. M believes in the latter, Institutional
reforms will take off, he will relinquish power to Anwar Ibrahim soon, who will
use his stature to champion a more egalitarian and inclusive society where
improving means and abilities will matter more than promoting racial and
religious narratives.
If it is
the former though, expect that when the politics of vendetta which currently
unite the country are exhausted, there will be a return to an UMNO of the
1990’s with a few token concessions to his new friends. Then, how much a group
of people who have never tasted power will bend their principles to stay in
power will determine how long PH survives.
If there is
a showdown between the two, a space will open up for the opposition. If UMNO
can genuinely reinvent itself as a party for all Malaysians as this column had
postulated here, then,
along with PAS, Malaysia may finally mature into a true democracy with plenty
of options available for the voter to choose from.
Ideally
though PH should find a middle path between its values and Dr. M’s, at least
for the next five years, to allow for space for a stable democracy to emerge.
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