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Activism Liberty Politics & government

[1563] Of Nik Nazmi’s manifesto and putting bloggers into office

Friend Nik Nazmi is running for election and he has produced a video articulating his agenda for his constituency.

At the Malay College, we used to joke that he would be the first among our class to be thrown into prison, courtesy of ISA. We did not joke about him being the first among our class to run for public office.

Public domain.

Friends. Remember to blog about Nik Nazmi tomorrow as part of an initiative to put bloggers into public office!

While I am at it, allow me to touch a criticism directed at the effort made by Siber Party of Malaysia. They wrote:

While we read blogs and we do operate a blog, it is only our platform and website to inform the good citizens of Malaysia about our views and policies on matters that concern all Malaysians.

Which also means we are not going to support a blogger because he or she is a blogger. we want to know their stand, their approach, their policies, philosophies, politics on all things Malaysian and the world. [Between axes. Siber Party of Malaysia. February 25 2008]

I absolutely agree that we should not support a candidate just because the candidate is a blogger. Yet, I need to point out that the criticism misses the whole point of the initiative: the initiative at its heart is about freedom. I wrote ‘liberty’ or ‘freedom’ no less than 4 times in emails that I sent out to probably 100 bloggers and the entry which introduces the initiative.

The idea behind the effort is to put those that embrace freedom of expression into public offices. From these offices, they have opportunities to defend their and our freedom from tyranny. I honestly believe the bloggers whom I have listed believe in freedom of speech, which is essential to blogging. Elizabeth Wong has probably been doing something for liberty when I was in diaper (okay, that is an exaggeration). Jeff Ooi knows what freedom of expression is, especially when it revolves around blogging and I know enough of Nik Nazmi to know that he appreciates freedom. TAs for Badrul Hisham a.k.a. chegubad, well, he is up against the son-in-law.

The crux of the message is freedom. Indeed, supporting a candidate just because he is a blogger does not make sense. I would certain not support a religious extremist‘s candidacy for public office just because he is a blogger.

So, Siber Party of Malaysia, are you willing to reconsider your position?

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Politics & government

[1536] Of DAP and PKR need each other

If there are solid unwavering rocks above ever-changing Malaysian waters, the centrality of race and religion to local politics has to be one of them. Most of Malaysian political parties are positioned to capitalize this reality though there are those whom wish to break away from the past. While movement away from communal politics requires great effort, I am convinced that the first party to be able to cut through the racial political barrier will dominate Malaysian politics until another true multiracial entity is formed. It is for this reason that I strongly feel DAP needs PKR to survive in the long run.

PKR is the only real multiracial political party with national presence on paper and on the ground in this country. If current circumstances continue to stay true into the future, PKR will be the only party with true potential to seriously challenge the incumbent BN.

Parties that place themselves inside suffocating communal boxes are trapped in a quagmire. This is especially so for those which identify themselves with non-Malay or non-Muslim communities. From the context of communal politics, only a Malay or a Muslim-based party has a real chance to gain majority power in the Parliament. This is based on the fact that Malay as well as Muslim groups form the majority in Malaysia and is further compounded by the fact that non-Malay votes have been shrinking for the past decades.[1][2] Parties blind to skin color and religious beliefs are the only players that will climb over the communal barriers.

Communities are not monolithic but communal politics falsely assumes those communities are so. In this aspect, communal-blind position is superior to that race and religion-based stance. Yet, the latter dominates the local political scene and this illustrates a status quo bias on a grand scale.

While that is so, BN has one foot in the door and even that is enough to outmaneuver its rivals which are communal-centric like DAP, PAS and previously PBS in Sabah. I concede that there are various factors at play but the fact that DAP appeals largely to the Chinese, PAS to the Muslims and PBS to the Kadazan-Dusun contribute to these parties ineffectiveness in challenging BN at the federal level.

DAP of course recognizes itself as a multiracial party. The concept of Malaysian Malaysia still echo years after it first gained popularity during Malaysian Solidarity Convention in the 1960s. I dare say the idea has played a large role in the evolution of “Bangsa Malaysia” or at the very least, the idea of a rights egalitarian Malaysia.

Slogan however is quite different from action. DAP is heavily dependent on Chinese voters and that fact is undeniable especially given the context of DAP-PKR general election negotiations. A true multiracial party will contest in any constituency regardless of the population composition of the area and yet, DAP are mostly interested to contest in Chinese-majority constituencies. And no, token candidates do not count.

Unlike DAP, PKR is jockeying to contest in a number of areas with diverse backgrounds, including Chinese-dominated areas. Reports suggest that negotiation between the two parties is hard because of PKR’s insistence in contesting in what DAP normally considers as its turf.[3] If seen through the lens of communal politics, PKR is theoretically capable of contesting in all areas that DAP plans to contest in but the reverse is untrue. A friend deep in PKR once told me that there are more Chinese in the party than there in DAP despite the fact that DAP is seen as Chinese while PKR to some extent as Malay. If that is true, it only gives PKR more cards to play. Regardless of that, there is no doubt there is a sizable number of Chinese in PKR and that is part of the reason why PKR wants a chance to contest in Chinese-dominated areas. A successful negotiation with DAP will go a long way to break the perception that PKR is a Malay party.

The audacity of PKR in taking a tough stance against DAP may sound shocking if the whole election negotiation is seen through the result of 2004 general election. In that election, PKR was almost wiped out of existence only four years after a relatively wildly successful debut in 1999 for a new party. But in conducting valuation of a company, it is future performance that matters, not past performance, regardless what many chartists, the practitioners of pseudoscience, say. That same is true with any political party.

But of course, before PKR could realize its potential, it has to do well in the expected upcoming election. While Malaysian demographics brought disadvantages to DAP, it is a key to PKR’s future. PKR sorely needs organizational efficiency and it could access and learn the skills through DAP or PAS. If it chooses PAS, PKR will only fall into the traps of communal politics. If it chooses DAP, it stands a chance to break free from the limitations of communal politics. This is the immediate question PKR needs to answer.

For DAP, it is whether they cooperate with or reject PKR. DAP may reject PKR and prolong its relevance until demographics makes its irrelevant or it may help in creating a more credible and move inclusive alternative to BN.

A creation of a credible alternative to BN requires for DAP and PKR to embrace each other. A failure to do so will cause PKR to gravitate toward PAS and DAP to become irrelevant and that is a step back from journey toward more inclusive politics. In response to my criticism that PKR is too populist in its stature with no clear direction ahead, Nik Nazmi emphasizes on the need to adopt big tent politics.[4] While I am unconvinced how that answers my criticism, as far as communal politics is concerned, he is right but a big tent politics only works if DAP walks together with PKR hand in hand.

Truly, to break free from communal politics, future merging of DAP and PKR is the only answer, if all trains stay on its tracks. DAP and PKR do not have forever to contemplate on the merger though. Both has to do so before BN turns to the dream of Onn Jaafar which UMNO rejected long ago.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — Ethnic groups: Malay 50.4%, Chinese 23.7%, indigenous 11%, Indian 7.1%, others 7.8% (2004 est.)

Religions: Muslim 60.4%, Buddhist 19.2%, Christian 9.1%, Hindu 6.3%, Confucianism, Taoism, other traditional Chinese religions 2.6%, other or unknown 1.5%, none 0.8% (2000 census) [The World Factbook: Malaysia. CIA. Accessed February 3 2008][↩]

[2] — IN his preamble, The Star’s acting group chief editor Datuk Wong Chun Wai pointed out that power sharing in this country has been a numbers game. The Chinese now comprise only 25% of the total population compared to some 35% a decade ago. Only about 30 of the 219 parliamentary seats are still predominantly Chinese. [Shrinking Chinese votes. The Star. November 25 2007][↩]

[3] — A showdown between DAP and PKR is on the cards in some constituencies as the two opposition parties could not reach a consensus on their seats allocation for the coming general election as a ‘deadline’ expires today.

[…]

The Chinese-majority seats have became a battlefield as opinion polls predicted there will be a swing of Chinese support from the ruling Barisan Nasional to the opposition due to economic and crime factors. [DAP-PKR seat talks on brink of collapse. Beh Lih Yi. Malaysiakini. January 31 2008][↩]

[4] — This might seem broad, but Keadilan is after all built as a big tent on the radical centre. From a purist’s perspective, this might seem less than ideal (pun intended); but in practice, many successful and ground breaking political movements were built on broad coalitions focused on immediate issues and core principles without being bound in ideological straightjackets. In the long run, a nationally successful political party has to represent the spectrum of the society they represent. [Keadilan and Big Tent Politics. Nik Nazmi.com. March 27 2007][↩]

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Activism Photography Politics & government

[1294] Of a new political star

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

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Humor Politics & government

[1195] Of aiya!!!

Barisan Nasional alleges that Khalid Ibrahim encourages his supporters to vote for Barisan Nasional.

Keadilan denies.

RTM, TV3 and everybody show a clip proving the allegation:

Aiya!!!

This coming by-election is memorable, that is for sure.

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Politics & government

[1150] Of Keadilan, the special purpose vehicle of discontent

At a point in the not so distant past, I used to hold a favorable view of Keadilan. Lately however, that opinion has slowly gone from supportive to almost ambivalence. The more I learn about the party, the more I find the party confusing. It is becoming increasingly clear to me that Keadilan is a party of undecided ideological standing. It is a patchwork of this and that, neither here nor there. Its members are too ideologically diverse and they possibly band together with one purpose: protesting. Yes. Keadilan from my point of view, is a protest party and nothing more.

At the beginning, during the upheaval of the late 1990s, the party was established as a response to the sacking and the imprisonment of former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim. To many in the party, the black and white were clear cut; the good guys were with Anwar Ibrahim, fighting perceived injustice while those standing behind Mahathir Mohamed were villains. Day in, day out, the party’s fixation on Anwar Ibrahim became so intense that it seemed the party’s main purpose was to free Anwar Ibrahim and nothing else.

Some within the party and some outside sympathizers started to realize the centrality of free-Anwar, anti-Mahathir sentiment within Keadilan. These people criticized the party for that and suggested that Keadilan needed to go beyond a personality. In the early days however, Anwar Ibrahim was so popular among the masses that tactical change was not necessary. The 1999 general election later proved that.

If the 1999 election proved that critics were wrong, 2004 proved that the critics were right after all. By that year, Anwar Ibrahim become so irrelevant that Keadilan initially lost all of its seats. It only regained one seat after a recount. And then, the final blow came. Mahathir Mohamed resigned and soon afterward, the former prime minister was released. With that, just like how a special purpose vehicle is useless after achieving its goal, Keadilan lost its cause and risked irrelevancy.

To be fair, the party is reinventing itself. Through my limited interaction with those in the party, it, or rather its members have found a new cause, Unfortunately, that new cause is similar to that of the Democrats’ during the 2004 election. If the Democrats chanted for anything but Bush, the people in Keadilan are saying anything but BN. Just like how the Democratic Party garnered dissatisfied voters against the Republicans, Keadilan is garnering dissatisfied voters against BN. The Democratic Party was a protest party then; Keadilan is currently a protest party.

What else could explain the fact that there are so many diverse fractions within Keadilan working together in spite of incredible difference?

Surely the liberals and the lefties would argue against each other to kingdom’s come. Add the Islamists into the equation, boy, it is a recipe for Krakatoa. The ideological difference between each fraction is too great to go unnoticed or ignored. I would imagine that if BN is wiped out of the equation, those fractions within Keadilan would turn onto itself.

So, what holds Keadilan together? What attracts there fractions so greatly that the difference could be set aside?

I could think of two factors. One factor has been mentioned and it is the shared disatisfication against BN. Another is the initial raison d’être of Keadilan, Anwar Ibrahim; personality cult.

A friend told me that Anwar Ibrahim is one of the few persons that could talk to both the liberals and the Islamists comfortably. The question is why is that possible? Has he managed to connect the liberals (along possibly with the socialists) with the Islamists? From the look of it, surely he has but what exactly is that connection?

Is it pragmatism?

In the face of vast ideological difference between groups, I tend to favor pragmatism as an explanation. A deeper inquiry would venture, what is the cause of that pragmatism?

I could think of only one way to rationalize this: the cause is the various fractions’ shared discontent against BN. In other words, the enemy of my enemy is my friend. Anwar Ibrahim seems to realize this; he builds his base on top of that discontent, catering everybody across the board.

Further, it seems to me that like John Kerry, Anwar Ibrahim is trying to please everybody. Because of the way he derives his political clout, he has to please every fraction within Keadilan. Everybody, meaning liberals, socialists, Islamists, the populists. Exactly because of this, he cannot afford to offend anybody. Exactly because of this, he needs to stay above the ideological jostling between the fractions of Keadilan. For if he starts to join the fray, he would lose support from some fractions. Exactly because of this, since he takes no real ideological stance, he is able to talk to both liberals and Islamists, etc. In the end, a populist.

Hence, the answer to why I think Keadilan is a mere protest party.

If Keadilan plans to be more than a mere protest party, it must find its ideological home.