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Politics & government

[2941] Ismail Sabri does not deserve 100-day honeymoon

In his speech revealing the Cabinet line-up, Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob said each ministry had to prove their early achievements within 100 days. He said that after stressing the Cabinet needed to have short and long-term plans.

That 100-day period might have been acceptable under normal circumstances. And it might be acceptable, if the Cabinet had a new line-up.

But this Cabinet is the same as the last one that failed miserably, with minor changes inspiring no confidence. The clueless Minister of Education is still the same. Ditto for MITI, and almost all other ministries. One improvement might be the promotion of Khairy Jamaluddin to the Health Ministry, but this could be negated by the silly switch: the ridiculous former Health Minister now takes over Khairy’s old portfolio. The health ministry under Adham Baba had been the source of dark comedy since March 2020, and only god knows what the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation has in store now. Good luck all the technologists out there.

So unchanged the line-up, that it is impossible to divorce the failure and incompetence of the previous Cabinet from the new one. The Prime Minister himself is the source of the current Covid-19 wave with his lack-of-quarantine mistake.

The largely disappointing line-up does not deserve space to breathe. This government does not deserve 100 days. They should be judged now. They must be put under pressure.

For heaven’s sake, there is an ongoing pandemic and we just do not have 100 days.  Thousands have died. If this government needs 100 days more, then we collectively as Malaysians have made a mistake and will pay a heavy price for it.

Categories
Politics & government

[1948] Of the next big step is a small Cabinet

Skepticism comes naturally with broken promises. Due to disillusionment among far too many individuals under the previous administration, the words of a Barisan Nasional-led administration are close to worthless nowadays. It is, therefore, not hard to prove that the window for sloganeering for the new Prime Minister is extremely narrow. What really matters now is action, and the first step in breaking that skepticism is by assembling a Cabinet worthy of trust.

The window for sloganeering should have been shut completely if not for the role of slogans in clarifying any agenda. While catchy slogans still have a place, the agenda must first be set straight and right. In this era of extreme skepticism, doing otherwise invites disaster.

Questions on the slogan will be raised and convincing answers will not be forthcoming exactly because the slogan lacks substance. That will create disappointment, reinforcing pre-existing skepticism. Mixing skepticism with further disappointment is a surefire recipe for cynicism.

Being a skeptic, it is not hard at all to turn myself into a cynic, especially with the mainstream media acting the way they do at the moment. The mainstream media — the major printed and broadcast media — are obviously oblivious to the reason why they lost their credibility in the first place. Their coverage of the three just-concluded by-elections continue to prove that they are nothing more than individuals typically found in the dark back alleys with scant ersatz clothing soliciting for clients of dubious taste.

So early in days of the new administration, there are little clues to the actual agenda of the new Prime Minister, save an unclear slogan with no concrete definition.

”One Malaysia”, for instance, is amazingly opaque despite the untrustworthy mainstream media parading the slogan as a sign of change. Change is not about slogans but the mainstream media would have all of us believed otherwise.

There appears to be some effort by the Prime Minister to elaborate on that slogan on a piecemeal basis but, so far, it is all wishy washy. It is there in the air, warm and fuzzy but nobody can really see it. The new Prime Minister clearly has not communicated his message well.

This has made his slogans open for a gamut of interpretations, making blowback a real possibility. Already ”One Malaysia” is seen by some as a repackaged Malaysian Malaysia, striking fear in the hearts of conservative Malays. On the other side, ”One Malaysia” suggests intolerance for civil dissents and a return to Asian values where unity is promoted at the expense of liberty.

In absence of clear message, one has to look somewhere else to ascertain the agenda of the new administration. The opportunity to do just that is coming with the expected formation of a new Cabinet. The size and the membership of Cabinet will shed light on some of the new prime minister’s agenda.

The size of the new Cabinet will indicate whether the same path of big, ineffective and wasteful government is the order of the day. Under the Abdullah administration, there were 33 individuals with a seat in the Cabinet by virtue of being ministers; there were 27 ministries of various kinds.

It is easy to digest how the number of the ministries translates into a big government. The greater the quantity of ministries is, the greater the requirement for civil servants. Tremendous resources are required just to keep a bloated government running.

A large number of ministries not only suggests the large size of government. It also suggests that the role of government is wide; wide enough to smother the life of private citizens, not only with respect to civil liberty, but also in the areas of business where multiple permits and licenses are required by different ministries, as each ministry tries to justify its existence.

At the back of my head, there is a nagging feeling that these ministries were created to satisfy political demand for positions and power rather than accommodating national needs.

At the very top, having 33 decision makers in the Cabinet makes the decision-making process cumbersome. In a country with limited empowerment as evident through the lack of local elections and in effect unresponsive local government, far too many decisions eventually go back to the top. When such top-down statist set-up is coupled with a cumbersome Cabinet, it is little wonder that the government is ineffective.

Adoption of organic — or bottom-up — approach can solve that problem. One example of that is by returning the power of local government to the people through reintroduction of local government.

With active local government, many functions of the Ministry of Housing and Local Government can be made irrelevant as the decision-making path length is shortened. Greater democratization itself can eliminate the need for the Ministry of Federal Territories completely.

Regardless of democratization, what exactly does the Ministry of Federal Territories do that the local authority, like the City Hall of Kuala Lumpur, cannot?

A new Cabinet must address the problem of big government that has been strongly identified with the past administration. The new administration has to forcefully break from the past. Or else.

Inevitably, that means embracing a limited but effective government led by a small but capable Cabinet.

Functions of ministries need to be streamlined to address the problem of overlapping turfs, ministries have to be merged to reduce the scope of government, and excess positions within the government need to be removed to address more than a decade-old fiscal deficit; the deficit is an indicator of the size of government.

These actions, to me, will produce a very strong signal indicating a change from the malaise Malaysia suffers. That will help in convincing me — and probably others, too — to cut down on my skepticism and to give the new administration a fighting chance.

Unfortunately, elimination of excess positions within an already bloated government might not happen. The mini-budget specifically called for absorption of the unemployed into the government. Past promises are tying the new Prime Minister’s hand.

Nevertheless, reducing the size of government cannot be done in a day. It has to be done in a gradual manner. Yet, gradualism is not a luxury the new administration can afford. Given the urgency and the gravity of the need for change, the only quick big punch to the prevailing skepticism relates back to the size of Cabinet and eventually, the size of government.

Size however is not the only consideration. The composition of the Cabinet is as important as the size. Still, even the question of composition necessarily leads back to the question of size.

The reason is that the pool of Members of Parliament available to the new Prime Minister contains a limited number of qualified individuals with intact credibility. A large Cabinet will more likely than not absorb individuals who do not command confidence from the public in times when confidence is exactly what the new administration needs badly.

If the new administration wants to earn confidence from the masses, a large Cabinet is not an option.

Having said that, it must also be stressed that a small Cabinet does not guarantee a smooth ride for the new administration. The size is a mere symptom of the agenda and a lean Cabinet only suggests that the agenda is on the right track. It says nothing of the agenda itself.

A failure to form a small cabinet will, however, make the years of the Najib administration a hell for Barisan Nasional.

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

First published in The Malaysian Insider on April 8 2009.

Categories
Humor Politics & government

[1947] Of he is a minister because he speaks English!

Datuk Anifah Aman, Foreign Minister – Outspoken brother of Sabah Chief Minister, he refused a deputy minister’s position after Election 2008, believing he deserved more.

He was identified as one of those Sabah politicians who was supposed to join Anwar Ibrahim’s PKR but all along he was a Najib loyalist. Given the Foreign Ministry portfolio because of his command of English. [Grading Najib’s Cabinet. The Malaysian Insider. April 9 2009]

Given the Foreign Ministry portfolio because of his command of English.

I suppose, too many Cabinet ministers cannot speak English properly. So low is the benchmark of becoming a minister these days.

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

p/s — At first glance, the Cabinet line-up looks just okay.[0] Just. Barely.

There are names that I do not like and some stuff like the merging of the two education ministries did not materialize.

Perhaps, too many Senators too; Chew “May 13” Mei Fun is one of those Senators. She is a deputy to yet another Senator, Sharizat Abdul Jalil.

I still remember Chew’s words during the campaigning period for the last general election. She said “if there is no sufficient Chinese representation in the Barisan Nasional, it is not a good thing, the Chinese community cannot afford another May 13 incident”.[1]

Well, we know that that did not happen. Her politics of fear is just another politics of hoax.

The Deputy Minister line up might have some problem. Like I said, I do not like Chew. And while Najib Razak wanted to create a clean Cabinet, he missed a spot: Baharom Johari is one of the deputies.

Do you remember Johari Baharom? I do. And I bet Nat does too.[2] There was an allegation of corruption directed against Johari Baharom by some somebody who commented on Nat’s blog. The police later arrested Nat under the OSA. The Deputy Minister for Internal Security at that time was Johari Baharom.

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

[0] — [Najib names his new cabinet. Malaysiakini. April 9 2009]

[1] — [Chew Mei Fun: Another May 13 if Chinese representation in BN is insufficient. Wong Chin Huat. People are the boss. January 22 2008]

[2] — Nat was taken away from his office today by 3 police officers to Bukit Aman. According to EK, they said they ”nak cakap tentang internet”. I’m a bit blurry with the details but I will try my best to keep you all updated. In the meantime, whoever wants to go to Bukit Aman to show support please do! Please call 2283 5567 ext 151 (that’s my office number) for more details. If I don’t answer means I’m not at my table. All else, try Eli or Tian if you have their numbers. [flash: Nat being held at Bukit Aman!. Soon Li Tsin. Jelas.info. July 13 2007]

Categories
Politics & government

[1591] Of good and bad ministers

These are ministers that I have reserved some respect for (in no particular order):

  1. Mohd Zaid Ibrahim (for being a liberal)
  2. Amirsham A. Aziz (for his professional experience)
  3. L. Devamany (for having a conscience)
  4. Nor Mohamed Yakcop (for economic-literacy)
  5. Syed Hamid Albar (I seem to like him for some unidentifiable reason)
  6. Rais Yatim (for his academic qualification)
  7. Maximus Ongkili (for daring to speak up)
  8. Khaled Nordin (for just being a nice guy)
  9. Shahrir Samad (for having a conscience)

I hope these individuals will bring sense to the new Cabinet.

The following should however resign immediately before they embarrass the country:

  1. Abdullah Ahmad Badawi (for inconsistency and incompetence)
  2. Nazri Aziz (for un-parliamentarian behavior)
  3. Johari Baharom (for possibly being corrupt and blatant abuse of the OSA)
  4. Nor Omar (for issuing stupid statements)
  5. Muhammad Muhd Taib (for corruption as well as for frivolous police reports)
Categories
Politics & government

[1583] Of KJ as Minister of Internal Security?

Words on the street have it that Khairy Jamaludin is up to head the Ministry of Internal Security.

Be prepared because if it is true, we would have a bigger battle ahead of us.