Mahathir: The Stumbling Block to UMNO Reformby dinobeano |
August 14, 2013
MY COMMENT: UMNO reform is vital for the survival of the party. It is
almost trite to say that. The conservatives have taken over and
increasingly UMNO is becoming like the Tea Party in the US. Whose fault
is that. I attribute this state of affairs to the apathy of its
membership because they are not prepared to say to Dr. Mahahtir that
enough is enough and ask him to finally retire. Badawi had to take on
his predecessor but failed to silence the man. In stead he lost his job.
Najib
is too cautious and will not criticise Tun Dr. Mahathir openly.But let
us hope that if he made Party President in his own right, he will honour
the assurance he gave me at the 2010 Maybank Open Golf at KLGCC that
he would like to make Malaysia great again. To do that, Mr Prime
Minister, you cannot play safe. After all politics is risky business.
Take the risk and get the country moving again.
Civil
society is sick and tired of the political machinations of our longest
serving Prime Minister. Why should he be a stumbling block? It is easy,
Mr. Prime Minister,for you to advise him to stop playing racist politics
and stop meddling. After all, you are the most powerful man in our
country because Mahathir made it possible when he created a hegemonic
Executive Branch. Use it for the good of the nation.--Din Merican
Mahathir: The Stumbling Block to UMNO Reform
by Ram Anand and Lawrence Yong (08-13-13) @ http://www.malaysiakini.com
As
UMNO President Najib Abdul Razak attempts to reform the party away from
its conservative ideologies, his biggest stumbling block could well be
one of the party’s most influential figures - former Prime Minister Dr
Mahathir Mohamad.
Analysts Malaysiakini
spoke to said the former premier's shadow still looms large over the
UMNO grassroots, and his outspoken views have now divided UMNO down the
middle.
Mahathir's
views are often seen as being conservative and very much race-based,
fuelling right-wing views about Malay supremacy and lending credence to
the perception that the Chinese Malaysian community is attempting to
seize political power from the Malays.
"Mahathir-ism
remains the stumbling block to reform UMNO," political analyst Khoo Kay
Peng conceded, referring to the faction in UMNO that believes an
authoritative leader like Mahathir would make UMNO strong again.
"Mahathir's
problem is that he can't see any other approach than his own (to
govern). This is because he never lost a two-thirds majority before,"
Khoo told Malaysiakini, referring to the outcome of the 2008 and the
more recent May 5 general elections.
Khoo
noted that the problem started when Mahathir started attacking his
successor Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's administration, and the factionalism
has grown to an extent that Najib is now unable to control the
conservative wings of the party.
"Najib has no control over the conservative side of UMNO, which wants an authoritarian leader like Mahathir," he said.
Dr M 'also at fault' for loss of two-thirds majority
GVO
Khoo also agreed with Abdullah's statement in the recent book "The Awakening: The Abdullah Badawi Years in Malaysia", that Mahathir is also at fault for BN's loss of a two-thirds majority in the 2008 national polls.
"He
(Mahathir) kept bombarding the Abdullah administration until (Abdullah)
was perceived to be weak and unable to carry out promised reforms.Now
the perception that Umno can't reform has hardened even more in the last
election, making non-Malays reject the party," he added.
ASLI Centre for Public Policy Studies (CPPS) chairperson Ramon Navaratnam (left),
meanwhile, said that Mahathir's main fault was that the former premier
still "longed for prominence" even though he was no longer in charge of
UMNO or Malaysia.
"It
is unbecoming of an elder statesman. He should quietly provide advise
and lead behind the scene rather than publicly voice his views that can
sometimes sound very abrasive in the new context of 1Malaysia.He is
afraid that if he doesn't shout he would not be heard," Ramon said.
Ramon
likened UMNO leaders to a bunch of crabs tied together at this point,
each pulling in a different direction and headed nowhere. He said that
Mahathir was partly to blame because of his statements.
Universiti
Malaya Political Economist and Professor Terence Gomez pointed out that
Umno needed to look beyond Mahathir. "The party has to change with the
times," he said.
He
cited Abdullah’s fight against corruption and Najib's dismantling of
"race affirmative" economic policies, all of which were used by Mahathir
to weaken the leaders.
"In
the case of Abdullah, Mahathir seems to have gone on a warpath because
he worried that his legacy would be overturned," Gomez said, adding that
Mahathir was less critical of Najib because he chased the same Vision
2020.
But unless Najib rams his reforms through, Gomez warned that "history will repeat itself".
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