Showing posts with label Election. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Election. Show all posts

Monday, April 8, 2013

GE13 - Heroes and Villians

The 13th General Election will be a monumental election to be recorded in the annals of Malaysia history as generals in both the Barisan National (BN) and the Pakatan Rakyat (PR) will meet head on - the price of defeat is to retire from politics. Several top leaders, albeit more to come, have announced their intention of moving out from their strongholds to fight decisive battles - Lim Kit Siang, Liew Chin Tong, Fong Po Kuan (TBC), and Kulasegaran (TBC) from the DAP; Dato Mansor Othman, Rafiza Ramli, Datuk Chua Jui Meng (TBC), and Datuk Tan Kee Kwong from PKR; Salahuddin Ayub and Datuk Seri Mohd Nizar from PAS; and from BN, MCA old- Donald Lim, Ng Yen Yen, and Ong Ka Chuan; Devamany from the MIC; Teng Chang Yeow, and Chia Kwang Chye; and as for UMNO Dato Zainal Abidin Osman*, Raja Nong Chik and many others.

Incumbents Generalissimo - Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim, Nurul Izzah Anwar, Fuziah Salleh, Ong Tee Keat, Chor Chee Heung, Subramaniam, Kong Cho Ha*, Dato Seri Nazri*, and Datuk Seri Hishammudin* - these dignified individuals will be facing tempestuous battles profuse with malign sentiments.

With 79 seats out of 222 (166 in the Peninsula, 56 from Sabah and Sarawak), DS Anwar Ibrahim will need at least another 40 seats to form the next federal government. An uphill but possible task, DSAI believes that PR can win up to 12 seats in Johor, 8 in Sarawak, 12 in Sabah, while capturing another 8 more seats from PR leaning states in the North. Or in the words of Tian Chua, PKR senior VP and head of the Heavenly faction, "10 from Johor, 10 from Sabah, and 10 from Sarawak". Such is the optimism of our top leadership - endless possibilities and victory inevitable!

Arithmetic
In the 2008  elections, the PR had 30% Malay support, 75% Chinese support, and 70% Indian support. If we maintain this ratio, the results will be status quo of retaining 5 states and denying BN the 2/3rd majority - a victory for PR as it realizes a 2-party system in Malaysia. To win the federal government, PR would need a minimum of 80% Chinese support, at least 60% Indian support and 40% Malay support. Pakatan Rakyat leaders are confident to meet this desired numbers. Any deviation from this figures would bring an element of surprise and changes to the leadership structure of the Pakatan Rakyat coalition.

Thus the deviation is the most probable.

Recent survey, which I concur, has shown that Pakatan Rakyat has max the support of the Chinese community at 82%. In urban areas such as the Klang Valley, the support could surpass 90% and semi-rural areas/ old-towns the support at about 65%. As for Johor, I expect our Chinese support to be 2/3, at 67%.

As for the Indian support, it can be no doubt that PR is losing this group of electorate, possibly winning only 40% of the community - a combination of educated and urban votes with some rural votes. The loss is attributed to the lack of fieldwork - logistical as our leaders refuse to invest in the necessary infrastructure. The reasons could be owing to the lack of funding, and sufficient top Indian leaders in the coalition. Thus I expect PR to get 40% and BN 60%.

The Malay electorate will be the deciding factor into the formation of the next Federal Government. At a base line of 30% support to PR, the electorate has increase by about 2-4% national; thus being the absolute kingmakers in most seats. This is particularly significant to Selangor where an erosion of Malay support might cause PR to lose this prized state. A loss of Selangor would mean a consolidation of powers to the PM DS Najib Razak - stability to UMNO and deep vulnerability to the survival of the Pakatan Rakyat coalition.

Sadly, I'm expecting the erosion of the Malay support to between 22% - 25%. This is attributed to the 3 Rs - Race, Religion, and Royalty - a potent combination that has never fail to rally any conservative base in the world. The counter to this stratagem is superior fieldwork, but this has yet to be done by the PR leaders as like I've said before - boring and requires hardwork.

Consequences
If indeed the Pakatan Rakyat receives 82% of Chinese support, 40% of Indian support and 22-25% of Malay support, the dynamics of the PR coalition would undergo severe changes. This would be an abrogation of the PR leadership, especially to the leaders in PKR and PAS. The hold on the state of Selangor could be as low as 3-seats, an uncomfortable margin to the current 36-20. In terms of parliamentary seats, DAP would emerge as the victor with close to or about 40 seats, an increment of at least 10, while PAS and PKR will lose 3-5 seats each on aggregate.

The relationship between the parties, and the leadership structure would undergo shocking political vicissitudes. This new relationship shall be thoroughly discuss in subsequent posts as it involves leadership tussle in winning states particularly the prized Selangor.

But, PR can find comfort that BN is being denied their 2/3rd majority twice in a row and will have to get use to the new political reality. The winner will be ordinary Malaysians, and the biggest loser will be the Barisan National coalition, with its component parties pulverized!

What will happen to UMNO except for another five years of internal instability?



Next: Battle of the Titans

* indicates possibilities

Updates: It seems that PKR is not going to give the Home Minister Hishammudin a fight for his political career.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

My Story So Far - Malaysia and the 13th General Election


Banners and flags of political parties can be seen fluttering; palpitating the hearts and minds of most Malaysians like the flapping of butterflies. This occurrence has already been the norm as this nation, known as bolehland been put on election mode since the late 2011. In February, postals and stickers of elected representatives, or the Yang Berhormats (YBs) and YB-wannabes can be seen beaming with the widest and most alluring smiles, in major highways, cities, and towns inclusive both urban and rural alike. This will be the most divisive election. The electorate has already made up their minds. The people is ready to vote. But the Prime Minister is not..... till today!

At precisely 11.30 am today, the Prime Minister of Malaysia, Dato Seri Najib Tun Razak, had dissolved the Parliament, paving the way for the 13th General Election. Finally D-day has arrived.

The Beginning
It started in 2008, with the ruling Barisan National (BN) expecting an overwhelming victory - a norm for the past 50 years, was astonished with the loss of 5 out of 13 states, losing 82 out of 222 seats, and foregoing the 2/3rd majority in Parliament for the first time since Independence. The opposition - Pakatan Rakyat (PR) - captured the prized state of Selangor, as well as Penang, Perak, Kedah, and the usual Kelantan. 46.75% of the populace voted for PR. Though in 2009 Perak fell back to BN through a sordid and unscrupulous political coup  (though PR leaders had been warned but failed to take appropriate measures), and several YBs had shifted to pro-BN independent MPs; the Pakatan Rakyat alliance remained intact - remarkable to the eyes of political operatives in the ruling coalition. Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR), led by ex-DPM Dato Seri Anwar Ibrahim and the noble Datin Seri Wan Azizah (Kak Wan); the Democratic Action Party (DAP) led by supremo Lim Kik Siang, and his son, the chivalrous Lim Guan Eng; and PAS led by Tok Guru Nik Aziz and President Hadi Awang, are solidly united to ONE common purpose - toppling the ruling Barisan National. Already component parties in the ruling government - MCA, MIC, and Gerakan, have been severely wounded, losing the majority of the seats; and in the eyes of the draconian UMNO - the three partners had become liabilities. Unknown to UMNO was that the loss of the coalition partners is due to UMNO, over-indulging and treating the partners as derelicts. With inflation sky-rocketing, while the princelings and the politically connected gnawing bigger slices of the economic pie; the silent majority in the urban states shocked the ruling coalition by voting across racial lines for the opposition - collectively.

The gerrymandering by the puppeteer, marginalizing the minority races through various means - having an extremely large constituency or splitting the minority races to only roughly 20+ to 40+ percentage of the electorate in the constituency; - backfired! (through a minor split among the majority and a united minority to produce a small but decisive victory in the first-past-the-post electoral system)

Where 'I' come in
Having return from the states; fulfilling my childhood dreams of working for the Clintons ^^! (land of opportunities where dreams do come true); I started as a political aide for the young, and charismatic Nurul Izzah Anwar - daughter of the opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim. It was another dream came true as I was thrusted into the halls of power, always on the push! Being one of the four Praetorian guards (a term we call ourselves), it was success after success, out-maneuvering  and abashing political adversaries - externally and internally. It was most awesome when my prepared speech on democracy successfully baited Dato Seri Nazri, the Minister of Law into agreeing with our point of view,stating on captured TV "You are correct!"; and being the man in charge, and winning the most votes as vice-president in the party internal and first direct open elections despite all the negativity and chicanery that was threw upon us  (Might I add that I maybe one of the few who had the experience in a primary process). It was captivating.

All good things must come to an end. The markings were on the wall. I could feel it, yet powerless to change fate. Being ardent, yet naive; I entangled into a young man's folly - slightly arrogant, thought invincible to negative attacks by trusted comrades - fell out of grace and decided to take a break. That had consequence with all the Praetorian being out of favor (and only one left today). It was dark, it was stormy, and in the words of Churchill, "...I have worked very hard all my life and I have achieved a great deal, in the end to achieve nothing'.

Fate would have it that I remain in this field. Being involve in local rather than national politics, and having the time to improve, and to catch up on the readings - Churchill, Roosevelt, Eisenshower, to the leaders of the 21st century etc.

Today 3/4 - Day 1 of Dissolution
I remember telling the team, on record, that we'll have an election in April 2011, and it was the dissolvement of the Sarawak State Assembly; and we would have another till the end. I have to admit that i'm off by a week, predicting the dissolution to be on the 9th of April rather than the 3rd. Only the Prime Minister knows and he had chose today as D-day. Nominations should be within the next 10 days and the polling expected to be on the 27th/28th of April.

Over the next 3 weeks, I shall discussed strategies and fore-castings. Unlike many junkies/pundits, I usually make it clear what i think the results will be; with basis, because I too want to continuous improve by learning from what is right and what is wrong. It could the over/under estimation of the electoral mood; a data error (lacking of updated data owing to too much noise); pure bias owing to emotional attachment, or just plain wrong. Because politics is living, just like the law is living.

 I attended a late night meeting today - surprised at the presentation with newly updated terms such as GOTV (Get out the vote rather than Getting out the voters; very different as it involve different stratagems), elaborate organizational structures, and so on. Obviously Team Obama is doing well, providing political consultations to political parties all over the world. (**More like 101 reports but sold at exorbitant rates) Needless, these are interesting times.


Disclaimer: These views are honest and private to 'me'. For reading purposes only, no reposting allow. Please respect my privacy of thoughts and emotions. Allow me to be objective and most importantly truthful.