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WSWS : News
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Malaysia to go to polls one year early
By John Roberts
26 February 2008
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Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi dissolved parliament
on February 13 and called new elections for March 8more
than 12 months before they were due.
The Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition government, led by Badawis
United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), held 198 of the 219
seats in the previous parliament. UMNO alone held 109 seats. Along
with its coalition partners, the most important of which are the
Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) and the Malaysian Indian Congress
(MIC), it easily controlled the two-thirds majority needed to
change the constitution and ensure that the government held a
firm grip on state power. This is a position that UMNO has held
since independence from Britain in 1957.
The decision to call the poll early is bound up with economic
and political developments that have unnerved the government despite
its apparently unassailable parliamentary majority.
On February 19, Trade Minister Rafidah Aziz reported that foreign
investment in Malaysian manufacturing and service industries grew
by $US13.7 billion. She immediately warned, however, that global
economic uncertainties made it unlikely that the rate of investment
would continue. Of particular concern to the regime is the prospect
of a recession in the United States and the rise in oil prices
to historic highs.
Malaysia would be particularly affected by a US slump. Nearly
75 percent of Malaysias exports are manufactured goods.
The US is not only a major customer for its electronic and electrical
products, but US demand also lies behind much of the export market
for Malaysian goods in Asia as a whole. Overall exports increased
by just 2.7 percent in 2007, while exports to the US fell sharply
by 14.5 percent. Malaysias export growth was maintained
only by increased sales to Asia, which grew by 6.2 percent and
now comprise 63 percent of the total.
Despite increased foreign investment last year, Malaysia faces
fierce competition for funds from China, Vietnam, Singapore and
Thailand. The 2007 UN Conference on Trade and Development World
Investment Report provided some gauge of Malaysias fall
from grace in international financial circles. The report shows
that Malaysia has slipped to 64th place on the Inward Foreign
Direct Investment Performance Index, compared with fourth place
in 1990.
A major factor in investor attitudes is the refusal of successive
administrations, and Badawis in particular, to significantly
modify the Malaysian governments New Economic Policy (NEP),
which was adopted by UMNO in 1971. The NEP provides preferential
treatment to ethnic Malay-owned business, at the expense of Chinese
and Indian minorities and foreign capital. This has resulted in
the domination of large parts of the economy by politically protected
firms, generally owned by a section of the Malay ruling elite
close to UMNO. The nepotistic arrangements are considered an obstacle
to profitability by transnational investors.
Added to government concerns over the rates of export growth
and investment, rising inflation is fueling social discontent
within the country. The rise in world oil prices to between $US90
and $100 a barrel is expected to force Badawi to announce a reduction
in fuel subsidies some time this year, pushing petrol and other
fuel prices up sharply. Fuel and gas subsidies currently cost
the state budget an unsustainable $US12 billion a year, according
to a report published by the Asia Times.
Even without a rise in fuel prices, inflation was expected
to rise in 2008 to 2.9 percent, up from the 2 percent last year.
If the fuel and gas prices are raised, analysts predict inflation
will reach 3.8 percent, preventing the government from lowering
interest rates to counter any impact of falling economic growth.
There were widespread protests following an earlier fuel price
hike rise in 2006. Under conditions of general economic uncertainty,
further rises will aggravate anti-government sentiment.
A demonstration in the capital Kuala Lumpur on November 10
last year was the largest protest march in Malaysia in nearly
a decade. More than 30,000 people rallied in defiance of massive
police intimidation to demand reforms to the electoral system
and equal access to the countrys tightly controlled media
for non-BN political parties.
The demonstration included representatives of the main opposition
partiesthe National Justice Party (Keadilan), the Islamist
Parti Islam se-Malaysia (PAS) and the ethnic Chinese-based Democratic
Action Party (DAP). The presence of large numbers of young urban
and working class Malays in this rally rang the alarm bells within
UMNO.
Two weeks later, a protest by at least 10,000 ethnic Indians
clashed with police. The demonstrators demanded an end to economic
and political discrimination against the Indian minority, who
make up about 7 percent of the countrys 27 million population
and are among the most economically disadvantaged layers.
The nervousness in the BN regime has been reflected this year
in its use of brutal state repression to shut down any new signs
of social discontent.
A protest on January 26 by several hundred people in the centre
of Kuala Lumpur against rising prices was set upon by police.
In a vicious crackdown, 56 people were detained.
On February 16 police again broke up a small demonstration
of around 300 ethnic Indians in the city demanding the release
of leaders who were detained during the November 10 protest. At
least 160 people were detained. Justifying the crackdown, Badawi
told the official news agency Bernama: People who disrupt
the elections do not respect the democratic process.
The calling of early elections is the means by which the BN
leadership hopes to prevent the opposition parties from increasing
their support by appeals to the broad political, social and economic
grievances among the population.
Anwar blocked
One factor in Badawi setting the election for March is to prevent
former deputy prime minister and UMNO leader Anwar Ibrahim from
standing as a candidate for Keadilan and potentially becoming
the opposition leader in the new parliament.
Anwar is banned from standing for public office until April
due to a 1999 corruption conviction. Anwar was framed up on charges
of sexual misconduct and corruption following a bitter falling
out with then Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad over how to respond
to the 1997 Asian economic crisis. In opposition to Mahathirs
insistence of maintaining the NEP, Anwar advocated economic restructuring,
as demanded by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and international
investors.
Anwars policies would have meant opening the economy
to greater foreign competition and domination by removing the
patronage enjoyed by UMNO-protected businesses. After a brief
internal power struggle, Anwar was expelled from UMNO and the
government. He became the target of false politically motivated
charges after he organised mass rallies demanding political reforms
and calling for the removal of the BN coalition.
Badawi denied that the question of Anwar was involved in the
decision to call the snap poll. Anwars party, Keadilan,
only held one seat in the former parliament. Anwar, however, speaks
for a substantial layer of the Malay, Chinese and Indian business
elite who believe their interests are being compromised by the
continuation of UMNOs economic policies. Last September,
during the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Australia,
Anwar denounced UMNO and its NEP as protectionist
and as representatives of the past, totally corrupt and
irrelevant who risked turning Malaysia into an economic
basket case.
After Badawi replaced Mahathir in 2003, he promised economic
and political reforms. Five years on, his administration is accused
in both Malaysian and international financial circles of having
squandered the chance for substantial change following Mahathirs
departure.
Given its overwhelming parliamentary majority, the BN coalition
is confident that it will be able to retain government despite
the growing resentments to its rule from a variety of quarters.
Anwars association with IMF pro-market reforms enables
UMNO to accuse the opposition of being fronts for foreign interests.
Further assisting the BN coalition are sharp internal divisions
amongst the various opposition parties. The Chinese-based DAP
will not enter into a formal alliance with PAS due to its reactionary
demand for Islamic sharia laws.
The UMNO leadership is also calculating that it will benefit
from the electoral gerrymander that gives rural electorates greater
weight. Rural ethnic Malay areas are expected to vote solidly
in support of UMNO rather than the Islamist PAS. Rising world
rubber and palm oil prices have led, according to government figures,
to an increase in the incomes of small landowners of 300 percent
from 2004 to 2007.
Nevertheless, the decision to call the snap poll demonstrates
that the governing elite fear that long-term trends pose a real
danger to their rule. Badawi and UMNO are sending a clear signal
that they want to take elections off the agenda for another five
years so that they can suppress any political and social unrest
produced by international economic upheavals.
See Also:
Malaysian police crack down on protest
over price rises
[1 February 2008]
Malaysia: Large protest
in Kuala Lumpur demands electoral reforms
[16 November 2007]
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