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Malaysians due to vote after stunted 13-day election campaign
By John Roberts
6 March 2008
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Elections for the Malaysian national parliament and state legislatures
take place on Saturday. Economic issues have dominated the brief
13-day campaign, with government and opposition parties seeking
to address widespread concerns over inflation and the prospect
of an international downturn. Despite a growth rate of 6 percent
spurred on by strong exports, Malaysian people confront a looming
recession in the US, the countrys main market, and rapidly
rising prices, particularly for fuel and basic food items.
A survey conducted in late February by the Merdeka Centre found
that three quarters of Malaysians were pessimistic about the cost
of goods and services. The poll found that 20 percent ranked economic
issues such as inflation and jobs as their top priority in the
election, as opposed to 13 percent who nominated crime and public
safety and 11 percent who identified race relations.
The International Herald Tribune commented on February
26: The assumed peak of the economic cycle explains why
the election is being held now when [Prime Minister] Abdullah
[Badawi] could have waited a year. Judging by history, a vote
now should ensure few discomforts for the governing party.
Despite an overwhelming majority in parliament, the ruling 14-party
Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition feared that opposition parties
could make significant gains if the election were held amid a
deteriorating economy and rising social discontent.
The timing of the election was particularly intended to prevent
prominent opposition figure, Anwar Ibrahim, a former deputy prime
minister and treasurer, from re-entering parliament. Anwar is
banned from holding political office until April, due to his conviction
in 1999 on corruption charges. His conviction was part of a politically-motivated
frame-up following his bitter split with then Prime Minister Mahathir
Mohamad over how to respond to the Asian economic crisis of 1997-1998.
The BN, which is dominated by Abdullahs United Malays
National Organisation (UMNO), is virtually assured of a victory
and another five years in office on Saturday. The coalition held
198 of the 219 seats in the previous parliament, with UMNO holding
109. UMNO, which has held power in Malaysia since the countrys
independence from Britain in 1957, has substantial financial resources
and holds a tight grip over the state apparatus.
The electoral system is gerrymandered in its favour. There
are widespread allegations of electoral fraud, ranging from thousands
of deceased being left on the electoral rolls, to the rigging
of postal votes in marginal seats. Moreover, the Malaysian media
is one of the most compliant in the world. In elections, it functions
as little more than a government agency, providing blanket favourable
coverage of the BNs campaign and denigrating or censoring
the opposition.
The opposition parties are trying to prevent BN from winning
a two-thirds parliamentary majority for the first time since 1969,
thereby stripping it of the ability to change the constitution
at whim. Anwar told the media that he thought his Peoples Justice
Party (Keadilan), the Democratic Action Party (DAP) and the Islamist
Parti Islam se-Malaysia (PAS) could collectively win more than
74 of 222 seats at stake and deny Barisan Nasional a two-thirds
majority.
Keadilan is standing up to 100 candidates and hopes to win
20 to 25 seats. Anwars wife and party president, Wan Azizah
Wan Ismail, is standing again for the seat she holds and stated
on February 23: If I win, I will make way for my husband
to contest for this seat in a by-election after the ban under
the law, which bars him from contesting until this April, ends.
Anwars 27-year-old daughter, Nurul Izzah Anwar, is also
running as a Keadilan candidate.
Anwar has drawn large crowds to Keadilan rallies. The party
is promising free education, lower petrol prices, justice for
ethnic Indian protestors jailed under the draconian Internal Security
Act (ISA) and a higher minimum wage. Central to its campaign is
the call for the replacement of UMNOs New Economic Policy
(NEP) with another economic strategy.
The NEP, a communalist measure introduced by UMNO in 1971,
institutionalises discrimination against ethnic Chinese and Indians
in favour of the majority ethnic Malays. Malay-owned businesses,
in particular, are given preferential treatment. Anwar has denounced
the policy as only benefiting a small layer of the ruling elite
around UMNO, not the vast bulk of the population.
The other opposition parties have also stressed economic issues.
DAP has promised a 6,000 ringgit ($US1,877) subsidy to poor households
and vowed to attack BN economic cronyism by issuing state contracts
fairly through open tenders. PAS has pledged to set up subsidies
for small businesses, greater access to health care, lower prices
and the construction of low-cost homes if it retains government
in the state of Kelantan, which it has held since 1990.
The governments nervousness over the impact of the opposition
is apparent. BN launched a media blitz on television and in the
newspapers last month under the slogan security, peace,
prosperity. The advertisements emphasised that the governments
total spending of 43.3 billion ringgit ($US13.7 billion) to subsidise
fuel, flour, cooking oil and sugar had produced lower prices than
those in Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Singapore. All
Malaysians enjoy lower prices and have more money in their pockets
because we care ... Only one choice: Barisan Nasional, it
stated.
The BN campaign has swamped marginal seats, particularly targeting
Kelantan in order to dislodge PAS. Nationally, Abdullah has demagogically
promised to create two million jobs within five years and cut
the proportion of Malaysians living in poverty from 3.5 percent
of the population to 2.8 percent by 2010.
In order to challenge BN, Keadilan, DAP and PAS have agreed
to field only one candidate in each electorate. This means that
DAP is mainly standing in majority Chinese areas, and Keadilan
and PAS in Malay districts. The opposition parties are mired in
the same communal politics as the government and are incapable
of advancing any genuinely progressive alternative to UMNOs
rule.
Despite their populist appeals to end corruption, communalism
and inequality, Anwar and Keadilan speak for a wing of the ruling
class that has concluded that the economic protectionism and nepotism
associated with the NEP is rendering Malaysia uncompetitive in
the world market. The pro-government press never tires of pointing
out that Anwar has re-invented himself, as he loyally served in
UMNO governments for 16 years, overseeing the NEP and enforcing
anti-democratic repression of dissent.
Anwars opposition to the NEP is bound up with the interests
of more globally-oriented sections of Malaysian capital that regard
it as an unacceptable constraint in the struggle for investment
and export opportunities with their regional rivals. The logic
of Anwars economic program, including deregulation and privatisation,
would necessarily involve major attacks on wages, conditions and
living standards.
Similarly, DAP reflects the desire of sections of the ethnic
Chinese business elite for major changes to Malaysias economic
and political setup. DAP leader Lim Kit Siang has stressed in
the election campaign not only the building of a democratic
and just Malaysia, but one that is competitive.
PAS, by contrast, articulates the views of the Islamic religious
establishment and a layer of ethnic Malays in the more backward
and rural areas of the country. Its advocacy of an Islamic state
would consolidate the political position of these layers and thus
alienates the countrys substantial Chinese and Indian minorities.
In this election, PAS has played down its Islamist program in
order to reach an election deal with other opposition parties,
particularly DAP.
While Abdullah calculates that the election will enable BN
to gain another five years in office, the very fact that it has
been held early points to economic and political turmoil ahead.
In recent months, a series of public demonstrations have erupted
for the first time since 1998over demands for electoral
reform, against anti-Indian discrimination and to protest prices
rises. In each case, the government has responded with an overwhelming
police presence, arrests and arbitrary detentions.
See Also:
Malaysia to go to polls one
year early
[26 February 2008]
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