A NEW government that comes into power through a bottom up process might be tempted to go too far and too fast in their reforms, said an academic today.
Nottingham University Politics school and International Relations head Prof William Case said abrupt, radical reforms might trigger authoritarian backlash.
“Sack all the civil servants, cancel stake contracts, dismantle NEP and turn back on China. Do all these things, do it quickly and see what happens,” he said at a Post-GE14 conference titled Making Democracy Deliver at University Malaya today.
The bottom up transition refers to the upwards progress of an organisation from the lowest levels.
Case said the transition of power to the new Pakatan Harapan (PH) government had been “encouraging and peacefully executed”.
However, he stressed that things may go south for PH if the government is too abrupt with their actions and decision-making.
The new PH government had recently scrapped projects that were initiated by the previous government, such as the MRT3 line and the Malaysian-Singapore High-Speed Rail (HSR) project.
The PH government is currently trying to fulfill 10 policy pledges which the coalition promised to accomplish within 100 days in power.
However, some had told the public to give PH time.
Rev Clarence Devadass, director at the Catholic Research Centre in Kuala Lumpur had told Malaysians to be patient with the new government while Umno veteran Rafidah Aziz had also advised PH to discard the 100 days timeline, saying that it is not practical.
Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad also said it would take more than 100 days for PH to fulfil the 10 promises as the coalition did not know the damage that had taken place in the country.
Meanwhile, Case also said other factors that could go wrong for the PH government is if PH falls apart and fails to undertake reforms.
“The third reason, which is much more dangerous, is if BN (Barisan Nasional) grows aggressively nativist. They may also team up with PAS and unleashes right-wing populism,” he added. – June 2, 2018.
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