How did it go so wrong for Zahid?


Chan Kok Leong

Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi handed over his duties to his deputy, Mohamad Hasan, after facing growing pressure within the party to quit. – The Malaysian Insight file pic, December 20, 2018.

THE son of Javanese parents, Ahmad Zahid Hamidi reached the pinnacle of Umno when he became its seventh president on June 30 this year.

Under normal conditions, he would have been prime minister by virtue of also being the Barisan Nasional chairman.

But BN failed to retain the government after ruling for 61 years and Zahid inherited the unenviable task of keeping the party together and the wolves at bay.

Among the first things the 65-year-old tried to do was to get its lawmakers to sign statutory declarations to remain in the party and promise that the party will be back in business within two years.

Yet less than six months into his presidency, Zahid has had to watch helplessly as Umno members of parliament and assemblymen quit the party one by one until it is now left with 37 from the 54 federal seats it won in the 14th general election.

Added to that is the almost full dissolution of its Sabah chapter last week after four MPs and nine assemblymen quit Umno.

The final straw was on Tuesday night when the Umno president said he was relinquishing his duties to party No. 2 Mohamad Hasan after growing calls from within the party for his resignation.

So, what caused Zahid’s collapse?

International Islamic University Malaysia’s Tunku Mohar Tunku Mohd Mokhtar said: “I think Zahid was unfortunate to take over a party that was demoralised after the defeat of BN in the last general election.

“The party itself is also in denial, believing that it has the support of the Malays. The fact is Umno is a component of Barisan Nasional and while it was the dominant party, it still needed the non-Malay component parties.”

The political science lecturer said many in the party leadership felt that Zahid did not give any clear direction to the party after taking over.

“He wanted to form an alliance with PAS and he also allowed his men to open up discussions with PKR and Bersatu,” said Tunku Mohar.

Ahmad Zahid Hamidi with PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang at the PAS muktamar in September. The two Malay-Muslim parties have been working together since GE14. – The Malaysian Insight file pic, December 20, 2018.

Zahid surprised everyone in September when he decided to cosy up to arch rivals PAS by attending their annual general meeting.

Although PAS returned the gesture by sending its own delegation to the Umno general assembly, its president, Abdul Hadi Awang, gave it a miss. Also missing for the first time at the Umno gathering was its oldest political ally MCA.

Being the opposition has tested Zahid’s leadership qualities and the calls for his resignation showed that he was not the type of leader who could take followers through uncharted waters.

He also failed to convince the party of its cooperation with PAS.

“And simultaneous ‘negotiations’ with PKR and Bersatu showed that he was still an opportunist,” said Tunku Mohar.

“Apart from attempting back-door comebacks, he has not shown that he can rebuild or try to convince the former components to come back to BN.”

Former Umno deputy Youth chief Senator Khairul Azwan Harun said acting president Mohamad Hasan must now chart a new direction for the party.

“Forget about going into the government coalition for now. Rebuild and strengthen the party first. Also don’t accept those defectors who have deserted the party,” said Khairul.

“We need to relook into the party DNA and strategies to win GE15.”

He said this was a cleansing phase for Umno.

“And hopefully, Mohamad will be able to stop more MPs from leaving.

“But we can’t stop everyone or those who have a personal agenda. Let them go,” said Khairul.

For Khairul, Zahid’s problems were due to the deteriorating support from members after the party elections, his ongoing court battles and the intense factionalism within the party.

“But I must commend Zahid for his big heart. He has displayed exemplary spirit by taking a step back.”  

After the elections, Zahid was slapped with 46 charges of criminal breach of trust, bribery and money-laundering.

He could face more charges yet, after anti-graft authorities said on Sunday that they received a complaint against him over alleged money politics in the Umno elections and could commence investigations if the report has merit.

Ahmad Zahid Hamidi faces 46 charges and his legal woes have hindered his duties to lead Umno. – The Malaysian Insight file pic, December 20, 2018.

Zahid’s political career began in 1986 when he was appointed political secretary to Najib Razak during the latter’s tenure as youth and sports minister and later as defence minister.

He won his first party elections when he was elected Umno Youth chief in 1996 after winning the Bagan Datuk parliamentary seat in 1995.

Two years later saw Zahid jailed under the Internal Security Act after the turmoil in Umno that saw then deputy president Anwar Ibrahim sacked from the party and jailed for abuse of power.

Then an Anwar loyalist, Zahid was accused of speaking out against Dr Mahathir Mohamad over cronyism and nepotism in the government.

Dr Mahathir, in retaliation, publicised the names of those Malays and Bumiputeras who had received shares and high positions in government-linked companies with Zahid among the beneficiaries.

His political career, however, was unscathed by the political detour and in 1999 and he was accepted back into the Umno fold, but not before blaming the present PKR president Anwar for putting him up to raise the allegations of cronyism and nepotism.

His return from the political brink was complete when he successfully defended the Bagan Datuk seat in 1999.

After winning Bagan Datuk for the third time in 2004, Zahid was appointed deputy tourism minister by then prime minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

In the political tsunami of 2008, when many of his peers in Umno and BN lost their seats, Zahid managed to cling on to his seat.

His reward was a full cabinet appointment as minister in the Prime Minister’s Department.

In the cabinet reshuffle in 2009, Zahid was appointed defence minister by then prime minister Najib.

After the 2013 elections, he was appointed home minister in a portfolio swap with Hishammuddin Hussein who took over Zahid’s defence portfolio.

His loyalty to Najib and protecting him over the 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB) financial scandal saw him being appointed deputy prime minister in the July 2015 cabinet reshuffle in place of Muhyiddin Yassin, who was sacked for publicly questioning Najib about the scandal.

Amid mounting calls for his resignation as Umno president now, how Zahid handles this will show the quality of his leadership and that staying in the number one post depends on far more than loyalty and patronage. – December 20, 2018.


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Comments


  • The Javanese man has no standard lah. In fact there ain't many Melayoo leaders in BN aka UMNO. It's more thugs than proven sincere leaders.

    Posted 7 years ago by Jackal Way · Reply

  • When one does not have what it takes , it is always in the believe that you ain't the right one and miseries will follow suit. That is why the saying goes " if you can not chew it , please pass it along". Zahid spiralling climb to the top post was due to him being a loyal and dedicated apple polisher. He will bravely put himself in the front of any demanding situation to be noticed but all for the purpose of an opportunity. He can be an extreme bigot , extremist , racist or anykind that demands of him as long as he is noticed as the man. That explain his wannabe thuggish behaviour but in actual fact a coward devoid of intelligence. In conclusion he is just a misfit to land himself into the high post beyond his dreams , all due to the stroke of luck from a disturbed miscalculation which created an irrationale environment leading him to being selected as Umno President. Good as long as he is able to take and he can bear the brunt of onslaught of negative energy but for how long when one is not the right choice and do not possess the capability to take it head on. So end of chapter.

    Posted 7 years ago by Lee Lee · Reply

  • Zahid is more of political clown than a leader. He manoeuvred his way to the top by aligning himself with those in power. The karma hits back at him now.

    Posted 7 years ago by Awang Bilis · Reply

  • Bye bye, Uruk-hai!

    Posted 7 years ago by Antares Maitreya · Reply

  • UMNO is a den of thieves.
    Thieves kill thieves when no loot.
    Without the chief ,more thieves will run.
    Some thieves will quit.
    Some thieves will disguise.
    Some thieves will sing.
    Some thieves will be caught.
    Poodah

    Posted 7 years ago by SmartTraveler * · Reply

  • Zahid ni nampak sahaja baik tapi dalam masa yang sama dia la god father gangster yang terbesar kat malaysia ni - sepandai pandai tupai melumpat jatuh juga dia ke bumi

    Posted 7 years ago by Teruna Kelana · Reply

  • Zahid was certainly wearing a hat which is much much bigger than his head, so to speak. So how can he lead his party when he cant see the roads ahead?

    Posted 7 years ago by Rupert Lum · Reply

  • Umno aka a gangster party...its not going to help Malaysians..the name stinks

    Posted 7 years ago by Will Be Humble · Reply