GO ahead and leave Barisan Nasional, its secretary-general Mohamed Nazri Aziz told MCA which celebrated its 70th anniversary yesterday.
He said the ethnic Chinese component party can do this on its own instead of asking the former ruling coalition to dissolve.
Nazri said he didn’t understand MCA’s resolution, made at its annual general assembly in December, for BN to dissolve as the matter was academic since such a move required Umno’s agreement.
“They can leave. Do what Gerakan did, what PBB (Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu), what component parties in Sabah all did.
“All of them left and there was no problem. So, I’m puzzled with MCA, if they want to leave, just leave then, no one is asking them to stay,” Nazri told The Malaysian Insight.
Umno will not agree with MCA’s request and the matter was not even been raised at the BN supreme council, he said.
“It is actually academic, you know, the question about dissolving, because if Umno doesn’t agree, then MCA’s request cannot be implemented. That’s it,” said Nazri, the Padang Rengas MP.
He said the BN supreme council has not been meeting lately as coalition parties are busy campaigning first for the Cameron Highlands by-election in January and now, the Semenyih by-election this Saturday. Another by-election is expected in Rantau, Negri Sembilan, in the next two months.
“I have not received any order from the chairman to hold a BN meeting and without a meeting, we can’t discuss the matter,” Nazri added.
MCA at its AGM on December 2 passed a resolution for BN’s dissolution and for a new coalition to be formed.
Party president Dr Wee Ka Siong sent a letter on December 12 to the BN secretariat requesting a BN supreme council meeting for MCA to submit its resolution.
Such a meeting has yet to take place, as soon after the MCA AGM, Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi went on leave and handed over his duties to deputy president Mohamad Hasan.
A BN supreme council meeting scheduled for January 7 was then postponed indefinitely, with parties busying themselves with the Cameron Highlands by-election on January 26.
BN is now left with three parties – Umno, MIC and MCA – the founding partners of the pre-independence Alliance coalition.
It entered the 14th general election last May with 13 components but the coalition’s loss at the polls and change of federal government saw members leave, beginning with parties in Sabah and Sarawak, followed by the peninsula-based Gerakan last June. – February 28, 2019.
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