POLICYMAKERS must not bow to extreme groups if they are serious about nation-building, said former minister Rafidah Aziz.
“As long as we pander to groups with ulterior motives that are not for national development… this nation will never be a nation for all Malaysians,” she said in her keynote address at a forum by the Perdana Leadership Foundation in Putrajaya today.
Speaking for more than 90 minutes on “Factors impeding Malaysia’s economic progress and how to overcome them”, she talked about the “20% principle” as a personal rule of thumb.
“If 20% goes astray, it’s okay. You can work on them rather than trying to please everybody and cause the whole country to go down the drain.
“Worse still is trying to please the 20% as that’s your gallery. When politicians start playing to the gallery, that’s when the trouble starts,” said the former international trade minister, who is now AirAsia X chairman.
Rafidah cited US President Donald Trump’s politics as an example of how divisive “playing to the gallery” can become.
“When you have this gallery thinking, you will start formulating policies that are not for the nation as a whole, but for a small group of people. It’s like Trump, who talks about his base and forgets that he’s the president of the whole country.
She said the majority of Malaysians, fortunately, are reasonable and accept differences in views.
However, she said, “there is a minority who have shown xenophobic and parochial tendencies, and they have begun to infect the majority of policymakers”.
“These kinds of elements have the potential to continuously cause interracial and interfaith friction.
“When faith becomes a pawn in politics, that’s when the Taliban starts, and when people go into fight mode. But they are only fighting someone else’s political fight,” said the Bersatu member, referring to the extremist group in Afghanistan.
She also urged Putrajaya to come up with a Malaysian agenda.
“This agenda can be taken up by successive generations. It needs to have core elements, such as basic aspirations and values.”
The government can then formulate policies that meet the needs of most Malaysians, “and not just parochial needs”, she said. – August 7, 2019.
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