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I WAS asked this question: “What if voting for Pakatan Harapan (PH) brings back Mahathirism and create another disaster for Malaysia?”
My answer is it may.
But for me, the present Barisan Nasional (BN) government under the leadership of 1MDB-tainted Prime Minister Najib Razak poses a clear and present danger to this nation.
What is at stake is not just the economic well-being of Malaysians but the very social fabric of our multi-ethnic and multi-cultural society.
To stay in power and escape prosecution, he has shown he is prepared to compromise with religious fundamentalists to change the secular nature of this country and deploy more draconian laws against dissenters.
Mahathirism as an ideology.
If you are talking about Mahathirism as an ideology of repression, racism, cronyism and corruption, you already have its full manifestation in Najib’s Umno.
Dr Mahathir laid the foundation for Mahathirism but Najib has taken it to the next level with unbridled kleptocracy.
Furthermore, time is on Najib’s side. He is 65-years-old while Dr Mahathir is 92.
Can personal ambition be Dr Mahathir’s motivation? Unlikely. Some would say he is paving the way for his son Mukhriz or his ultimate goal is to merge with a defeated Umno minus Najib.
Perhaps. Again, we are dealing with speculations versus present reality.
I choose to take a chance with Pakatan Harapan, even one led by Dr Mahathir because my fear is any other choice would lead our nation to eventual ruination.
Another reason I favour Pakatan Harapan is Mahathir’s Bersatu party does not dominate Pakatan Harapan the way Umno does Barisan Nasional.
Whether it will one day is again in the realm of speculation.
But as it stand, the way electoral seats are allocated, no one party in Pakatan could dominate or impose their agendas on the others.
It is in this power tension that consensus decision-making is more likely to take place and we should find safety in such balance of power.
More commitment to reforms
Pakatan Harapan has not been silent on commitment to reforms either.
Mahathir committed to reforms that deal with corruption, political funding, two-terms limit for the PM and generally on the need for separation of powers between the executive, legislative and judiciary.
Granted it could and should go further with details of institutional and electoral reforms but these are definitely steps in the right direction.
Voting in an election is about making a choice. Some may begrudge this time round we are presented with two unpalatable options and they had to choose between the lesser of two evils.
But hasn’t it always been that? When was there a coalition that was perfect, good and reflects all our ideals?
Never and that will never be. I put it to you that it has always been a choice of the lesser of two evils or to the more positive-minded, between the better of two good.
Rise of a Third Force?
Some think if Pakatan Harapan fails to seize power this time and got totally annihilated, it would cause such a great disillusionment with establishment politics it would usher in a Third Force.
Personally I doubt a truly radical third force could arise from the ashes of political abyss post-GE14.
If PH does collapse; new actors, new alignments and perhaps a new name will take its place.
The so-called third force itself would have to make compromises with parties that are race-based, religious, regional and ideologically incompatible.
Such is the nature of politics. You have to make compromises to accommodate the views of those you don’t agree with.
It is not about selling-out. It is about representation, maintaining harmony, having consensus and building a nation.
Change is a long and arduous process
Does this mean we lose sight of our goal of building a democratic and inclusive society where all are treated with dignity, where people are given equal access to education, practise their beliefs (or not), to business, to healthcare, etc?
Absolutely not.
We cannot lose sight of our ideals but getting to those ideals is a long-term goal because change is often a slow and arduous process.
It is not an event called the general election. Elections are the opportunity citizens have to express their choice of which coalition best represent their
aspiration.
The emphasis is on “best represent” not “best”.
No rivers are absolutely straight when they begin their journey from the mountains. They have to meander through valleys, rocks and other obstacles before they reach the sea.
Likewise, achieving our ideals of a mature and functioning democracy requires navigating around obstacles and making compromises and accepting Plan B.
Sometimes it look like it’s regressing but as long as it is flowing, it is not.
Participation in expressions of democracy like voting is to keep that river flowing, it cannot stop.
If we still cherish the idea of democracy, voting is sacrosanct, a sacred duty of every citizen.
Conclusion
Understandably many are disillusioned and disappointed with the state of politics and even of democracy itself.
But as Winston Churchill said: “Indeed it has been said democracy is the
worst form of government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time.”
It may not be perfect but it is still the best form for citizens to peacefully express their choice and effect peaceful transfer of power. – January 31, 2018.
#EveryVoteCounts
* Thomas Fann is chairman of Engage
* This is the opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insight. Article may be edited for brevity and clarity.
Comments
Posted 8 years ago by Bigjoe Lam · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Orenji Lingo · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Malaysian First · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Malaysian First · Reply
To me Mahathirism is just a way of governance where we put our trust in a charismatic personality to lead us forward instead of putting our trust on our institutions or laws or any particular ideology.
As an ideology, i think it is an hodge podge of an ideology because its principles are taken from different ideologies from all over the world and mixed in a way that is unique to us by a leader whom we trust has our best interest at heart.
As a way of governance, i think it is going to be a one-man sort of governance that is iron fisted in nature - it would be one man-ish because to have a powerful second that is almost equal to the first has a destabilising effect on this sort of governance ; this sort of governance is best when there is just one big man at the top supported by a team that is subservient to his authority, and it will be iron fisted because the charismatic leader and his team would probably have to punch their way through the existing powers structures - be they the constitution or the parliament or the courts or the institution of royalty - in order to take the people where the charismatic leader has promised to take them.
Am i ok with the return Mahathirism - hell yeah - sometimes i think Mahathirism or Lee Kuan Yew-ism is the only way to govern the people of this region.
Also, i think a parliamentary democracy where you have many people sharing power and governments changing every 5 or 10 years is more suitable for a country where the government is just expected to follow the will of the people, because the people themselves know where they are going, and just need their government to expedite some matters.
In a country where people don't really know where they are going, and are composed of multifarious forces who will be perennially jostling with each other over a game of oneupmanship, i think a strong and charismatic leader in the mold of the late lee kuan yew or Dr. Mahathir who will rule over a period of 20 to 30 years uninterrupted would be better to ensure the welfare, progress and development of the people.
The only problem is , i don't think even Dr. Mahathir will be able to bring back Mahathirism today.
Posted 8 years ago by Nehru Sathiamoorthy · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Tanahair Ku · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Lee Lee · Reply