Thursday, March 18, 2010

Targetting The Biggest Ass

Targeting The Biggest Ass
M. Bakri Musa


Johore UMNO leaders had apparently told Prime Minister Abdullah that he
must have a succession plan that is "structured, smooth and speedy." This
three "S" strategy missed targeting the biggest ass of all, Abdullah
himself. The initiative had more to do with saving Abdullah's "face"
than with solving the grave problems confronting the party.
If UMNO members and leaders were serious, they would focus on
getting this harsh and unadulterated message straight to Abdullah: He is
unfit to lead the party and country. He has clearly demonstrated this
through his deeds (or lack of them) and words. The man is a habitual
liar; he cannot separate fact from fiction and distinguish reality from
fantasy.
Abdullah's idea of taking responsibility for his party's
electoral debacle is merely to utter that statement. He has no inkling
of what it means to accept responsibility.
Abdullah's pleading that he is needed to "revive" the party is
laughable and self serving. If he could not pilot his ship of state
competently when it was calm, there is no hope that he would be any more
capable when it is now stormy, and threatening to get even more so every
day. Abdullah is the problem, and a very huge one at that. Consequently
his moving out would be a big part of the solution. It would not solve
everything of course, but it would remove a major impediment.
His "leadership" has been nothing more than endless
sloganeering (Work with me, not for me!"), like the leader caricatured in
Shahnon Ahmad's short story, "Ungkapan" (Sloganeering).
Having grown accustomed to the perks and trappings of his
office, Abdullah will not leave voluntarily, much less gracefully. He
has to be literally dragged out. Subtleties and hints will not work on
this man. He is too dumb to read the signals. He is also insulated,
surrounded by courtiers ever willing to spin bad news.


Only Three Exit Strategies

There are only three ways to get rid of Abdullah. One is for him to be
successfully challenged as party leader in the upcoming UMNO General
Assembly in December. Two, would be for a sufficient number of the
ruling coalition members to vote with the opposition in a "no confidence"
motion in Parliament. And three of course, would be through divine
intervention, not inappropriate for a man who is never shy in parading
his piety and religiosity.
Knowing the onerous obstacles placed in UMNO towards
challengers, the first option is unlikely. Granted, Tengku Razaleigh –
the only one to have come out publicly to challenge Abdullah – is a
formidable challenger. More daunting however, is the cultural inertia of
Malays, especially those in UMNO. They have yet to learn the essential
lesson that challenges and competitions are healthy, not acts of treason
or betrayal.
The second path is more realistic. The political resurgence
of Anwar is real. Far from being the "Anwar who?" of a few years ago, he
is now increasingly viewed not only as the de facto leader of the
opposition (even though he is not yet in Parliament) but rightly as Prime
Minister-in-waiting.
Anwar will be able to contest a parliamentary seat once his
statutory prohibition ends on <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns =
"urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />April 14, 2008. A vacant
seat will surely come up soon as Malaysia has a good track record of MPs
dying in office or getting caught in some scandalous acts and thus having
to resign. More likely though would be for one of the current PKR MPs to
resign, not to pave the way for Anwar (though that would be the
convenient and acceptable excuse) but because the job is not as glamorous
or challenging as it is made out to be. Many PKR MPs are successful,
young and honest professionals; their "elevation" to the "Yang Berhormat"
(Your Honorable) status cuts deeply into their income and career
prospects.
As for divine intervention, that is beyond my purview.
However many a leader had used "medical" reasons as a convenient
face-saving cover for resigning. Abdullah could always blame his
hemorrhoids or narcolepsy (a pathologic tendency to doze off).


Abdullah Is The Problem

When Abdullah assumed office nearly five years ago, I was one of the few
who were not enthused about his leadership potential. My conclusion was
based on reviewing his performance as a minister. I predicted then that
by the time Abdullah leaves office, Malaysians would be counting their
blessings if he had not screwed up the country too much, and that the
best we could hope for was for him to maintain the status quo.
Alas, I was wrong. I had not counted on the maturity and
resilience of Malaysians in overcoming Abdullah's gross incompetence.
Malaysians are also incredibly generous as demonstrated by their giving
him a rousing endorsement in the 2004 election in the hope that it would
give him the necessary boost and confidence to lead. Unfortunately that
too could not override his basic ineptness.
In their collective wisdom, in this recent election Malaysians
decided that it was not necessary to deal a crippling blow, only enough
punch that would leave Abdullah and UMNO reeling, and in the process
trigger an implosion in an already corrupt and dysfunctional
organization.
Equally remarkable, Malaysians also demonstrated that they are
capable of executing peaceful political change. There was not even a hint
of civil disorder following Barisan's loss of five states. Compare that
to 1969 and the horror that followed when the ruling coalition lost only
one state.
To be sure, had the election been conducted free and fair,
with no stuffed postal ballots and with the use of indelible ink to
prevent fraudulent voting, the ultimate message would have been
delivered, and Abdullah and his ilk would have been kicked out.
Perhaps it was better this way. For had the Barisan Nasional
been voted out, there would have been a dangerous political vacuum as
none of the opposition parties could form a government. Their loose
coalition, the Pakatan Rakyat (Citizens' Alliance) had yet to be
ratified. Now having sensed that power is within their grasp, the
opposition parties are ready and willing to sink their differences for a
common cause.
Meanwhile UMNO and its coalition partners are galloping fast
towards their collective demise. Their course is irreversible.
Thankfully my earlier dire prediction on Abdullah was
misplaced. Abdullah has not destroyed Malaysia, only UMNO and Barisan
Nasional. Malaysians can all count their blessings for his legacy not
being any worse.


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