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Malaysia PM faces limited future after worst electoral showing

StarshipTroopers

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset

Malaysia PM faces limited future after worst electoral showing


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Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak (C) and his other party leaders celebrate after winning the elections at his party headquarters in Kuala Lumpur early May 6, 2013.
Credit: REUTERS/Stringer

By Niluksi Koswanage and Stuart Grudgings
KUALA LUMPUR | Mon May 6, 2013 9:43am EDT

(Reuters) - Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak may have to step down by the end of the year, ruling party sources said on Monday, after his coalition extended its 56-year rule but recorded its worst-ever election performance.

Najib, 59, had staked his political future on strengthening the ruling coalition's parliamentary majority in Sunday's general election on the back of a robust economy, reforms to roll back race-based policies and a $2.6 billion deluge of social handouts to poor families.

But he was left vulnerable to party dissidents after his Barisan Nasional coalition won only 133 seats in the 222-member parliament, seven short of its tally in 2008 and well below the two-thirds majority it was aiming for.

It also lost the popular vote, underlining opposition complaints that the electoral system is stacked against it. Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim's People's Alliance won 89 seats, up 7 from 2008 but still incapable of unseating one of the world's longest-serving governments.

Anwar, a former deputy prime minister, said in a statement on Monday that he would not accept the result because it was marred by "unprecedented" electoral fraud. He has called for a rally in the capital Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday.

Undermined by the result, Najib now faces a difficult task persuading his dominant United Malays National Organization (UMNO) to press ahead with economic reforms and phase out policies favoring majority ethnic Malays over other races.

"We could see Najib step down by the end of this year," said a senior official in UMNO, which leads the coalition.

"He may put up a fight, we don't know, but he has definitely performed worse. He does not have so much bargaining power," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, still a powerful figure in UMNO, told Reuters last year that Najib must improve on the 140 seats won in 2008 or his position would be unstable.

Kuala Lumpur's stock market .KLSE surged nearly 8 percent in early trade to a record high on investor relief that the untested opposition had failed to take power, but later gave up some gains to close 3.38 percent higher. The Malaysian ringgit jumped to a 20-month high.

Ethnic Chinese, who make up a quarter of Malaysians, continued to desert Barisan Nasional, accelerating a trend seen in 2008. They have turned to the opposition, attracted by its pledge to tackle corruption and end race-based policies, undermining the National Front's traditional claim to represent all races in the nation of 28 million people.

MCA, the main ethnic Chinese party within the ruling coalition, only won seven seats, less than half its 2008 total.

Najib, the son of a former prime minister, said he had been taken by surprise by the extent of what he called a "Chinese tsunami." Alarmingly for Najib, support from ethnic Malays also weakened, particularly in urban areas, a sign that middle-class Malays are agitating for change.

Najib, who polls show is more popular than his party, could face a leadership challenge as early as October or November, when UMNO members hold a general assembly and elect the party leader.

"In the next round of elections within UMNO, you will see some dissidents emerging and asking for Najib to resign," said the official, who has held cabinet positions in government. He said Mahathir would be among those who back the dissidents.

ANWAR CRIES FOUL

Barisan Nasional also failed to win back the crucial industrial state of Selangor, near the capital Kuala Lumpur, which Najib had vowed to achieve.

"Najib is now leading a coalition that lost the popular vote, a coalition that will really struggle to prove its legitimacy," said Wan Saiful Wan Jan, head of the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs in Kuala Lumpur.

"My feeling is it's not going to be very easy for him."

Investors had hoped that a strong mandate for Najib would enable him to push ahead with planned reforms such as subsidy cuts and a new consumption tax to reduce Malaysia's budget deficit, which is relatively high at around 4.5 percent of GDP.

Those reforms now seem in doubt, Credit Suisse said in a report on Monday, although Najib is expected to push ahead with $444 billion Economic Transformation Program aimed at boosting private investment and doubling per capita incomes by 2020.

For Anwar, the election was likely the last chance to lead the country after a tumultuous political career that saw him sacked as deputy prime minister in the 1990s and jailed for six years after falling out with his former boss, Mahathir.

His three-party opposition alliance had been optimistic of a historic victory, buoyed by huge crowds at recent rallies, but faced formidable obstacles including the government's control of mainstream media and a skewed electoral system.

Anwar, 65, had accused the coalition of flying up to 40,000 "dubious" voters, including foreigners, across the country to vote in close races. The government says it was merely helping voters get to home towns to vote.

"My heart is with every Malaysian who does not accept the results," Anwar said in his statement.

Malaysia's Bersih (clean) civil society movement, which has held large rallies to demand electoral reform, joined Anwar in withholding recognition of the result, saying it needed to study numerous reports of fraud.

(Additional reporting by Yantoultra Ngui and Siva Sithraputhran in Kuala Lumpur and Saeed Azhar in Singapore; Writing by Jason Szep and Stuart Grudgings.; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

 

StarshipTroopers

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The message you have entered is too short. Please lengthen your message to at least 10 characters.
 

halsey02

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Asset
But LHL faces unlimited future despite poorer and poorer showings

It is SIngaporeans who face a LIMITED income & restricted entry to the caSINoes, while his income is unlimited & does his "you know who", have unlimted credit to wager in the financial markets for a long term, without even having to step into any caSINoes...:p
 
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StarshipTroopers

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset

Malaysian elections expose serious divides


6 MAY 2013, 9:12 PM - SOURCE: AAP

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Malaysia's governing National Front polled 5.22 million votes to the opposition's 5.49 million but retained power in weekend elections.

Wearing a bright blue shirt and a grim expression, Prime Minister Najib Razak appeared before the media on Monday to sombrely acknowledge that his coalition had won general elections for the 13th time in a row.

He had reason to be cheerless. The National Front coalition's victory in Sunday's parliamentary elections despite losing the popular vote, has not only exposed the entrenched racial divide in the country but also a new schism - between the rural poor who preferred the status quo and the urban middle-class who wanted change.

Healing the divisions will be a big challenge for Najib, who took the oath of office Monday to begin his second five-year term after surviving the fiercest challenge to the National Front's 56-year rule. If left untended, the racial and social divisions could undermine the stability of Southeast Asia's third-largest economy.

On the face of it, the National Front appears to have done well. It won 133 seats in the 222-member Parliament - down a fraction from the 135 it won in 2008. The opposition People's Alliance coalition led by Anwar Ibrahim won 89 seats. But look deeper and the numbers carry a grim story for Najib:

The National Front polled 5.22 million votes to the opposition's 5.49 million votes, according to calculations by The Malaysian Insider, an independent news website.

The National Front banked heavily on three states with large rural populations - Sarawak, Sabah and Johor - where many people from indigenous groups and the ethnic Malay majority are beholden to the government for handouts traditionally given to them. The three states alone, out of Malaysia's 13, accounted for more than half of the 133 seats won.

People in many urban areas - especially Chinese who are Malaysia's second largest ethnic group - voted overwhelmingly for the opposition, reflecting the huge disenchantment with the government's affirmative action policies that favour Malays.

Speaking at the news conference, Najib blamed a "Chinese tsunami" for the coalition's performance.

"On the whole, the people's decision this time shows a trend of voting polarisation," Najib said.

"This worries the government, because if it's not handled well, it could spark tension."

Many opposition supporters also believe the coalition resorted to fraud to win, including using migrants from Bangladesh as illegal voters. The government and electoral authorities deny it.

Despite losing the popular vote, the National Front benefited from gerrymandering of constituencies.

In Sarawak, on Borneo island, nearly all of the six constituencies won by the opposition had between 26,000 and 40,000 voters each.

In contrast, the National Front won 20 seats in Sarawak, where each constituency had about 10,000 voters.

"What we are seeing here is a regime that has used the trappings of power to stay in power," said Bridget Welsh, a political science professor at the Singapore Management University.

"The reality is that many people will see this election as an election bought and stolen. There will be a huge trust deficit for the National Front."

The results also reflect the complexities of modern-day Malaysia, which evolved from a 1950s backwater of rice paddies and tin mines into a country where cities like Kuala Lumpur and its famous Petronas Twin Towers are only an hour's drive from rural rubber and palm oil plantations.
 

The_Hypocrite

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Well Najib won the erection,,,he could have lost it and have no future..but if he won due to fraud and stole the erection, he might just get overthrown. This time the demonstrations might get bigger and worse,,how will BN run the country like that? Have to admit, m&ds are more savy politically and are more willing to take to the streets.
 

Ash007

Alfrescian
Loyal
Mudlaysian, like Sinkies, only kpkb, if not they won't have accepted the status-quo for 56 years. The only difference this time is that they have a better opposition with actual results. Its a good small step in the right direction. I doubt there would be large scale protest like in Thailand.
 

Pocong

Alfrescian
Loyal
505 BLACKOUT !!!

<iframe src="https://www.facebook.com/video/embed?video_id=506866542695050" width="400" height="320" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 

Pocong

Alfrescian
Loyal
Got Balls ?

<iframe src="https://www.facebook.com/video/embed?video_id=124291347770720" width="720" height="1280" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 

Pocong

Alfrescian
Loyal
“ 停电10分钟,一切已成空 !”:看看台灣新聞如何報導馬來西亞黑暗的選舉!

这是在馬來西亞永远都看不到的新闻!

<iframe src="https://www.facebook.com/video/embed?video_id=499312906789956" width="640" height="360" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 

escher

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
But LHL faces unlimited future despite poorer and poorer showings

Sinkies have no fucking future and destined to have even more billions reaped off from them for
smear of shit on sole of shoe LKY Stinkgapore sovereriegn funds to join that 800++ billions LKY screwed and fucked from singkies already.

ALL PRAY PRAY PRAY THAT LKY WILL BE EATING JOSS STICKS WITH WORMS EATING HIM FAST FAST
THEN WE ALL HAVE A CHANCE FOR OUR OWN FUTURES

AFTER WE ALL FIRST GO YUMM SENG YUM YUM YUM
SENG
 

Satyr

Alfrescian
Loyal
But LHL faces unlimited future despite poorer and poorer showings

The man with the golden spoon. I laughed when I heard him congratulate Najib on his "well deserved" win. Is he saying Najib deserved to get such a mediocre win ?
 

zeddy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Its an open secret in Malaysia that Najib is under Mahathir's thumb.. Make no mistake about this.. Mahathir is still an influential figure in UMNO, similar situation to our Old Fart in the PAP..

My guess is, there will be infighting within UMNO sparked by Mahathir to fasten the departure of Najib as the PM.. Many senior UMNO warlords are quietly unhappy with the results of the GE..

Watch out for DPM Muhyyidin Yassin.. This guys is a smiling tiger that abandoned Abdullah Badawi when the latter as the then PM was slammed by his Party members for the poor 2008 GE showing.. In the end Abdullah was ousted out of power.. History might repeat itself..
 

winners

Alfrescian
Loyal
Najib will surely be booted out at the next UMNO assembly, partly instigated by Mahathir. Muhyyidin will come in as the new head of UMNO, aka the new PM. The local Chinese community will be at his mercy and if things were to get worse, there'll be mass exodus of the Malaysian Chinese (for those who can afford) to emigrate.

The result of the GE13 had become a big disadvantage for the local Chinese. The majority had taken the risk to vote for the opposition but now that the BN is still the federal government, I doubt they won't get punished for their disloyalty.

Frankly, I would rather that they had continued to support Najib in this recent election and give him a larger mandate than Badawi. Thereafter, give him the next 5 years to clean up his act. I believe he needs the stronger mandate to override his warlords within UMNO and only then can he be a fairer leader. Furthermore, by the next election, Mahathir would probably be gone and Najib can then exercise more command and power within UMNO without the old man around. But now, all these hopes have been vanished. The Malaysian Chinese should have asked themselves: Do they want Najib or Muhyydiin? Who is the better of these 2 for their Chinese community in the forthcoming future?

The above are just my own views.
 
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jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
The man with the golden spoon. I laughed when I heard him congratulate Najib on his "well deserved" win. Is he saying Najib deserved to get such a mediocre win ?

Silver spoon, not golden. The guy before him? Wooden spoon.
 

ray_of_hope

Alfrescian
Loyal
Its an open secret in Malaysia that Najib is under Mahathir's thumb.. Make no mistake about this.. Mahathir is still an influential figure in UMNO..

Not as simple as you make it out to be. Mahathir detests S'pore and was sorely upset when Najib struck such extraordinary economic deals with S'pore.
Mahathir would have never given up Tanjong Pagar railway station, not even for many billions of dollars...
 
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