Pakatan Rakyat Malaysia in Sarawak – You must be joking!


By Sim Kwang Yang

PRM

So Gabriel Adit and some other like-minded people are going to form a new party called Pakatan Rakyat Malaysia (PRM) in Sarawak.  Dr. John Brian Anthony even claimed on his blog Dayak Baru that the new party had been registered with the Registrar of Societies a few days ago.

I know Gabriel personally.  A long time ago, I used to drink in the same pub in Kuching with him, sometimes every afternoon.  It is hard for me to bad-mouth him, though Internet commentators are beginning to bad-mouth him already.

Some fair comments on this latest development are still apt and possible.

First of all, it is very difficult to form a new political party in Malaysia, and Sarawak is no exception.

 

Years ago, I was hired to make an application to register a new political party in Sarawak.  I did all the paper work, and was invited to meet the then Deputy Home Minister, at the time when Dr. M was the Home Minister in charge of the Registrar of Societies.

The Deputy Minister told me that only the PM had the power to approve application for the registration of new political parties and new newspapers, so I had to wait.  Soon, word reached me that the PM Dr. M had rejected the application submitted by me, because of the objection of the Sarawak CM Taib Mahmud.

I wonder if they do things differently nowadays, but I doubt it.  For a new political party to be formed in Sarawak, the PM surely has to be consulted, and in the true spirit of mutual back-scratching in the Barisan Nasional, the PM would surely consult the Sarawak CM.

Therefore, for the new PRM to be registered, surely its registration would have received the blessing of the CM Taib Mahmud – for obvious reasons.

Too many instant politicians

Am I unhappy with Gabriel Adit for leaving PKR for the new PRM?  Not one bit!  In fact, when he joined PKR amidst much fanfare last year, I was worried for the PKR.  He has too much political and financial baggage, and he could become a huge liability for the Sarawak PKR.  Now that he has decided to leave PKR and go form the PRM, PKR is one toxic asset less.

 Anwar

That is why I disagree with Anwar Ibrahim’s method of recruiting instant politicians who had been with the BN.  Their political baggage is simply too tainted for comfort.  It is far better to recruit new people, young and old, from the untainted masses of middle class Sarawakians, like the retired police or army officers, former civil servants, and even new graduates.

Apart from the opposition DAP, PKR, and PAS, political parties in Sarawak depend on very strong financial backers to survive.  There is the huge cost needed in running a party structure, to pay administrative personnel and the office rental, and to fund the election war chest.

In the old days, party funding was one of the main fuses that caused the SNAP to split up in two.  Party funding also became a contentious issue with PBDS, to the extent that you could say money is the cause of all political evil in Sarawak.

READ MORE HERE



Comments
Loading...