PKR’s Tanjong Malim dilemma


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Two viable candidates – one Malay and one Chinese – are eyeing the seat 

In the 2008 election, the PKR had great difficulty in finding suitable candidates to field in this semi-urban constituency. Now, it has one too many.
 
Chen Shaua Fui, fz.com 
 
In part two of a three-part series focusing on the Tanjong Malim parliamentary seat, we look at the challenges facing PKR in picking the right candidate to stand here in the next general election

 
THE opposition in the Tanjong Malim parliamentary seat has an unfamiliar problem in the coming general election.
 
In the 2008 election, the PKR had great difficulty in finding suitable candidates to field in this semi-urban constituency. Now, it has one too many.
 
There is a laid back air about Tanjong Malim that hides the intense political attention that this constituency is attracting. Many people have left the area for higher education and in search of better job opportunities. Kuala Lumpur is an accessible 70km from the main town.
 
The electorate of some 53,000 voters consists of 53% Malays, 28% Chinese, 14% Indians and 5% others. A local politician says that Malay voters will decide who wins the coming contest, especially since there has been an increase of some 2% of their numbers since the last election, due to a rise in the number of auto workers in the Proton City in the constituency.
 
For the PKR, the lesson from the 2008 general election was that it needed to do the groundwork long before the next election if it hoped to gain the public’s backing. A young, vocal NGO worker was chosen by the party to build up support on the ground.
 
Chua Yee Ling, 29, was selected because of her track record as the councillor for Hulu Selangor, which is adjacent to Tanjong Malim. She was also an aide to Selangor state exco member Elizabeth Wong and was elected to the PKR women’s wing as an exco member in the party’s election in 2010. Chua was an active member of a youth group, Youth4Change before she joined politics.
 
Chua has been working on the ground since two years ago and has built up a team consisting of young former MCA members. In that time, she has opened two party branch offices in Tanjong Malim and Bidor towns, organised fundraising dinners and talks and walkabouts in the Felda settlements.
 
“In these small towns, you have to turn up at weddings, funerals and any social functions that are going on, so that people get to know you personally,” she tells fz.com in an interview.
 
Chua sees some change in the people’s mood in the Malay-dominated Felda areas. 
 
“Previously, we could only turn up at kenduris (feasts). Now, we can organise ceramah (talks), and the turnout  is quite encouraging,” she says.
 

Two viable candidates
 
About a year ago, Chua had to deal with a new factor. Another potential candidate for PKR appeared in the form of Jeneral (retired) Datuk Abdul Hadi Abdul Khatab, a retired air force officer.
 
The local PKR leaders want Chua to contest the seat, as they believe that a young Chinese leader like her will be able to win Chinese votes that went to the MCA in 2008.
 
The PKR Tanjong Malim division chief Mejar (retired) Kamal Badri said the division had conveyed the message to the party leadership at the state and national levels.
 
He said that during the last election, there was no Chinese candidate from the opposition to contest in the parliamentary and three state seats – Behrang, Slim and Sungkai – and he believes that this was why the 1,500 Chinese voters in Slim River did not vote for the PKR.
 
He said that Chua had been working in the area for a year before Hadi appeared in the picture, and considered that as “a little bit late.” Kamal said that the voters have seen Chua as the potential candidate, and they may not endorse Hadi if he were to stand in her place. 
 
“This will not only affect (Pakatan Rakyat’s chances for) the parliamentary seat but also the state assembly seats,” said Kamal, who is the potential candidate to contest in Behrang state seat.
 
Chua said that the party may be working on the basis that Hadi could gain the Malay votes in view his rank as a retired general.
 
Another factor, according to a Perak PKR leader who spoke to fz.com, is that the seat is being held by a former federal minister, Datuk Seri Ong Ka Chuan, and the party’s top leadership was concerned that Chua could be too young  to take on a political heavyweight.
 
On her part, Chua is being supported by the PKR women’s wing to contest the seat, to meet the 30% women’s candidacy quota set by the party.
 
However, she stressed that she has no problem if Hadi is chosen, and will work hard to make sure the party’s candidate wins the election.  “We have been going to the ground together. Let us compete to win the chance to stand in the seat,” she said.
 
Chua also pointed out that, although she and Hadi are competing with each other, they are united in the aim of making sure the party wins in the election.
 
The MCA, however was affected by factionalism, she opined, as Ong Ka Chuan’s faction and the other division leaders do not work together.
 
For example, she said, the publicity materials of MCA leaders reflect this lack of unity. While Ong has his own banner, the MCA Tanjong Malim Division Chief Loke Yuen Yow’s banner has the party president Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek’s photo on it.
 
However, Chua acknowledged that PKR needs to be cautious about the candidates it fields so as not to repeat its experience with representatives who have defected. 
 
Since 2008, at least six legislators have left PKR, including Behrang assembly member Jamaluddin Radzi, and the party’s image has suffered as the voters have felt betrayed by these defections. The party had promised to screen its candidates more strictly. 
 
Chua proposed that the party holds a debate between she and Hadi to see who is more suitable to contest.
 

The danger in race-based campaigning 
 
Hadi, when contacted, shared Chua’s view, promising that he would work hard to ensure that whoever contests the seat would win. He said he has been promoting the party rather than himself personally. 
 
“I’m selling the party, not myself. I think that should be the way,” he said 
 

 



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