New Year resolutions for Pakatan Rakyat


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THE Pakatan Rakyat (PR)’s People’s Uprising Rally, dubbed KL112 by some, passed without any major incidents last Saturday. Is the PR any closer to winning power federally? What New Year resolutions do PR parties need to make to stand a real chance at becoming the next federal government and retaining the states they hold?

Wong Chin Huat, The Nut Graph 

Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR)

Challenges

This Malay-dominated multi-ethnic party has prided itself as being centrist, not so much economically, but as a party between the religious PAS and the secular DAP. It likes to believe it is a party of tomorrow embraced by the middle ground. However, the sad truth is, it is less attractive than both PAS and the DAP. It is not Islamic enough compared with PAS, not Malay enough compared with Umno, and not liberal enough compared with the DAP. It, therefore, risks being seen as an inferior good in the eyes of communal voters on both ends.

What about the middle ground? The fact is, there may not be a simply defined and unquestionable middle ground. Because we are a bipolar society, the middle ground in one community may be considered radical in another. Take the use of the word “Allah” by non-Muslims. What view would the “middle ground” hold? And if PKR does markedly worse than PAS and the DAP in the next elections, PKR may be more torn between the differently defined middle grounds, not knowing which one it should fall back to.

Suggested resolutions

PKR certainly needs to think more non-communally. More than that, it should recognise that its real niche is not to bridge the divide between PAS and the DAP but to enable the articulation of so-called communal issues by the “ethnic others”, as PAS did two years ago. PAS’s support of non-Muslims’ right to use “Allah” two years ago was a major coup against Umno’s communal game. It was a powerful political statement when an Islamist party defended non-Muslim rights and spoke against the zealots in its own community.

PKR should strive to offer real reconciliation and solidarity in a similar way. Instead of having less extreme Malay leaders talking about Malay issues, bold non-Malay leaders should take up issues close to Malay interests and vice versa. For example, PKR non-Malay leaders could advocate measures to prohibit private sector discrimination, while its Malay leaders talk about about inclusive recruitment of civil service. So, instead of offering moderation in a form inferior to PAS and the DAP, can PKR offer exchanges of role and build trust, which PAS and DAP cannot do as credibly?

PAS

Challenges

PAS’s contradictory stand on whether non-Muslims can use “Allah” shows that it is in an identity crisis. Some party leaders are apparently anxious over the attacks of Datuk Dr Hasan Ali and Nasharudin Mat Isa that the party is betraying its Islamist ideals in moving to the middle.

PAS’s anxiety is due to its own success in transforming its image. It is now more successful in its secondary market – the non-Muslims – than its primary market – the Muslims. Support for PAS among Chinese Malaysians has risen from between 10% and 20% to possibly beyond 50-60%. This should not come as a surprise, thanks to its mainstreaming efforts and also Umno’s extremism, especially after 2008. However, among Malay Malaysians, it is still second to Umno. PAS’s support can hope to rise beyond 50% only after winning federal power, which would accord it more resources.

PAS’s Nasharudin Mat Isa

How can PAS return to its comfort zone by winning higher support among Muslim Malaysians? The quickest way is to simply chase away some non-Muslim votes in the hope of gaining some Muslim votes. The manner in which a non-Muslim unisex salon in Kota Baru was fined and the temporary about-turn on Allah both signify this trend to restore PAS’s psychological balance. But the trade-off may not pay off as they risk chasing off more votes than they can win back.

If PAS loses some mixed constituencies in the next elections without winning back more Muslim heartland seats in compensation, this would certainly make the hardliners more relevant in the party. So the party’s loss may actually benefit some individuals within the party.

The opposition made significant inroads in the 1990 and 1990 general elections, but due to PAS’s zeal in Islamisation, this contributed to the disintegration and decline of the opposition fronts in the subsequent 1995 and 2004 general elections. If it is not careful, PAS may again save Umno and Barisan Nasional thanks to its own fear of success.

Suggested resolutions

PAS should just live with the fact that it will continue to be more popular among non-Muslim Malaysians than Muslim Malaysians, at least until it enters Putrajaya with its partners. Playing to its gallery at the communal flank risks shooting itself in its foot, and damaging the PR’s electoral chances in the process.

To console itself, PAS should ask a simple question: Is it Islamic banking’s fault that it is more popular among the non-Muslims than the Muslims? If higher non-Muslim support has not made Islamic banking less Islamic, similarly PAS shouldn’t feel less Islamic due to non-Muslim support.

Read more at: http://www.thenutgraph.com/uncommon-sense-with-wong-chin-huat-new-year-resolutions-for-pakatan-rakyat/ 

 



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