The election chest is empty, chaos threatens BN, the overseas
bolt-holes paid for with taxpayers’ money look increasingly inviting to
corrupt politicians and Malaysians no longer feel that the government is
on their side.
(With apologies to the composer of the popular children’s song below)
There’s a hole in the budget, dear Rosmah, dear Rosmah,
There’s a hole in the budget, dear Rosmah, a hole.
Then mend it, dear Najib, dear Najib, dear Najib,
Then mend it, dear Najib, dear Najib, mend it.
There’s a hole in the budget, dear Rosmah, a hole.
Then mend it, dear Najib, dear Najib, dear Najib,
Then mend it, dear Najib, dear Najib, mend it.
With what shall I mend it, dear Rosmah, dear Rosmah?
With what shall I mend it, dear Rosmah, with what?
With an AES, dear Najib, dear Najib, dear Najib,
With an AES, dear Najib, dear Najib, with an AES.
There’s a hole in my budget, dear Rosmah, dear Rosmah,
There’s a hole in my budget, dear Rosmah, a hole.
Use your head, then! dear Najib, dear Najib, dear Najib,
Use your head, then! dear Najib, dear Najib, use your head!
With former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad taking potshots at him
from the fringes and many in his own coalition undermining him, isn’t it
time someone put Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak out of his misery?
Few in his party consider him a capable leader and it does appear as
if Najib is the only one who believes that he is up to the job. Either
this prime minister has hidden talents, or we are blind to his
abilities.
The date for GE13 has yet to be announced but the one-sided
pre-election campaign has dragged on interminably. Najib has been busy
criss-crossing the country whipping-up support for BN. He is in his
element, with all spin and no substance to his rhetoric.
The rakyat may be weary of listening to Najib’s praise for BN’s
development programme, track record and experience. They may tire of the
opposition being bashed by BN. They might even switch off when both
ruling and opposition members have a go at each other; but come GE13,
they know which box to mark their ‘cross’.
Najib’s ploy to exhaust the rakyat with electioneering may actually
backfire. He is already seen as indecisive and a man who fears facing up
to his problems.
The rakyat are aware that opposition MPs are not perfect. They are
impressed with the track record of the opposition-led states of Selangor
and Penang, and they empathise with the Kelantan people who are
deprived of development, by Putrajaya.
At least one man Najib can count on
Najib must have heard from his intelligence unit that BN is in deep
trouble, but there is at least one man Najib can count on. This person
is hoping for continuity, at least where his own position is concerned;
but things are not looking too good for him either. He is Perak Menteri
Besar Zambry Abdul Kadir and he has come up with a cringeworthy slogan
which should appeal to the self-indulgent Najib.
Last Thursday, Zambry was on hand to fete Najib at a ‘Promises
Fulfilled’ event held in Lumut, where the PM unveiled the ‘Negeri Aman
Jaya 1Malaysia Bersatu’ or ‘NAJ1B’ concept.
Zambry said that NAJ1B combined the ‘None Missed, None Marginalised’
slogan, under which he claimed all Perakians were able to reap the
benefits of a BN administration.
Cynics merely mocked the latest obeisance of the Perak MB and said
that one typographical error at the end of the acronym would lend a
different meaning to the soundbite, whilst others wondered if the ‘N’ in
NAJ1B stood for Najib’s narcissistic tendencies.
The more we hear Najib speak, the quicker we want him out of office.
He may describe himself as virtuous and a champion of the people, but he
does appear to be out of touch with the rakyat.
When invited to speak at MCA’s 59th Annual General Meeting (AGM), Najib (centre in photo)
and the MCA leaders said nothing meaningful. Their rhetoric was limited
to attacks on neighbouring countries and the opposition.
Najib then insulted the intelligence of the Malays when he said: “If
they (the DAP) are really multiracial, I dare them to contest in a
Malay-majority constituency… The Malays have had enough of DAP, all
rubbish.”
If the Election Commission (EC) would do its job properly and
election boundaries were properly apportioned and gerrymandering was
disallowed, perhaps Najib would like to test his “Malays are fed-up”
theory.
Instead of a DAP candidate contesting in a new and fairly demarcated
Malay majority constituency, how about pitting an Umno candidate there?
Najib might be shocked to learn that even Malays would not vote for the Umno candidate.
Malays are disappointed with Umno, and tired of being fed lies when
Umno leaders justify corruption, money laundering, abuses of power and
injustices. They are sick of the corrupt judiciary and police force, the
shambolic EC and an inept civil service.
Like bit players in a bedroom farce
As far as many Malaysians are concerned, the MCA, like the MIC, are like bit players in a bedroom farce.
MCA president Chua Soi Lek appeared to encourage attacks on the
opposition and responded to criticism of these with: “….. election is
very near. And a good leadership should always be sensible and sensitive
about its environment.
“While the AGM is always a platform for policy, laying out policies,
we feel that this is not the time to talk about policy because the
general election could be two, three months away.”
Earlier, the MCA Wanita vice-chairperson Heng Seai Kie (left in photo) accused PAS spiritual leader Nik Aziz, of condoning the rape of non-Muslim women who did not adopt the Islamic dress attire.
This time, Malays from various political persuasions believe that Heng and MCA have overstepped the boundary.
Did we hear Heng speak out in support of the Penan child rape
victims? On the day she made her statement, did she realise that it was
the sixth anniversary of the murder of a Mongolian model by Malaysian
policemen, allegedly on the orders of a very senior Umno politician? Did
she condemn the protection afforded to a cabinet minister who had
allegedly raped his maid?
With Heng’s insult, rumours about a reconciliation between Umno and
PAS, to unify the Malays, were scorched. The Chinese have abandoned MCA,
just as the Malays have abandoned Umno.
If the MIC really wants to prevent gangsters from infiltrating Indian
youth, why not channel the monthly payment of RM30,000 made to S Samy
Vellu into an holistic scheme to help the Indian youth. Businessmen from
India are quite capable of generating business links in Malaysia
without a special envoy.
Almost every day, there is a manifestation of the corruption that
festers within the BN government: Whimsical election hand-outs, money
laundering, money smuggling, illicit outflows and overpriced government
tenders. The Automated Enforcement System (AES) aka speed trap, hides a
discrepancy of RM407 million between the actual purchase price and that
which was tabled in parliament.
At the end of the day, ‘BR1M’ might as well stand for ‘Bankrupt
Rakyat 1Malaysia’. Najib’s ‘1Malaysia’ is bankrupt of ideas, as well as
being fiscally and morally bankrupt.
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