The DAP believes all that is needed to topple BN’s 55-year reign of
“cronyism, corruption and abuse of power” is for the bulk of the three
million newly-registered voters to vote against the ruling coalition.
“If
70 percent (2.1 million) of these voters cast a vote against the BN, it
would deliver 123 parliament seats to Pakatan, enough to form a new
government in Putrajaya,” said party parliamentary leader Lim Kit Siang
in a statement.
However, he clarified that this is assuming that the 2008 voting patterns still prevail.
Though
Lim did not mention if his prediction accounted for the distribution of
the new voters and where they will vote, a detail that may decide if
their presence will give an impact or not.
The three million
voters would not make much of an impact overall, if all were registered
as voters in already opposition-friendly Federal Territory of Kuala
Lumpur, for example.
Lim was referring to the almost three
million newly-registered voters on the electoral roll since the 2008
general election, almost a quarter of the 13 million total voters in the
current electoral roll.
Approximately 60 percent of these voters are below the age of 60.
“Many
of these voters have been motivated to register because of the
possibility of political change in the next general election,” posits
Lim.
He believes that a new generation is rising up to reject the
old style politics of the Mahathir Mohamad era, as evidenced by the
1998 Reformasi and the more recent Bersih electoral reform movement.
Lim
claimed this goundswell was responsible for the political tsunami which
swept BN away in Kedah, Penang, Perak and Selangor and took away their
two-thirds parliamentary majority.
The role of the
newly-registered voters, he argued, is even more crucial with the
alleged presence of the many phantom voters in the electoral roll in
what is expected to be the dirtiest elections in Malaysian history.
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