COMMENT These days Prime Minister Najib
Razak must be looking back to April 2011 when he hesitated to go
simultaneously to the polls with Sarawak Chief Minister Abdul Taib
Mahmud the same way former International Monetary Fund chief Dominic
Strauss-Kahn must look at his visit to the Sofitel Hotel in New York
last year.
Najib's
hesitation tripped him into a concatenation in which every divination
of when it would be a good time for him to seek a national mandate was
subverted by unfavourable circumstances.
It is moot whether
Strauss-Kahn's weakness for philandering would not have had him exposed
nevertheless, had he not stayed at the Sofitel where he was reported to
have had a sensational dalliance with a chambermaid that destroyed his
chances of being the Socialist Party's candidate for president of France
- he had been the odds-on favourite for the nomination.
In the
event, the stolid Francois Hollande became the Socialist Party nominee
and eventual winner of the presidential contest against incumbent
Nicholas Sarkozy, presumably leaving Strauss-Kahn with the unenviable
option of wringing his hands - or rather tightening his knickers - when
musing on the what-could-have-been.
It is doubtful Najib is the
ruminative sort. If he were, the departure last weekend of two Sabahan
members of parliament from the BN fold ought to be viewed as yet another
downdraft in a spiral that is well nigh irreversible.
Given the
unbroken series of scandals that have dogged the government since the
time Najib allowed Taib Mahmud to go to the ballot in Sarawak in April
last year, unaccompanied by simultaneous polls in the rest of the
country, the question of when is it a good time for the PM to call an
election that would give him the mandate to rule in his own right has
become a painfully stupefying one.
Pak Lah too was highly popular
A host of scandals have occurred on Najib's prime ministerial watch since April 2011.
Worse, the huge demonstrations organised by polls reform advocacy
group, Bersih, in July 2011 and last April in Kuala Lumpur have combined
to create the impression that Najib's government is in deep recession
where popular support is concerned.
True, a supposedly independent opinion survey continues to find that the PM enjoys high personal ratings among voters.
But ever since his predecessor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, was rated by an
opinion poll just before the March 2008 general election as comparably
highly placed in the public's esteem, which then did not save him from
stumbling to staggering - and office-stripping - losses in the eventual
ballot, these surveys are regarded with skepticism.
Now
with two BN MPs from Sabah having crossed over to the independent
benches, and despite cynicism about their real motives, the effect of
their departures does very little to sustain belief that the
confidence-building measures the Najib administration has undertaken
ever since taking office three years ago presage a reversal of the
electoral fortunes inflicted on the Abdullah government.
But hope
must be springing eternal in its breasts, as witness its continuing
munificence towards civil servants and Felda settlers, an extravagance
that could scarcely be justified given the state of our national debt
which is perilously close, if not already in breach of, the legal
ceiling of 55% of GDP.
Long-sitting governments in danger of
electoral repudiation are apt to resort to reckless nostrums in the hope
of extending tenure.
Spending its way to victory
With the Najib administration's tendency to throw money at places in
its fort when cleavages have appeared, do expect that there will be more
goodies doled out to its flanks in Borneo after the ructions that saw
the departure of two MPs from Sabah BN.
This is a government that
will not hesitate to open its increasingly depleted purse to beguile a
problem from accruing into a crisis.
Incidentally,
this is the centenary of the birth of a world renowned economist,
Milton Friedman, whose ideas have great pertinence to not only the
current issues in the West but also to political questions in our
country.
In his writings, the Nobel laureate flatly opposed
actions that would cause inflation. He also frowned on ‘easy money',
which in the understanding of his profession was about deficit spending.
Friedman always maintained that the Great Depression of the 1930s was
the result of government policy, not market failure. That led to counsel
state, institutions and individuals to keep their fiscal house in
order.
Of course, Friedman's writings were more than about economics; they were about life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Reading him, one would argue that a debt-strapped government that
sought to maintain its popularity by inflationary spending would convert
a downturn into a disaster.
We see too clearly from a neutral & democratic New Zealand. For these low lives & criminals, God' s nemesis will prevail. Look at Gaddafi , then Assad, when Syrians wanted fair & free elections, Assad said there were foreign terrorists wanting to topple the Gov't… now he kills them. Gaddafi and Assad weren't even democratically elected! Just like your PM - handed down from Daddy! Even watching from afar, we have reached the brink now: We call the most horrific course on these criminals. The people's power, the people's day will come.
ReplyDeleteWe see too clearly from a neutral & democratic New Zealand. For these low lives & criminals, God' s nemesis will prevail. Look at Gaddafi , then Assad, when Syrians wanted fair & free elections, Assad said there were foreign terrorists wanting to topple the Gov't… now he kills them. Gaddafi and Assad weren't even democratically elected! Just like your PM - handed down from Daddy! Even watching from afar, we have reached the brink now: We call the most horrific course on these criminals. The people's power, the people's day will come.
ReplyDelete