by Abdar Rahman Koya (South-East Asia, Crescent International Vol. 37, No. 12, Safar, 1430)
By-elections in Malaysia are fought with the same vigor, if not more, as the general election. Why this is so remains a mystery, especially when the ruling party still has a comfortable majority in parliament despite the drubbing it got in the general elections last March.
But in a country with highly racialised politics, in which each political party needs to prove that its support base is multiracial although its manifesto may not be, by-elections are used to gauge not only the people’s sentiments about the ruling party, but also how a certain community — Malay, Chinese or Indian, the three major communities in the country — perceive the government in the context of their own communal issues.
The outcome of the January 17 by-election in a constituency of almost 100 per cent Muslims, as is the case in the east coast parliamentary constituency of Kuala Terengganu, had been eagerly awaited by observers to see how far the parties fare in the Malay heartland. The seat, held by an MP from the ruling United Malay National Organization (UMNO) before his death, was won with a razor thin majority to beat the Islamic Party’s (PAS) Mohamad Sabu last March; this time, a PAS candidate won the seat with a quadrupled majority.
One thing many agree with is that the win is not PAS’s alone, although its machinery and support in the east coast of the Malay Peninsula, part of the Malay-Muslim heartland, cannot be underestimated. But thanks to the still standing “agree-to-disagree”-type cooperation with former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim’s People’s Justice Party and the ethnic Chinese-centric Democratic Action Party, a victory for PAS was predicted after winning over support from the once impenetrable non-Muslim electorate, tiny but decisive amid an almost equal political split among Malays.
While most observers say that the defeat spells trouble for prime minister-in-waiting Najib Razak, after Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi steps down next month, there are other dimensions to interpret the results. One of these is that it put to rest the suspicion about the opposition coalition’s grassroots support. While the Malay mainstream media repeatedly played the Malay racial card to hammer the message that Anwar has an anti-Malay agenda, it was thought that the opposition was more dependent on non-Malay votes. Its stance on issues such as equal opportunity for all races in the government sector, as well as a pledge to do away with controversial pro-Malay policies, has been exploited by the ruling coalition. On the other hand, the non-Malay component parties in the ruling coalition have been playing their own racial card to woo non-Malays, and their favorite bogeyman is PAS and its stance on the Islamic state and Shariah, calls which surface periodically either as a reminder of the party’s hard-to-achieve goal or for political mileage to assuage criticism from grassroots members.
Playing with issues to appeal to different people, it would seem, is not the ruling parties’ monopoly. During the last few years, opposition parties too have learnt the art of shuffling the racial card, although it is done with subtlety.
During the Permatang Pauh by-election that saw Anwar’s comeback to parliament last September, issues such as Anwar’s relationship with the West and his proposal to dismantle the New Economic Policy that favors ethnic Malays in jobs and education, as well as the vile allegations of sodomy, were played to the maximum to turn the Malay-Muslim voters against him. Although he won with a bigger majority, the presence of a sizeable non-Malay electorate was thought to have given him the edge, and thus the argument that Malays were solidly behind him could not be conclusively proved.
This time around, all such perceptions have been shattered. Not only did the government fail to exploit some of the genuine failings and weaknesses of the opposition coalition due to its own shortcomings and image, it also failed in the character-assassination campaign against Anwar. The reason was the Israeli attack on Ghazzah thousands of miles away.
The Palestinian issue has always been passionately highlighted in the Malaysian media and politics. During the last two decades, then strongman Dr Mahathir Mohamad and his popular foreign policy earned Malaysia respect from Muslims worldwide. Malay-sia’s more developed status in terms of its economy and education, compared to other Muslim countries, has also raised expectations for it to be more actively involved in a number of issues.
This time around it was no different and with a by-election occurring at a time when the Israeli aggression was reaching a climax, politicians from both sides, including non-Muslim politicians hitherto disinterested in issues such as this, lost no time coming out strongly in defense of Palestine. Calls were made to boycott American products and suspend the Free Trade Agreement talks with Washington; different groups also rushed medical supplies to Ghazzah’s Rafah border with Egypt, donation boxes were placed in public places and a series of lectures and forums were held to educate the public on the history of the Palestinian resistance, in addition to the usual demonstrations across the country. All these took place during the campaign for the by-election.
Anwar capitalized on these developments; he used his parliamentary time to debate a motion on Ghazzah urging the government to summon the US ambassador in the country. He said the government need not waste time waiting for Barack Obama to move into the White House because of his sympathies for the Zionists. Anwar called for a regional action plan with Muslimneighbors Brunei and Indonesia to set an example to Arab governments that he described as meek and hopeless. These are rare words from a man who has been widely criticized for his more than friendly ties with shady Western characters. The debate was attended by diplomats and ambassadors; the US and Britain however decided not to surprise anyone by being absent.
This culminated in a rare show of unity in Parliament, with a motion passed demanding Israeli leaders be tried for war crimes, making Malaysia, with Iran, as the only Muslim country to have made such a strong condemnation of Western backing for the killings in Ghazzah.
When an election is contested based on a coalition of parties with a plethora of issues, it is sometimes difficult to tell which party emerged as the winner even after the results. In this case, one can say that PAS was not the clear winner in the by-election; instead, it was Anwar, who managed to redeem his political and personal image, at the same time managing to sustain opposition momentum among non-Muslims against UMNO and the status quo.
Clearly, Anwar’s charisma and his prime ministerial image linger on to give the ruling UMNO a beating he had longed for since his prison days. This despite his failure to bring down half-a-century of UMNO-led rule through defections of MPs as he had promised last year, and despite the falling price of petrol that was for a short while thought to be the golden rule to gauge the government’s popularity.
Meanwhile, as Badawi prepares to hand over power to Najib Razak in March, UMNO cannot afford a replay of the loss in Kuala Terengganu. The last thing the ruling coalition wants now is a government backbencher to kick the bucket.
But the day will also come when Anwar too will be shown to be a mere mortal. This is a scenario that few in the opposition parties want to entertain at this time as they dance to the beat of their newfound good times tune.