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Thursday, June 11, 2015

NAJIB PLOTS SNAP GE TO SHUT UP DR M: PM bets on 2/3 majority win as Pakatan IMPLODES

NAJIB PLOTS SNAP GE TO SHUT UP DR M: PM bets on 2/3 majority win as Pakatan IMPLODES
A number of political analysts have been predicting over the last few months that Najib Tun Razak, prime minister of Malaysia and head of the Barisan Nasional (BN) government, will call for a snap poll to consolidate his position and that of BN.
Najib will find that a Cabinet reshuffle to oust Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin and other ministers who have refused to declare 100% support for the way he is handling the multi-billion 1MDB financial debacle won't be enough to help him stay on as PM and Umno president.
Already dubbed the 'weakest' PM, he has to 're-buy' Umno support and one effective carrot to draw in the greedy Umno warlords is the gift of a stab at a seat in parliament or the state assembly, where lucrative contracts exchange hands.
A win by the Umno-BN will also close the door on the onslaught by arch enemy Mahathir Mohamad, and with the Pakatan Rakyat shaking and Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim behind bars, Najib is counting on a fairly easy win.
The analysts believe Najib will sell the GE idea to the Umno and BN top councils on the basis that he wants to take advantage of the Pakatan's weakness and try and win back a two-third majority in parliament that he might be able to govern the nation without any hindrances or obstacles.
But are these analysts reading the situation right and will Najib really dissolve parliament and call for a snap poll? These are troubling times for everybody in the country and whether a snap poll will set the situation right is a point of debate.
True the opposition is in disarray with their former leader, Anwar Ibrahim, languishing in jail and the tripartite coalition of PKR, DAP and Parti PAS are pulling in different directions over conflicting issues that has caused BN to realize that this might be the right time to gain more seats over them.
But the present political scenario is hard to read and it just possibly might backfire on Najib and BN if they assume that they can just roll over the opposition as PR have proven over the last decade or so that they are no pushover.
Springing a surprise
PM Najib
While the opposition coalition are disunited and DAP and Parti PAS are at loggerheads with each other over the issue of implementing hudud laws, the governing coalition of BN is also at its weakest ebb over issues of governance and other factors affecting the country.
With dissident politician Anwar Ibrahim in jail, the opposition might just be beneficiary to a whole lot of sympathy votes for him as many Malaysians feel his conviction of sodomy is really a conspiracy that is meant to stifle him from making further progress in his political career.
Issues of the day such as the Goods & Services Tax, the worsening environmental conditions and climate change and the rising prices of goods and services are among the factors that might cause the opposition coalition to spring a surprise if snap polls are held.
If Najib seriously goes for a snap poll at a time when his personal popularity is waning and people are troubled and upset of the governance and especially the finances of the country, he may well have to pay the price of losing even further ground in a snap poll.
Reading the situation
The reality on the ground is that both sides are facing troubles of their own and the outcome of a snap poll is hard to predict as based on the present political climate, it can go either way and both sides have an equal chance of securing governance from Putrajaya.
But if analysed a little deeper, a snap poll could turn out to be in full favor of PR. This is because there is a strong possibility that PKR, DAP and Parti PAS would temporarily reconcile their differences to square off with BN in a snap poll.
This is something that can be achieved although how they settle their differences after a snap poll might turn out to be a nightmare of the worst kind. But the possibility that they will warm up to each other just for the sake of winning a 14th general election is likely.
On the BN side of the coin, it looks as if more and more Malaysians are beginning to cast doubts and aspersions as to whether the governing coalition has reached the expiry date of its rule of Malaysia which has been exclusively held by them since 1957.
The ground realities when weighing the pros and cons of a snap poll is that both sides have their weaknesses and both sides have their strengths. But it is really how they measure up on Election Day that will be able to tell who wins and who loses.
History in the making
If a snap poll is expectedly called by Najib and BN and there really is the 14th GE held in the near future it will be history in the making as never before has a general election been called at a time when the political situation is chaotic and filled with so many uncertainties.
It is surprising that there actually are political analysts who wholeheartedly believe that Najib will go for a snap poll because he is unlikely in the near future to be able to sort out the problems and crises that are plaguing his term as prime minister.
With BN having so many issues unsettled and facing so many uncertainties, the likelihood of Najib going for a snap poll is risky and it is evident that while nothing is for sure, it is also becoming increasingly difficult to read the voting trends and pattern of the Malaysian electorate now.
But if Najib is pushed to the brink, and faces the stark reality of having to step down as prime minister, he might just be tempted to toy with the idea of having a snap poll and gamble on the unexpected that BN can win back the favor of the Malaysian electorate.
But this will mean he will have to break the bank and bend over backwards to buy the votes of Malaysians and it just might be that the young voters who are clamoring for change in this country might not fall for his tricks this time round. - Malaysia Chronicle

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