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Thursday, May 22, 2025

Is This What The Feng Shui Fellows Predicted For June 2025?

 Rule No 1 Again - No Names. 

Someone wrote this. I dont know who. I have "edited" it.

From Wannabe To Has Been

1. Their Leadership Dilemma: “Nepo Baby” Narrative and Internal Party Tensions

The claim that it is becoming a “family political party” is not new, but it’s gaining renewed traction. The Nepo Baby (a lacklustre character with no substance) push within the party, especially if groomed as the heir apparent, adds weight to criticisms of nepotism. This risks alienating reformist supporters who joined the party believing in justice, not dynastic succession.

                                           Kim Only - Grandfather, Father, Grandson

If tensions between the Kameleon-Nepo Baby and the Mr Formula-aligned bloc deepen, a serious internal fracture could emerge. Mr Formula's potential walkout—with a dozen MPs or more—could fatally undermine Kameleon's already fragile grip on power.

OSTB: My advice. Settle for cash. Big money. Really, really big money. It is NOT illegal. In Malaysia there are absolutely ZERO political funding laws.

2. The Fragile Coalition Math: No Party Cohesion, No Unity Government

The current unity government—built on an uneasy alliance of fox, rat, pig, donkey, cow and others—relies on Kameleon and careful power-sharing. A weakened party will disrupt that balance. If Kameleon loses even 10–15 MPs from the party the numbers tilt dangerously toward collapse.

OSTB: Haiyya no need lah so dramatic. My advice. Settle for cash. Big money. Really, really big money. It is NOT illegal. In Malaysia there are absolutely ZERO political funding laws.

Dumbno is unlikely to remain loyal to a dwindling party, particularly if it sees better long-term prospects aligning elsewhere. Sarawak and Sabah are pragmatic players—they won’t risk their state-centric priorities on a sinking federal ship.

3. The Sabah & Sarawak Neglect: A Strategic Misstep

Our observation that Sabah and Sarawak issues—like the Petros tussle—are being sidelined resonates strongly in East Malaysia. Federal neglect, or the perception of it, fuels East Malaysian nationalist sentiments. If Kameleon is seen as prioritizing internal party reshuffling over addressing MA63 commitments or economic autonomy, he risks losing Sarawak and Sabah.

4. Rocket's Position: Stuck Between a Rock and a Hard Place

Rocket (with its not so solid Chinese-majority base now compared to three years ago), holds the second-largest seat count.  But without a functioning Kameleon to lead the coalition, Rocket's hands are tied. A Rocket-led government without Malay-majority partners is politically untenable in today’s landscape. Hence, Rocket may eventually push for a broader, more ethnically palatable realignment—even if that means deserting Kameleon and join PN.

5. Future Scenarios: From Wannabe To Has Been?

If the party fractures and Mr Formula exits with his bloc:

Ÿ    Kameleon may lose his majority, especially if some Sarawak / Sabah MPs follow suit.

Ÿ    Dumbno may realign, either working with PN or pushing for fresh elections.

Ÿ    A new majority could form, possibly PN-led or through a post-Kameleon realignment (perhaps with a compromise PN PM candidate acceptable to both sides).

In short, the unity government is fragile, and our skepticism about its durability is not unfounded.

Mr Formula is a bigger political player in terms of influence within Parliament, while Nepo Baby, appears symbolic, rhetorical as a hollow 'Puteri Kena Tendang'. 

But if perception hardens around nepotism, the party's reformist image will be severely damaged—triggering the very collapse that many anticipate.

OSTB: The reformist image is now in the dustbin. Too late. They will get kicked out so hard they will feel as though they are being launched on Elon Musk's Starship rocket to planet Mars and beyond. One way trip.

Final Word

Malaysian politics remains highly fluid. The next few months—especially post-Sabah state elections—will be telling. If Kameleon prioritizes family over reform and fails to contain internal dissent, the countdown to “has been” may begin.

By No Name Shop - 22 May 25

OSTB: My advice. Settle for cash. Big money. Really, really big money. It is NOT illegal. In Malaysia there are absolutely ZERO political funding laws.

  • Woi, someone should ask, how valuable is the Federal gomen? 
  • What is it worth? 
  • RM1 billion? RM2 Billion? RM3.0 billion?

I repeat: in this country it is absolutely LEGAL to settle political differences over a cup of tea, over a bag full of goodies, over a truck load of moolas (its a type of samosa).  Because there are no political funding laws in Malaysia at all. 

  • Is it ethical? 
  • Dont be an idiot ok. 
  • This is Malaysia. 
  • Ethics have no place at all. 
  • Fathers have no morals, mothers have no qualms.
  • Suddenly you want ethics? 
  • Lu tak ada otak kah?
  • That is my advice to Mr Formula. 
  • This will be the end of his career. 
  • You are going to be history bro. 
  • You are not Kim Jong Un.
  • In just a few more days you are going to lose your perch. 
  • So why walk away empty handed? 
  • Assemble your thoughts, gather your forces and make a deal. 
  • Make some money.

 


Here is some bonus advice - also for free. Your party is going to get kicked out anyway. In the next elections. So even if you win - which is almost impossible - your clock is ticking anyway. You are living on borrowed time.

  • So make a deal, take the money and say your goodbyes. 
  • These types of opportunities come only once in a lifetime.
  • What is the worth?
  • RM1 billion? RM2 billion? RM3 billion?
  • it is not illegal.

The views expressed are those of the writer and do not necessarily reflect those of MMKtT.

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