By : SELENA TAY
THE MONTH of September will
be upon us in a little more than two weeks time. Some political observers are
already discussing whether the 13th general election will be held in September
and some of them have opined that September is still a possibility in order to
catch Pakatan Rakyat by surprise.
Actually, September is the
only avenue opened for Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak to call for the polls. In
the field of detective work, it has been said that when all the possibilities
have been eliminated, then that which remains is the one that clinches it.
Appended below is a
month-by-month analysis right up to June next year:
1. October 2012 – the haj
season is going on and if the general election is to be held this month, PAS
will have enough reasons to shoot Umno down and the image of Najib as a Muslim
leader will be torn to shreds.
2. November 2012 – the SPM
and STPM exams are being held and school halls will be used.
3. December 2012 – end of
the year brings floods to Kedah and Kelantan and the PAS state government in
these two states will probably not dissolve the State Legislative Assemblies.
This means that these two states will still be in PAS’ hands after the polls in
December if it is to be held in December.
4. January 2013 – floods too
and also the beginning of the school season and teachers will be busy.
(Teachers are also required to participate in BN’s campaign rounds.)
5. February 2013 – Chinese
New Year. It will not be feasible to anger the Chinese in this manner.
6. March 2013 – too close to
full term which ends on April 28. The rakyat will be able to see clearly that
the Prime Minister is not a confident man.
7. April 2013 – full term.
Everyone will be able to see that Najib is cowardly and inefficient and is at
last cornered and forced to hold the polls.
8. May to June 2013 – two
months’ extension of time from April 28. Ditto as in April: cowardly and
inefficient.
As such, whether Najib likes
it or not, he has to call for the polls before Sept 17 before the haj season
begins.
RCI
on illegals
Having the polls in September
will also prevent more Barisan Nasional lawmakers from quitting. Meanwhile,
Najib has set up a Royal Commission of Inquiry to look into the problem of the
illegals in Sabah getting MyKad, which has only now merited his attention.
Be that as it may, the prime
minister is not really looking into the real problems that the nation is
facing. Has Malaysia taken concrete steps to reinforce the economy before we
are hit by the global economic downturn?
What is the federal
government doing to curb crime and reduce the number of illegals landing on our
shores? Seems that Malaysia is on autopilot.
Instead, the prime minister
is busy mulling over when to call for the polls. Already there was a major
failed attempt in June this year. It is called a “failed attempt” because in
May he was telling those who attended the Umno 66th anniversary celebrations
that he is thinking of seeking a royal audience in order to dissolve
Parliament. But nothing came out of that.
Najib should get the gold
medal in terms of being the world’s most indecisive leader.
Playing
it safe
The BN government must get
the country up and running by concentrating on economic and administrative
matters and this can only be done after the polls are held as clearer policies
can then be formulated.
Now everything is held up
while our nearest neighbour Singapore is forging ahead in terms of investments.
The prime minister can still
hold the election not later than Sept 17 by dissolving Parliament by Aug 27 the
latest. A long-time political observer, who wished to remain anonymous, opined
that Najib is the sort of person who likes to play safe in the sense that he
will not call for the polls unless he is absolutely sure that he can win big
and BN is absolutely ready for the polls.
“There is no such thing as
100% readiness although the prime minister seems unable to realise this,” said
M Manogaran, DAP’s Teluk Intan MP.
In the recently-concluded
London Olympics, a Russian diver and an American diver broke the Chinese
stranglehold on the diving event because they had the guts to perform difficult
dives when it mattered.
That is the hallmark of a
champion and this is the quality that is sorely lacking in Najib. He does not
have the courage and the conviction to go for the jugular.
“At the end of the day,
Najib’s leadership qualities are in doubt as he does not have a clear mindset
of where he is heading and in which direction he is leading the nation,” said
PAS Kuala Selangor MP, Dzulkefly Ahmad.
Therefore in the 13th
general election, Malaysians must decide whether to stick to the old and
familiar BN and remain stagnant with a clueless leadership or be brave enough
to go for change in order to improve and forge ahead to be a major player on
the world economic stage.
By the way, this columnist
is adamant that the polls will be held in September unless the prime minister
wants to prove this columnist wrong. (FMT)
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