GERAKAN has challenged Chief
Minister Lim Guan Eng to clarify his position on the defection of elected
representatives to rival parties.
Up to now Lim has not made a
stand on whether he approves of such defections, which are described by state
Gerakan human rights and legal bureau chief Baljit Singh as "morally
wrong".
A government, Baljit
explained, must be chosen by the people through the election of their
representatives and therefore, those who plan to seize power through defections
should be condemned.
He said Lim had remained
silent when PKR de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim announced that many BN
parliamentarians would be crossing over to Pakatan Rakyat on Sept 16 two years
ago.
Baljit praised only one
opposition leader - DAP national chairman Karpal Singh - for having the guts to
speak out against defections and Anwar's Sept 16 plan.
"How much did Anwar
offer these representatives to cross over? Why is Lim silent about this?"
Baljit asked at a press conference yesterday.
"Or is Lim thinking of
the possibility that his father, Kit Siang, could be the first non-Malay deputy
prime minister if Pakatan manages to take over the federal government?"
Baljit was accompanied at
the press conference by state political training and education chief Rowena
Yam, publicity, information and communications bureau chief Dr Thor Teong Ghee
and state Gerakan Youth vice-chief Dr Lim Boon Han.
He was responding to a
recent news report quoting Lim as saying that he could not understand why the
federal government would not enact legislation to prevent party-hopping of
elected representatives.
Lim had also reportedly said
that he did not think the BN would do it as it needed to buy such
representatives to cross over.
Following the resignation of
two BN Sabah MPs, the ruling coalition labeled them as 'frogs', to which Lim
had supposedly replied in the media that "I don't understand (the
criticism), BN has been encouraging this culture."
Last week, Lim, who is DAP
secretary-general, rubbished the newly-established Royal Commission of Inquiry
(RCI) on illegal immigrants in Sabah as a sham.
He described the RCI as an
attempt to hide the "loss of confidence" in Sabah BN following the
defection this month of a deputy minister, a parliamentarian and a senator, who
said they were disillusioned with the ruling coalition.
According to Baljit, anyone
who defected, whether from the BN or Pakatan, is a "political frog".
The federal government
alone, he added, could not ensure that a law against defections could be passed
as both sides of the political divide would need to back it in Parliament.
In December last year, a Gerakan
team led by Baljit proposed to the Parliamentary Select Committee on Electoral
Reform that elected seats be automatically declared vacant if the
representative quits his or her party.
The proposal, Baljit had
said, was to ensure that there would be no political coup after an election and
that a by-election should be held to determine the new representative for the
constituency.
In 2009, three Pakatan
assemblypersons in Perak quit their parties and declared themselves
BN-friendly, which eventually led to the BN seizing power from the PAS-led
Pakatan administration. (Malaysian Digest)
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