Najib’s Mea Culpa: Too Little, Too Late


March 5, 2012

Najib’s Mea Culpa: Too Little, Too Late

by Terence Netto@http://www.malaysiakini.com

COMMENT Prime Minister Najib Razak presumably took a leaf from his across-the-causeway counterpart Lee Hsien Loong’s book by apologising for past mistakes of his government in an effort to recover slumping public support.

Najib offered the apology on a campaign swing through Kedah last weekend. Although the extent and content of the apology immediately stirred discussion and debate, the fact it was offered in the first place was enough to count as indicative of the PM’s perception of his position and his administration’s situation vis-à-vis the electorate.

With a general election said to be just round the corner, Najib is trying every which way to get voters to stick with his ruling coalition that is battered by scandals of a serial nature.

NONESingapore PM Lee (right in photo), who was not in a comparable plight, resorted to a similar attempt at ingratiation with the republic’s voters on the eve of that country’s general election last year.

It was a strategy that worked for him, though not for his team: candidate Lee scored 10 percentage points higher in the vote than the rest of his party’s slate which fell to a level that was the lowest in the ruling PAP’s history of participation in elections since independence in 1965.

Lee’s apology provided a modicum of balm for the hurt of an electorate smarting from the government’s better treatment of high employment-value immigrants over locals, but it could not stem a tide of resentment that saw the opposition post their best results in years.

Najib’s apology is offered in circumstances much different to that faced by his southern counterpart. Unlike Lee’s PAP, which was not anywhere near defeat by the opposition, Najib’s UMNO-BN coalition is in mortal peril of an upset by the opposition Pakatan Rakyat, in the Peninsula at least, though not in its strongholds of Sarawak and Sabah.

Corruption scandals and inept government have conduced to UMNO-BN’s parlous standing in the eyes of voters increasingly convinced that a change of government is imperative.

Hence, an apology by a PM who constantly holds out the promise of reform, is presumably aimed at telling voters that a government that acknowledges its blemishes would be contrite enough to remove them.

But as the Malay saying ‘Cakap tak serupa bikin’ (Talk is not the same as action) holds, Najib’s mea culpa would have to be accompanied by action to make an impression on the people.

Scratchy Najib-Muhyiddin duet

When challenged by the opposition to list the actions that the PM was apologetic about, Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin stepped in, as is his wont, to quell the extent of the apology.NONE

Muhyiddin was saying in effect that there was no need for BN to engage in public self-flagellation; an apology was a sufficient earnest of the ruling coalition’s desire for self-improvement and reform.

Throughout the three years of Najib’s administration, the character of his tenancy has been the same: the PM is allowed to determine the labeling of an intended raft of reform measures, but it is his deputy who determines their true import.

Hence it was not surprising that after Najib had elected to issue a public apology for BN’s past record, it was Muhyiddin who stepped in to quell any notion that deep remorse would issue in radical measures towards improvement.

Thus the one-step-to-the-fore, two-shuffles-behind character of the Najib-Muhyiddin duet of governance continues unchanged. It is a scratchy duet that the PM’s vacillations ensure it will stay in place until he can dispose of the implied threat to his tenancy of the No 1 position in his party posed by his deputy. There was a time that contest was the most significant election in the country. The general election was the preamble before the finale of the polls to the top-tier of the UMNO leadership.

Not anymore. Though the looming contest between Najib and Muhyiddin is critical to deciding UMNO’s directions in the second half-century of Malaysia’s independence, it has been reduced to a sidebar – the upcoming 13th general election of the country raised to its proper and pivotal importance in determining the nation’s fortunes.

In a sense, the UMNO internal polls supersession of the general elections’ significance as a bellwether was a distortion that was emblematic of all that ails the country. It represented the supersession of national considerations by essentially sectarian ones.Hence its restoration to its proper size and importance is one of the several benefits – the incumbent PM’s apology is only the latest – stemming from the results of the political tsunami of March 2008.

8 thoughts on “Najib’s Mea Culpa: Too Little, Too Late

  1. An insincere, meaningless apology. He’s not walking the talk.

    Only today, 1MDB bought over Ananda Krishnan’s power “assets’ for RM8.5 billion.

    Why? Tanjong is nearing the end of its Tenaga PPA when the assets will be worth zero unless the Govt extends the PPA, which beautiful situation it can used to drive prices down to bargain basement level.

    So, why is 1MDB paying a premium and how is the puchase of an already existing and dying powe biz going to add multipliers to our economy? By what math or economic theory?

    Who really owns Tanjong Plc?

    And why are all these crony “entrepreneurs’ cashing out, retiring, moving their HQ’s outside M’sia and listing them in S’pore & HK, or transferring them to “Charitable Foundatons” controlled, not by charities, but by yours truly!

    BUMNO/BN looting continues unabated!

    ABU indeed at GE13.

    Dpp
    we are all of 1 Race, the Human Race

  2. Apology? Najib is taking a leaf out of Obama’s playbook which didn’t go down well with many of his own supporters. Not just his Republican adversaries. In the case of Najib he played right into the hands of his political adversary from within. None other than Muhyiddin Yassin.

  3. Why are cronies cashing in their chips? Because the roulette has stopped spinning. It is closing time.

  4. Whether it was a copy-cat Obama or Hsien-Loong, doesn’t matter. Jib’s is dispensing what he see’s as a minor concession of his Almighty Grace. Gawd, he really believes that he’s the Chosen One. Idiot! He just hedging and avoiding all the brickbats flung at him for dodging the Debate with his ‘Irresponsible’ opponent, Anwar.

    It’s good he said it to his lackeys and not speaking as the PM. Or was he?

  5. the show is over when the fat Lady starts to sing? the fat lady is singing in the US and getting awards for it.

    the goons are shifting all their fortunes outside because of their impending demise(hopefully). or is it that the RM value is going to drop again?

  6. What is there for Prime Minister Najib to apologise. All he has to do is to implement his reform agenda in earnest.

    His predecessor twice removed planned it all. He destroyed all institutions of governance so that he could get his way unchecked for 22 years. He is still interfering in the affairs of state and no one dares to stop him. It is he who should apologise, not Najib. He refuses to take a bow. But then the God of all the Gods is never wrong. He is still very much a part of the unfolding tragedy that is Malaysia today.–Din Merican

  7. He is still very much a part of the unfolding tragedy that is Malaysia today.–Din Merican

    And this tragedy has to come to its final conclusion before anything will change.

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