What’s keeping Malaysia’s Opposition together? — Bridget Welsh
Published: 10 October 2012
What keeps the Malaysian
opposition Pakatan Rakyat (People’s Alliance) together? The quick answer often
given is the common search of political power.
While power frames the
relationships between three disparate political parties - Islamist PAS, secular-committed
Democratic Action Party and the umbrella reform-oriented PKR of Mr Anwar
Ibrahim - it is not the glue of the opposition alliance. Were this the case,
PAS would have left the coalition when UMNO floated the offer of joining the
government in 2008 and intense jockeying took place within PAS.
The answer lies in the three
parties’ shared moral compact.
Pakatan Rakyat is an alliance of profoundly different backgrounds, with
secularists, theocrats, conservatives and progressives working together. In a
world wracked with tensions over religion and misunderstandings, Malaysia’s
opposition stands out in bucking international trends of difference.
CORRUPTION IN EVERYDAY LFE
Three common principles bind the
Opposition together. The first is deep concern
with endemic corruption.
The problem of corruption is not
new, and while Malaysia’s practices are assessed above many in Asia, including
Indonesia, what has become increasingly apparent is that it has crossed the
line of acceptability for many Malaysians. Survey results show that an
overwhelming majority view their officials as corrupt and believe that their
officials do not abide by the law.
Scandal after scandal, from the
National Feedlot Corporation and Scorpene, to the recent revelations about the
extension of the Ampang LRT, has inundated citizens. While there are many civil
servants who work hard to deliver services, there are pressures within the
system to conform to predatory practices.
Malaysian corruption was
initially concentrated among the elite through the practice of “money
politics”. But more and more, it is extending into everyday issues such as
school fees, crime prevention and service provision.
Most basic food items, such as
sugar and rice, are tied to non-transparent deals of politically-aligned
businessmen, as are bigger items such as cars through Approved Permit licence
allocations.
These weaknesses in governance
share a common moral thread - a privileged minority using the system to their
advantage, and this is hurting the majority and widening inequality.
FAIRNESS AND THE PLAYING FIELD
This leads to the second shared
principle - fairness. The three
political parties each have a different take on what is fair, but there are
areas of similarity: Namely, everyone
should have a seat at the table; everyone should be treated fairly in a court of
law; and social and economic inequalities should be minimised.
This shared view of fairness
extends into the outrage over unfair legal decisions and deep-seated concerns
about poverty and displacement of many Malaysians. Pakatan’s conception of
citizenship has evolved into one in which all Malaysians are exactly that —
Malaysians. It is a modern view of citizenship, in which everyone has rights
and the government is to respond to the people, not the other way round.
The Opposition’s moral compact is
also driven by a mutual interest in
expanding democratic governance to level the political playing field.
Calls for the removal of the
Internal Security Act (which was suspended and replaced by the more benign but
less tested Security Offences Act earlier this year), electoral reform,
freedoms of assembly, religion and speech, among other things, all fall under
the umbrella of expanding political space and rights.
Ever since the reformasi movement
of 1999, opposition activists have joined forces in highlighting democratic
deficits and showcasing reasons for an expansion of democracy. Each protest and
political crisis has brought the opposition together - from Bersih 1.0 in 2007,
to the defections and subsequent takeover of the Perak state government in 2009.
The bonds forged by protesting together are strong.
Since 2008, there have been significant efforts to rupture the
Opposition’s moral compact on multiple fronts. The charges of sodomy and
corruption have been tied to attempts to discredit opposition leader Anwar
Ibrahim and raise doubts about his moral calibre to lead. The introduction of
issues such as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual (LGBT) rights puts pressure
on the relationship between the liberals and others within the Pakatan Rakyat.
The sensitive “Allah” issue that
rose to the fore in 2010 tested the Islamists’ position. The push for Malay
rights under the rubric “Ketuanan Melayu” reflects efforts to reinforce ethnic
supremacy over shared humanity and equality, to reimpose the social contract of
the past.
Each of these issues has not
broken the ties between the opposition actors, and it is in part due to the
prominence of the underlying principles that bring them together.
THE PROBLEM OF HUDUD
This is not a moral compact
without problems, however. The biggest
challenge for the Opposition lies within. It has to do with an issue being
negotiated throughout the Muslim world: The place and form of Islamic law,
notably hudud.
Globally, Islamist political
parties from AKP in Turkey to the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt are grappling
with how to bring about Islamic governance while maintaining rights. For
liberals, the introduction of measures such as hudud violates the shared
democratic ideals, as there remains deep mistrust of Islamists in office.
For secularists, hudud violates
their view of governance. Doubts persist in some quarters about whether the
Islamists will continue to hold to the ideals in office, respect different
religious rights and, importantly, tolerate difference within their own community.
Detractors point to Algeria and
Iran as testimony to a potential violation of trust. Others more open-minded
highlight the negotiated paths of Turkey and Morocco.
For Malaysia, the hudud issue
remains on the agenda, unresolved and unlikely to be so before polls. In public
remarks, Mr Anwar has stressed the centrality of dialogue and principle of
consensus. There appears to be a working agreement to agree to disagree.
Among Islamists there has been a
global trend towards greater accommodation of difference and an appreciation of
constitutional frameworks for governance. Many in the PAS old guard,
nevertheless, are tied to the vision of a religious theocracy that is
increasingly becoming outmoded, even in Egypt where the President comes from
one of the historically strongest advocates of these measures, the Muslim
Brotherhood.
Islamists the world over are having to reprioritise their principles in
order to govern societies, and PAS will have to as well. What is important is
that it will need to do this on its own terms, rather than respond to
ultimatums from allies and opponents alike.
Hudud will remain salient to this
campaign, because at its core, it puts pressure on Malaysia’s Opposition to
reassess, reaffirm and reinforce their common moral priorities. It is this
common ground however, that is Pakatan’s moral compact — and for now it is on
firm ground.
Bridget Welsh is Associate
Professor of Political Science at the Singapore Management University. (2012)
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