Strained:
Najib-Mahathir ties
Malaysian Premier's cosier relations with Singapore could
be decisive in a break-up with Mahathir. By Asia Sentinel.
June 1, 2009
The
former PM appears about ready to have a go at yet another
successor
The
honeymoon between Malaysia's new prime minister, Najib Tun
Razak, and the irascible 84-year-old Mahathir Mohamad, who
played a major role in driving Najib's predecessor from
office, is over almost before it began.
Najib,
gambling that the former premier's influence is waning within
the ranks of UMNO, has broken decisively over a number of
hot-button issues with Mahathir, who held office for 22
years before stepping down in 2003 in favour of Abdullah
Ahmad Badawi.
Many
of them involve a cosier relationship with the Singapore
government, with which Mahathir carried on a rocky relationship.
So far,
Mahathir, although said to be privately furious with Najib,
has held back from attacking him publicly.
"I
believe this is for a number of reasons," says a lawyer
with ties to the Mahathir faction.
"Remember,
we are after all in a recession - and what good would it
do to try to force him out in an all-out war? But Najib
is pushing the envelope by making his own mistakes. I think
the die is cast, but it's not full blown war yet."
Dangerous
for Najib
Badawi,
who came into office as a reformer but stumbled, was attacked
by Mahathir almost from the time he became prime minister,
especially after cancelling a series of Mahathir's favorite
projects.
He was
beset by a series of other problems, including a fading
economy, perceptions of rising crime and a passive personality.
He led
his party to disastrous elections in 2008 in which the Barisan
Nasional, or national ruling coalition, lost its two-thirds
hold on the national parliament for the first time since
independence.
Given
Badawi's weakness, it is questionable how much influence
Mahathir actually had in engineering his downfall.
Mahathir
in 2007 left the party he had headed when the government
announced he would be investigated on allegations he had
rigged judicial appointments.
Blasting
away from the sidelines, he didn't return until April, when
Badawi finally stepped down.
Nor
was he especially charitable to Najib. Although he returned
to share the podium with Najib at the UMNO national conclave
in April, those close to him say he regards Najib as a potentially
weak leader because he didn't break with Badawi soon enough.
He also
is said to think Najib is tainted by a long series of scandals
and, in the words of the source, is "yellow" because
he lacked the nerve to take on the opposition in a by-election
in the state of Penang that is set for May 31.
Najib,
according to polls, actually took office with a lower approval
rating than the ill-starred Badawi.
Party
insiders say he recognises his weakness and feels he has
to act fast to try to get the voters to forget his weaknesses.
He has
cracked down hard on protesters and the opposition at the
same time he has instituted measures to try to revive the
economy, which shrank at a disastrous 6.2 percent annual
rate in the last quarter.
After
appearing to embrace the idea of Mahathir's "crooked
bridge" proposal to replace half of the narrow, congested
causeway that links Singapore with the southern state of
Johor, Najib has announced he would go along with a plan
favoured by the Singapore government for a third bridge.
He has
also publicly endorsed the massive Iskandar project directly
across the causeway in Johor over the objections of Mahathir,
who famously said Singaporeans would take over the project
and drive Malays out to live in the forest.
Najib
has also made a series of appointments to top positions
in UMNO and the government over Mahathir's objections.
They included provisionally naming a former close Badawi
associate, Omar Ong as a non-executive director of the state
oil and gas company Petronas, which observers in Kuala Lumpur
view as a prelude to making him the Petronas CEO when Hassan
Merican is expected to retire in 2010.
Ong
is a member of a group called the "fourth-floor boys,"
top advisors to Badawi and Badawi's son-in-law, Khairy Jamaluddin,
in particular a bête noir for Mahathir.
To Mahathir's
consternation, a number of the fourth-floor boys, perhaps
Khairy himself, are gaining influence in Najib's government.
Despite
Najib's early pledges to clean out the party and install
reformers, as Mahathir has repeatedly demanded in his "Chedet"
blog, Najib has also named several individuals to top UMNO
party posts in the face of allegations that they were tainted
by money politics.
They
include Mohd Ali Rustam, who was made a member of the UMNO
Supreme Council after Ali Rustam had been suspended from
competing for the job of party deputy vice president after
being caught buying votes.
Another
is Rafidah Aziz, the long-time trade and industry minister
who lost her job as head of the women's wing of the party
because of allegations she had been steering contracts to
members of her family.
In early
April, Mahathir spoke out publicly against Najib's appointment
of Mohamed Nazri Aziz as a cabinet minister and Johari Baharum
as a deputy minister, whom he called "unsavoury characters."
"It
is quite obvious that he (Najib) does not depend upon me,
for example, he appointed ministers, deputy ministers who
I think don't deserve to be ministers, who are involved
in corruption," he told reporters.
Most
recently, on May 18 Najib announced he wouldn't lead the
Barisan Nasional into contesting a by-election in the Penanti
district of Penang State, where an opposition figure, Mohammad
Fairu Khairuddin, quit as a state assemblyman after stepping
down as Penang deputy chief minister in a spat with party
leaders.
Mahathir
told Najib to find a candidate to go for the seat and reportedly
said he would lead the campaign himself, although the opposition
is extremely strong in the district and so far the Barisan
has lost five out of six by-elections since disastrous national
elections in March of 2008.
Najib
appears to be gambling that the dyspeptic former leader's
influence has waned to the point where he can't do the kind
of damage to Najib that he did to Badawi.
In an
unsigned article that appeared last week in the Internet
publication Malaysia Insider, the author said that "Pragmatism,
and not bending to the will of former prime ministers, has
emerged as the dominant principle behind decision-making
in the early days of the Najib administration.
(Najib)
seeks to reconnect the Barisan Nasional government with
the elusive non-Malay and younger vote bank."
Najib,
the article said, fears leading the Barisan into defeat
in the next general election, and that he has less than
two years to win back some of the support that has evaporated
to the opposition Pakatan Rakyat.
Accordingly,
Najib has opened the financial services sector to multinational
investors, removed affirmative action quotas for 27 sub-sectors
in the services sector and taken on the emotion-laden issue
of religious conversion.
Some
parents who have converted to Islam have attempted to take
their children with them into the new religion over the
objections of their spouses.
That
is particularly galling to the UMNO old guard, who have
never given up a single convert from Islam.
Najib:
serious challenges.
In addition
to the widespread perception of his own corruption in connection
with billions of dollars in contracts let to UMNO cronies
when he was defence minister, he has the continuing millstone
of the economy around his neck.
As late
as two weeks ago, the stimulus package he put into place
was expected to result in gross domestic product growth
of plus or minus 1 percent.
However,
the economy slipped disastrously, by 6.2 percent year-on-year
in the first quarter and Najib said Thursday that it could
contract by as much as 4 to 5 percent for the full year.
And,
as Mahathir has pointed out, despite his promises to rid
the party of the old-guard rent-seekers that got UMNO in
trouble with the wider public prior to the 2008 election,
he has brought them back in growing numbers.
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