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10 APRIL 2024

Sunday, November 4, 2012

BN could lose 8 parliament seats in Pahang


It would be wrong for Barisan Nasional to assume that the votes garnered by the opposition in Pahang in the 2008 polls were protest votes.
COMMENT
In 2008, the vote swing to the opposition in Pahang was around 9%. Allowing for a generous re-gain of 5% by Barisan Nasional, the opposition Pakatan Rakyat still has a 4% vote swing.
In Raub, Pakatan saw a 45% swing, while in Jerantut (46%), Temerloh(46%), Indera Mahkota (50%), Kuantan (52%) and Bera (43%).
Based on 2008 performance, six seats showed great promise for Pakatan. The opposition won in Kuantan and Indera Mahkota. Both seats were won by PKR.
But this time round, with the racial factoring, and a simple vote swing of 4%, my projections are that Pakatan could well win eight parliamentary seats in Pahang.
The seats are Cameron Highlands, Raub, Kuala Lipis, Jerantut, Temerloh, Indera Mahkota, Kuantan and Paya Besar.
This is because there are a few peculiar features shown by Pahang and which are capable of being generalized.
(1) Areas with a large Malay population do not necessarily lead to easy wins for BN. Jerantut, Temerloh, Indera Mahkota and Kuantan all have majority Malay voting populations. But in each of these areas, Pakatan secured 46-52% of the votes. Pakatan got 40% votes in Kuala Krau and 43% in Bera.
(2) It means Malays are more discerning and are ready to evaluate their voting preference in terms of the costs and benefits.
(3) Jerantut in particular with a population of 81% Malay voters saw Pakatan took home 46% of the votes.
(4) As a rule, if Pakatan puts up a Malay candidate in these areas, the Malay votes are easily split 50:50
How stable was the vote swing to the opposition? Very often, the gains made by Pakatan were dismissed as protest votes.
‘Votes for Pakatan are stable’
They probably were but no one is sure how much of the swing to the opposition in 2008 was done in the name of protest.
And to assume that all were protest votes would be a big mistake.
The swing to the opposition can only be attributed to the people having made a choice based on conviction and belief.
People believed in Pakatan and so made the swing. This type of voting preference is not easily overturned. Unlike votes secured through vote buying and intimidation. These votes are deceptive, fickle and can be re-taken.
What Pakatan lacked in terms of material, they gave in the form of better and more committed service.
Pakatan has contributed to raising general awareness. Barisan Nasional on the other hand does a number of things – paying for votes, bringing development and so forth, daily dosages of propaganda through all the marketing means of the mainstream media.
But their quality of votes is different. The vote for Pakatan is stable while that of BN is fickle.
It would therefore be unrealistic to assume that BN has regained completely from lost ground.
Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak for example is busy marketing his own personal brand rather than improving the discredited brands of Umno and BN.
The Najib factor isn’t strong enough to resuscitate Umno and BN. It’s even dangerous to rely on the Najib factor especially when Najib becomes the subject of greater scrutiny.
The writer is a former Umno state assemblyman but joined DAP earlier this year. He is a FMT columnist.

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