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10 APRIL 2024

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Pakatan must only have one dream for Malaysia

Resolve the fundamental issue, don't leave it vague and an 'agree to disagree' policy.
COMMENT
agree-to-disagree
By TK Chua
The unravelling of events in Pakatan Rakyat is just too perplexing to let go without comment.
First was DAP’s resolution to sever ties with PAS president Hadi Awang for his insistence to implement hudud without consultation and consensus with other partners in the coalition.
Then during the recent PAS party elections, there was a motion passed by the muktamar to sever ties with DAP. However, since the motion, some PAS leaders have openly declared that the party is still in the coalition.
Now the MB of Selangor, Azmin Ali of PKR, has said that the party welcomes the formation of PasMa as a political party which has implicitly declared its intention to replace PAS in the PR coalition.
As problems within PR become more acute and protracted, various quarters have come up with proposals to reconcile their differences. Some have suggested that DAP should first retract its resolution to sever ties with Hadi Awang. Then, in return, there was a suggestion that PAS should retract its resolution to sever ties with DAP. There was also a proposal that PKR will play a mediating role to bring PAS and DAP together.
All these suggestions and proposals are no solutions at all. DAP severing ties with Hadi Awang and PAS severing ties with DAP are mere symptoms not the causes. Similarly, PasMa replacing PAS is no solution unless PasMa is fundamentally different from PAS in core principles and policies.
In the midst of endless arguments and squabbles, PR coalition partners might have forgotten the genesis of their problems, which is the disagreement over hudud and perhaps ultimately over theocracy and Islamic state.
This is the mother of all problems within PR. The fundamental issue is how the coalition partners choose to see the future of Malaysia: does the coalition want an open, liberal and secular Malaysia or a conservative, conformist and theocratic state?
It is just too impractical and dangerous for each PR coalition partner to use its own core principles and ideals to attract members and supporters based on these differences. How could members and supporters who were attracted for different reasons and ideals work together as a team towards attaining a common aspiration?
It is time to settle this fundamental issue once and for all. It is no longer feasible to leave this issue vague and on the “agree to disagree” basis. Coalition partners must agree to core policies and principles and openly and unequivocally declare they will adhere to these policies and principles. There shall be no turning backing or wavering based on expediency, treachery or circumstances.
Put simply, the coalition partners of PR should come together because they have a common aspiration for Malaysia, not because they need each other to win the election. PR can win election to oblivion. So, sort out first that common aspiration, the rest can wait.
TK Chua is an FMT reader

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