When the damages are already there, then only you start blaming everybody except yourself
Can you trust this kind of presentation? If anything happens, he will be the first person to run away.
UMNO vocal leader now, but unfortunately, under remote control.
This gentleman, who is the son-in-law of one of Malaysian prime ministers, had been seen timid, very quiet when he was UMNO youth chief and a minister under Najib's administration. Drastically, became vocal and condemned Najib fiercely, immediately on 9 May 2018 after BN lost to Pakatan Harapan in the general elections. Only after damages had been done.
Politics is the art of manipulation and at the same time blaming other people is one way to survive. Everytime you touch me I'll become a hero because my expertise is to convince you that it's not me but the wrongs of others.
Politicians are opportunists. If you're not an opportunist, you're not a politician. Make yourself look good on the expense of others, especially your enemies.
Datuk Seri Ti Lian Ker should confront Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and Datuk Seri Mohd Najib Tun Abdul Razak there and then. Of course with proposed solutions. But you didn't do it . Why? Because you're a politician.
You only know how to blame others only after damages had already been done.
It looks like DAP is doing almost the same thing like what MCA did before. One day, when DAP is no longer in the government and no more in power, they are expected to do the same as MCA. Why? Because DAP leaders are politicians too. As mentioned earlier, only after damages have been done.
Recently, expressing his disappointment, a former MCA vice-president said support for the Chinese-based party declined after 2004, in large part due to the perceived arrogance displayed by UMNO, its Barisan Nasional ally.
As reported by media, Ti Lian Ker said non-Malay support for BN took a hit following the controversy that arose after then UMNO Youth leader Datuk Seri Hishamuddin Hussein wielded a keris at the UMNO annual general assembly in 2005, a stunt which upset the non-Malay community.
Despite Hishammuddin later apologising for his antics, Ti said analysts cited the incident as one of several which pushed the non-Malays over to the opposition in the 2008 general election.
Ti said five years earlier, then prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad had likened Suqiu, a Chinese lobby group, to “communists from the past” and the Al-Ma’unah cult.
In 2006, non-Muslim ministers were forced to retract a memorandum calling upon then prime minister Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to protect the rights of religious minorities. Ti said the move left a bitter taste in the mouth of the Chinese community which had voted overwhelmingly for BN and UMNO in the 2004 general election, which was the first with Abdullah leading BN.
Another incident that riled up the Chinese community was the vitriol aimed at Tan Sri Robert Kuok in 2018 following accusations that the tycoon had funded the DAP’s bid to topple the BN government, FMT quoted Ti as saying.
Like children quarrelling, the word pondan can become big issue
He added that UMNO’s Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz, who had challenged Kuok to return from Hong Kong to contest in the general election, had refused to apologise for calling the tycoon a “pondan”.
“These incidents did not sit well with the Chinese community, especially after MCA had persuaded the community to back Dr Mahathir Mohamad in his spat with Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah as well as support Abdullah Ahmad Badawi later.
“And we (MCA) were guilty by association and ended up as collateral damage,” he told the news portal.
Ti was commenting on UMNO Supreme Council member Datuk Seri Dr Puad Zarkashi’s call for MCA to reflect on its declining support from the Chinese community.
Puad said while he sympathised with MCA, the party should ask itself why its support had declined to such an extent that it only managed to win two parliamentary seats in the 15th general election in November 2022. He suggested that the party’s poor performance had nothing to do with BN.
Puad’s comments were made in response to MCA secretary-general Datuk Seri Chong Sin Woon urging the party to take charge of its own destiny if BN continued to drag its feet over a clear direction for the coalition.
Ti also said that the prediction by former finance minister Tun Daim Zainuddin in 2018, widely reported in the vernacular papers at the time, that Pakatan Harapan would make inroads in the general election had also swayed the Chinese community to back the then opposition.
The former deputy unity minister said UMNO should not close an eye to these “historical facts”. It must admit that MCA should not shoulder the entire blame for its dwindling support, especially when the party had remained loyal to BN despite the controversies that plagued the coalition, including the 1MDB scandal.
He also felt that Puad’s remarks were off the mark and reeked of arrogance.
Chong, he said, was merely expressing concern about UMNO gravitating too much to PH, especially DAP.
Right now, the impression, rightly or wrongly, was that UMNO was selling out to DAP, which could also be costly to UMNO, Ti reminded.
“UMNO cannot continue to shut its component parties out or leave them in the dark as this will mean that UMNO is selling out BN in favour of DAP, which in the long run could spell the end of BN.”
End©Permadu
| By Fauzi Kadir Chief Editor |
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