3/13/2008

Pertinent lessons from Malaysia

Below are 3 lessons which I fully agree with PN Balji of the Today paper. Lesson 1: A good leader must lead from the front, especially when it comes to important issues. Lesson 2: Be discerning when listening to views and trust the right people. Finally ownership. It is now 5 days since the electoral hammering....It is time for Abdullah to own up to the damage inflicted on his party and the people who had pinned their hopes on him. Lesson 3: Accept responsibility, assess the mood of the people and decide how to move on. What a good piece of lesson and what a nice timing.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

If Abdullah goes, all the hard work Singapore has put in which has resulted in the current cordial relations with Malaysia will go down the drain. His successor Najib is a Mahathir appointee, and will most likely steer relations back to the days of confrontational politics. Bye bye IDR.

Chua Chin Leng蔡镇龍 aka redbean said...

najib still got an axe hanging over his head. UMNO will be in crisis if abdullah and najib quit.

and anwar will become the natural choice.

Anonymous said...

Aside from Najib and Abdullah, the 3 points you highlighted here 'gasp' I don't seem to see in LSL let alone the rest of the snr ministers...

Oh well, thats just my humble opnion. =)

Anonymous said...

Anwar is kidding himself if he believes that the results were achieved solely on the back of his efforts. Yes, there was a groundswell of dissatisfaction but unbeknown to most layment, there was a concerted effort from the Mahathir/Najib team to sabotage UMNO from the inside, as they saw this as the most opportune time to get rid of Pak Lah. Don't read too much into the results because for all you know it could just be a fluke, and four or five years from now, with Pak Lah out of office and a new PM installed be it Najib or someone else, the BN could romp home with the same massive victory they got in 2004. It has also yet to be proven that the opposition alliance can withstand the test of times. If we take the fiasco in Perak as a benchmark, I am not too optimistic. PAS has been magnanimous in dropping their Islamic state demand from their manifesto for the first time ever, but it seems the DAP is going on a witchunt against Malays and refusing to tone down their overwhelmingly Chinese chauvinistic
character. Their success in capturing Penang has obviously gone to their hands and they now think they can be a one man show and dispense with the Malays. The Malays are closely watching how they administer Penang. Any wrong move on their part will be seized upon with glee by UMNO to restore the status quo.

Chua Chin Leng蔡镇龍 aka redbean said...

hi malaysian patriot, welcome to the blog.

the opposition came to power on a bunch of reasons. i agree that anwar is not the sole reason. you are right to say that mahathir/najib played a big role too. mahathir still has a lot of strings to pull.

anwar i believe is still a force to reckon with.

DAP better wake up and play their role carefully and work with PKR and PAS if they want to remain in favour. it is dicey, agree.

the possibilities of what happens tomorrow are anyone's guess.

Anonymous said...

Redbean, you think PAP is going to lose any sleep over the worry that the Malaysian election results can be replicated in Singapore ? Don't bet on it. Firstly, there is no Singaporean version of Anwar. Secondly, Singaporeans do have legitimate grouses against the government, but none of them are as serious or threatening as the ones that the Malaysians have to grapple with. Thirdly, the GRC system will ensure that the PAP will always have the advantage. Fourthly, the PAP can always use the time tested method of handing out goodies and subtle coercion about MUP, IUP, Lift Upgrading to ensure the bulk of the electorate will always come back to them even if some may have flirted with the idea of voting for opposition. Singaporeans just have too much at stake to risk voting for a rag tag bunch of political misfits. Nope, it is good to see the Malaysians finally exercising some political maturity, but Singaporeans political maturity is still stuck in the Dark Ages.

Chua Chin Leng蔡镇龍 aka redbean said...

i don't think PAP is going to lose any sleep. there are still very confident that the people will vote for them, after so many handouts.

the lesson as balji said, is about leadership during a crisis.

Anonymous said...

Firstly, there is no Singaporean version of Anwar.

Yes, in terms of brains, rhetoric and political experience, None of our opposition members can hold a candle to dato seri anwar, and therein lies the difference.

Chua Chin Leng蔡镇龍 aka redbean said...

anwar is a born politician and a born leader. he has been honing his skills for many years.

he will put anyone over this side of the causeway inside his pocket.

our politicians can't even pronounce words correctly or speak clearly.