Hawkeye
KOTA
BARU: Former Umno vice-president Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah did not
initiate the discussions between him and several MPs from Sabah and
Sarawak.
In fact, according to “individuals privy to the proceedings”, it was
the MPs who mooted the meeting. They formed an informal delegation to
seek advise from the veteran Umno leader.
It was “just a chit-chat” veered towards the possibility of combining
resources to impress upon other MPs that time is ripe for a leadership
change.
A breakaway from Barisan Nasional and Pakatan Rakyat styled politics
was also seen as necessary to ensure the country regains its path as a
progressive nation.
The “individuals” said Tengku Razaleigh is seen as an eminent
statesman regardless of what his critics may say about the 78-year old
Kelantan Prince.
It is therefore only natural for some politicians to seek his input
on how the country’s future is shaping up, especially those from Sabah
and Sarawak who feel slighted that their states were overlooked in the
federal cabinet line-up.
The “individuals” who declined to be named due to the “sensitive”
nature of the issue, confirmed that among the matters discussed was the
filing of a motion of no confidence against Prime Minister Najib Tun
Razak when the 13th Parliament session begins its first sitting next
week.
This is where the numbers game come in.
It is uncertain if Tengku Razaleigh can muster the magical number of 35 MPs from Barisan Nasional to join him.
It is also uncertain if he is able to coax the 89 MPs from Pakatan Rakyat to agree to such a proposal.
‘Drama’ a warning?
If Tengku Razaleigh has 124 MPs behind him then the motion could be
filed, debated and put to vote in Parliament as it quantifies more than
half of the House.
There are 222 elected parliamentarians in Dewan Rakyat and BN under Najib have 133 MPs in the house.
Some insiders opined that the whole ‘drama’ could just be a signal
from some MPs for Najib to re-evaluate the current political scenario
and to govern better.
They said it “may not” represent a concerted effort to oust Najib.
Among the issues raised is Najib’s ability to lead.
The many concessions given to the Chinese and their rounded rejection
of BN in the recently concluded general election, corruption, raciasm
as well as lagging development in Sabah and Sarawak has left observers
mulling over his leadership ability now seen as “weak”.
Then there are also references to the young voters (aged 40 and
below) who will soon become the bulk of the voters in the nation’s
electoral list before 2020.
Tengku Razaleigh’s aides meanwhile are pessimistic over any bid to move a no confidence motion against Najib.
They believe most Umno MPs may not support the no-confidence
proposal, as many did not want their party further weakened when it
already has to deal with a frail BN.
Neither, is there a clear signal from Pakatan on whether they will support it.
History repeats?
What has been reported in the months before the GE13, was that PAS,
PKR and DAP leaders had all publicly declared that Pakatan leader Anwar
Ibrahim would be PM if they wrested Putrajaya.
And since they failed to capture Putrajaya, Anwar is now the
Opposition Leader although DAP won the most number of seats within the
Pakatan pact.
It is learnt that in 2008, following the opposition’s historic
victory, one key leader from DAP and PAS had each met with Tengku
Razaleigh in Kuala Lumpur.
They had allegedly indicated their willingness to back Tengku
Razaleigh as PM, should a national unity government be formed with
segments of BN.
The deal however went sour as PKR under Anwar were not convinced,
while BN’s MPs also backed out due to pressure from their own coalition.
Anwar was at the time, also seen to be hatching his own plans to wrest federal power.
In which case is history repeating itself?
Also read:
Jeffrey rejects talk of ‘Razaleigh plan’
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