Malaysia politics: Ong Tee Keat and MCA’s baby steps
Everybody is watching the Pakatan Rakyat and their political progression since they became government in 5 Malaysia states.
We, however prefer to watch development in BN politics as it tried to recover from injuries inflicted in 308 tsunami. If BN manages to stage a great comeback to Malaysia politics, it definitely will pose an interesting study for political analysts and students.
From our observation:
• UMNO has not showed progression from its pre-308 mindset so far.
• MCA has demonstrated some talk and trying to walk.
• MIC is too busy with ‘inhouse rebranding’. However, we would like to suggest it try ‘party reform’ instead.
We can put on record that as of now, we are impressed with MCA’s baby steps to reform its public identity.
Just check out the below report from The Sun and try to see what we saw.
(Meanwhile, sad to say, the Chinese newpapers and its political writers missed this. Sin Chew the community’s leading newspaper, failed to highlight in their report a very important point in this speech of the MCA President Ong Tee Keat. We do not blame them, even Malaysiakini missed it.)
…
Discard old policies or lose out, says Tee Keat
By: by Tan Yi Liang (Sun, 21 Dec 2008)
KUALA LUMPUR (Dec 21, 2008): Malaysia will lose out economically if obsolete policies are not discarded, says Transport Minister Datuk Seri Ong Tee Keat.
“Policies should be re-examined and discarded if they are not working to the nation’s benefit. Very often, policies drawn up with noble intentions are wayward in their implementation,” said Ong.
He said a change of mindset was needed for Malaysia to be competitive globally.
“We need to be creative, innovative, visionary and bold. There are some among us who, it appears, do not seem to have realised that we have moved into the 21st century. It’s the digital age, but they operate with an analogue mindset,” he said, adding that educational reform was needed if Malaysia was to compete globally.
“It is not just the digital gap that is widening between rural and urban areas, so is the education gap. We have no choice but to implement changes. Our children are no longer just competing with each other within national borders. They are competing with the world.”
He pointed out that the need to overhaul the national schools was more pressing than the debate over vernacular schools.
Ong, who said this when opening the Malaysian Young Entrepreneurs Conference at the Putra World Trade Centre here today, called for reforms to make the ruling Barisan National coalition relevant for Malaysians.
“The political mould has been broken. Unless we in the Barisan compete in the marketplace of ideas, there is a real possibility that we will be voted out of office in the next general election. It is time we change the political model that worked so well for us until March 8,” said Ong, who called on parties to focus on the interests of Malaysians as a whole.
“Unless we take on a wider, national role, we could soon become irrelevant. The political base of the communal parties has no doubt been within the community, and we must cater to their interests, but there is nothing that says we cannot or should not build on this base by addressing national concerns affecting all Malaysians.”
At a press conference later, Ong repeated his call for reform after the March 8 political tsunami.
“After March 8, I said it (the need for reform) loud and clear. When I was interviewed in April by one of the news agencies, I reiterated one point, and making a reference to my own party, I said we must initiate changes, or else we would become irrelevant,” he said.
He said he was “not apologetic” about his comments.
“I did it with good intentions, because at the end of the day, what we want, what the people want and are looking for and expecting from us is good governance. We are a beautiful country, we are rich in resources, so why can’t we harness our resources for the best benefit of the country and the people.”
He said his Barisan peers accepted the need for change, and noted that each Barisan component party had its own methodology for change.
“On Feb 14 next year, there will be a big BN rally, where the component parties, leaders and members will meet and brainstorm.
Perhaps this will serve as a good platform for the component parties to brainstorm and share experiences in transforming our own parties,” he added.
--- end ---
December 25, 2008 Posted by femalevoters | Government, MCA, MPs under par, MPs we like, Malaysia, News, Parliament, politics | 308, Barisan Nasional, BN, Malaysia Chinese Association, malaysiakini, MCA, MCA President, MIC, Pakatan Rakyat, politics, Sin Chew, The Sun, Transport Minister Ong Tee Keat, UMNO | No Comments Yet
MCA on Ong Tee Keat’s watch: About your aides
Dear Dato’ Seri Ong Tee Keat,
I have this uneasy feeling about you and those leaders helming the MCA national bureaus.
Chua Soi Lek, Lee Wee Kiat, Wong Nai Chee, Gan Ping Sieu …
Competence is clearly trumping ideology in the Ong Tee Keat’s new administration, and God knows after two terms of Ong Ka Ting & Co., it’s time to get back to the idea of streetwise smart, capable people advising the MCA president and executing his policies.
What I wonder is whether the members of your administrative team and staff aides, in addition to their grasp of the issues and success at achieving power, have a real feel for the needs of the people they are supposed to be representing.
I don’t doubt that they have the best of intentions. But the people near the pinnacle of power in MCA are encased in a bubble that makes it extremely hard to hear the voices of those who aren’t already powerful themselves.
There is no underestimating the challenges facing MCA, and you will need a strong administrative team and staff aides in your Presidential office NOW to help back you up with intelligences (internet and grassroots) and execute necessary actions at the grassroot level to get MCA started on the long road to re-connect MCA with the voters, both Chinese 25% and non-Chinese 75%.
Will your staff aides / administrative officers follow a new course, reaffirming plans to remove deadwoods of the previous administration?
We wish MCA all the best on your watch.
~Femalevoter
** I took the liberty to paraphrase a little from that excellent piece Bob Herbert wrote for The New York Times
cc: Malaysiakini.com
December 8, 2008 Posted by femalevoters | Government, MCA, MPs under par, Malaysia, News, Parliament, politics, women | Barisan Nasional, chinese, Chua Soi Lek, grassroot, Malaysia, Malaysiakini.com, MCA, New York Times, Ong Tee Keat, politics, staff aides, voters | 1 Comment
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