Is GE-13 over yet?
KTemoc Konsiders
One could be excused for believing the 13th general elections in Malaysia is still not over as some Malaysians continue to demand on a different outcome (results) of the elections to what it has been, wakakaka.
I would claim to be among the earliest (if not the earliest) to explain why BN with 47% of the popular votes ended up with 133 or 60% of the 222 federal parliamentary seats. I wrote on that in my 06 May 2013 post The Morning After – Part 1 as follows:
It’s also interesting to note than Pakatan has actually won the popular vote by amassing about 51% share of the total votes for GE-13 but been rewarded with only 40% share of federal seats, whilst BN with 47% of total votes garnered 60% of the 222 federal seats Only once before in Malaysia’s political history has a party with the majority of federal seats lost the popular vote, to wit, in 1969.
But this is a result of a combination of ‘first past the post’ contest combined with gross gerrymandering where in one federal constituency, only 15,000 registered voters can elect a MP to represent them in parliament while in another constituency, nearly 150,000 voters may only vote for also one MP to represent them. The voter in the former has ten times the say in parliament compared to his/her sardine-ized fellow Malaysian in the latter, who is perhaps a ‘lesser’ Malaysian.
I believe poor Anwar Ibrahim must have thought he would end up as the PM of a post GE-13 situation when he made a secret peace deal with Najib which was brokered by former Indonesian VP Jusuf Kalla.
The broker had recently emerged to criticize Anwar for reneging on the peace deal by his continuation of post-election protest rallies.
Of course Anwar’s fave journalist, Terence Netto, expectedly came up with an article in Malaysiakini on the circumstances an issues surrounding this so-called peace deal which concluded with a one-liner stating “It looks like Anwar has allowed one Bugis, Jusuf Kalla, to get him snookered by another, Najib Razak.”
Anwar has no shortage of supporters in this apparent attempt to create a state of political instability, not when his supporters possess the mindset of Myrmidons. They drew heavily on the 51% vs 47% popular votes as indicative of Anwar’s right to be PM without even understanding the Westminster first-past-the-post character. And what for – why let the inconvenience of facts interfere with jolly good protests!
He striving to bring the races together? Wakakaka, what an obscenity of such a brazen claim by him, and then some.