Malaysians start voting in 2013 General Election
Malaysians have begun voting in an election that could weaken or even end the rule of one of the world’s longest-lived coalitions, which faces a stiff challenge from an opposition pledging to clean up politics and end race-based policies.
Led by former finance minister Anwar Ibrahim, the opposition is aiming to build on startling electoral gains in 2008, when the Barisan Nasional (BN), ruling coalition lost its customary two-thirds parliamentary majority.
The result signaled a breakdown in traditional politics as minority ethnic Chinese and ethnic Indians, as well as many majority Malays, rejected BN’s brand of race-based patronage that has ensured stability in the Southeast Asian nation but led to corruption and widening inequality.
Hundreds of people lined up outside polling stations across the country, many of them first-time voters concerned about the rising living costs, higher crime and corruption in a government that has been in power for 56 years.
“I would like to see some change,” said Wardina Shafie, a 31-year-old computer engineer after she cast her vote on the outskirts of the Malaysian capital. “I think the opposition has a good chance of taking government. I only worry about voter fraud.”
The campaigning had heated up in recent days with Anwar accusing the coalition of flying up to 40,000 “dubious” voters across the country to vote in close races. The government says it was merely helping voters to return to their hometowns.
Polling will end at 5 pm. Officials expect the first results for 222 parliamentary seats and over 500 state seats to start trickling in from 8 pm onwards.
Opinion polls suggest a tight race that could further reduce the coalition majority, lead the opposition to dispute the result over claims of fraud and spill over to street protests.
Under Prime Minister Najib Razak, the blue-blood son of a former leader, the coalition has tried to win over a growing middle class with social reforms and secure traditional voters with a US$2.6 billion deluge of cash handouts to poor families.
He can point to robust growth of 5.6 percent last year as evidence that his Economic Transformation Programme to double incomes by 2020 is bearing fruit, while warning that the untested three-party opposition would spark economic ruin.
“The victor or loser of this 13th general election will not be BN or the opposition Pakatan Rakyat (PR). It will be Malaysia, its people and our children,” Najib tweeted on Sunday before casting his ballot in central Pahang state.
Najib, who is more popular than his party, has had some success in steadying the ship since he was installed as head of the dominant United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) in 2009.
Formidable advantages such as the coalition’s control of mainstream media, its deep pockets and a skewed electoral system make it the clear favorite.
But a failure to improve on 2008’s performance, when BN won 140 seats in the 222-seat parliament, could threaten Najib’s position and his reform program. Conservative forces in UMNO, unhappy with his tentative efforts to roll back affirmative action policies favoring ethnic Malays, are waiting in the wings to challenge his leadership.
LAST CHANCE FOR ANWAR?
The election represents possibly the last chance to lead Malaysia for Anwar, a former rising UMNO star who was sacked and jailed for six years in 1998 following a feud with then prime minister Mahathir Mohamad, who remains an influential figure.
The 65-year-old former deputy prime minister says his corruption and sodomy convictions were trumped up. He received a new lease on political life last year when a court acquitted him of a second sodomy charge.
His alliance, which includes an awkward partnership between a secular ethnic Chinese party with an Islamist party, can present a viable alternative, given its record of governing in four states it took over in 2008.
It wants to break down a network of patronage that has grown up between UMNO and business tycoons. The alliance also pledges to replace policies favoring ethnic Malays in housing, business and education with needs-based assistance. Anwar has called it a balance of “market economy and Occupy Wall Street”.
The opposition is riding a growing trend of civil-society activism, which has been most evident in a series of big street protests in recent years calling for reform of the electoral system and huge campaign rallies.
Election observers said at least 200,000 people turned up for rallies across the country late on Saturday in a last-minute push to support the opposition.
“One for all, all for one – regardless of color, creed, or religion,” veteran politician Lim Kit Siang told a 6,000-strong crowd in southern Johor state, bordering Singapore. “We are all Malaysians, why let racial sentiments provoke us?”
Most people in the crowd were Chinese, who make up about 25 percent of Malaysians and who abandoned the ruling coalition in 2008.
Maintaining its momentum among ethnic Malay voters may be more difficult amid warnings from BN that they would be at risk from Chinese economic domination if the opposition won.
“I am comfortable with the current situation here,” said a 62-year old Malay housewife after she cast her ballot in Johor. “I can’t trust the opposition. I don’t know them.”