Friday, June 05, 2026

Bersatu’s potential new allies offer next to nothing, say analysts





Bersatu’s potential new allies offer next to nothing, say analysts


5 hours ago
Nicholas Chung and Elill Easwaran


Political analysts say the smaller parties lack electoral influence and would not be able to compensate for the loss of PAS if it parts ways with Bersatu


Abdul Hadi Awang’s PAS may choose to discard Muhyiddin Yassin’s Bersatu and tie up with Hamzah Zainudin’s soon-to-be-announced new political outfit, according to an analyst.


PETALING JAYA: Ahmad Faizal Azumu’s confidence that “other parties” will rally behind Bersatu if PAS chooses to break out on its own is misplaced, analysts say, arguing that such support would do little to strengthen the party’s electoral prospects.


Syaza Shukri.


International Islamic University Malaysia political analyst Syaza Shukri said it was unclear which parties the Bersatu vice-president was referring to in his recent remarks.

She suggested that Faizal may have been alluding to parties within the Ikatan Prihatin Rakyat (IPR) grouping, but questioned whether they would align with his emphasis on Malay interests.


“If it’s the smaller Malay parties such as Iman and Berjasa, why would they go with IPR instead of Perikatan Nasional? Ultimately, they are small parties, so their addition may not significantly impact electoral success,” she said.

“However, such groups could still provide grassroots support, especially since Faizal also highlighted the importance of working with non-governmental organisations.”


Syaza suggested that in the event of a split, the smaller Malay-Muslim parties would likely gravitate towards PAS, particularly if the Islamic party collaborates with former Bersatu deputy president Hamzah Zainudin.


She said PAS would also likely retain the bulk of PN’s support base in the event the opposition coalition breaks up.

“I’ve always felt that PN voters are mostly PAS voters, so I don’t think a split would cause much confusion. Most of them would follow PAS,” she said.

“It is the so-called moderate Malay nationalists who would have to choose between Bersatu and Umno.”


Syaza also said parties such as Gerakan and the Malaysian Indian People’s Party (MIPP) would find it easier to work with Bersatu than PAS.

“Gerakan and MIPP know that the real strength lies with PAS, but PAS voters and ideology are very different (from their own). Joining Bersatu makes more sense, and they may also have a more equal say in such a collaboration,” she said.


On Monday, Faizal said PAS was free to determine its own direction if it believed doing so would advance the Malay cause and strengthen unity.

He expressed confidence that many other parties would continue to support Bersatu even if PAS decided to contest elections on its own.


Faizal’s remarks followed PAS information chief Ahmad Fadhli Shaari’s suggestion that PAS and Bersatu contest future elections separately, citing disparities in the strength of party machinery within PN.

The disagreement stemmed from comments made by Bersatu secretary-general Azmin Ali at a ceramah in Melaka, where he rejected claims that Bersatu lacked grassroots machinery and urged critics to “open their eyes and ears”.


‘Overly optimistic’

Universiti Teknologi Malaysia political analyst Mazlan Ali also took the view that Faizal was being overly optimistic about Bersatu’s prospects without PAS.


Mazlan Ali.


He said the parties Faizal was referring to were likely smaller component and friendly parties, including Gerakan, MIPP, Urimai, the Malaysian Advancement Party (MAP), Pejuang, Berjasa, Muda, Putra and Iman.

These parties carried little political weight, he said.

“The reality is that these small parties have no real impact on Malaysian politics. Even if they join Bersatu, what can they offer? Their numbers are very small,” he said.

Mazlan said he was “almost certain” Bersatu would be in a weaker position without PAS than if the two parties worked together under PN.

“If this split really happens, non-Malay parties such as Gerakan and MIPP will certainly stay with Bersatu. It is unlikely they would align with PAS because its Islamic state ideology is not something that non-Malay parties, especially Gerakan, agree with.”

At the same time, Mazlan said several Malay-Muslim parties could instead align themselves with PAS.

“Parties such as Berjasa and Putra will almost certainly go with PAS. But Urimai, MAP, Iman and Muda may side with Muhyiddin.”

Mazlan said a split would not significantly affect hardcore supporters, who would remain loyal either to PAS or Bersatu.

However, he said fence-sitters could view such a development negatively.

“Voters may ask how a coalition that constantly talks about unity and Malay solidarity can end up splitting among itself,” he said.


DAP’s national congress postponed over Johor, Negeri Sembilan polls





DAP’s national congress postponed over Johor, Negeri Sembilan polls


DAP secretary-general Loke Siew Fook says the party will defend all its incumbent seats in both elections


DAP secretary-general Loke Siew Fook said the selection of candidates to represent DAP in the two state elections will be determined by the party’s candidate selection committee. (Bernama pic)


KUALA LUMPUR: DAP’s 2026 national conference, originally scheduled for July 12, has been postponed to Aug 16, party secretary-general Loke Siew Fook says.

He said the decision was made by the party’s central executive committee at a meeting last night after taking into account the dissolution of the Johor and Negeri Sembilan legislative assemblies, paving the way for elections in both states.

“DAP will defend all its incumbent seats in Johor and Negeri Sembilan and contest several additional seats in Johor, subject to the final outcome of negotiations with our Pakatan Harapan (PH) component parties by the end of this week,” he said in a statement today.

Loke said the selection of candidates to represent DAP in the two state elections would be determined by the party’s candidate selection committee.

The committee comprises Loke, DAP national chairman Gobind Singh Deo, deputy national chairman Nga Kor Ming, wanita chief Teo Nie Ching, and DAP parliamentary leader Chong Chieng Jen.

Loke, the Seremban MP and former Chennah assemblyman, said DAP would campaign vigorously in the elections to help secure PH victories in both states.

On Monday, Johor menteri besar Onn Hafiz Ghazi said the 56-seat Johor assembly had been dissolved with effect from June 1 after receiving the consent of the Regent of Johor, Tunku Mahkota Ismail.

Yesterday, Negeri Sembilan menteri besar Aminuddin Harun announced that the 36-seat state assembly would be dissolved today after receiving the consent of the Yang Dipertuan Besar of Negeri Sembilan, Tuanku Muhriz Tuanku Munawir.


FAM cannot bury scandal before truth is revealed





FAM cannot bury scandal before truth is revealed


2 hours ago
Frankie D'Cruz


Former FAM president’s call to “move on” from the naturalised players case raises fresh questions as Fifa sanctions and unresolved accountability questions linger





FAM’s amnesia problem is simple: you cannot declare a scandal “history” while the autopsy is still incomplete — especially when the organisation itself has not fully accounted for what happened.

Former president Hamidin Amin wants closure. But closure cannot be declared from a podium or a congress floor.


It must come from truth, responsibility, and consequence.

Anything less is not closure. It is convenience dressed as stability.


The naturalised players issue still sits at the centre of Malaysian football’s credibility crisis. It is not a passing controversy or a media cycle story. It is a breakdown with international consequences.

Fifa has sanctioned the association and the players. The Court of Arbitration for Sport has upheld key findings. The AFC has stepped away, saying the matter now lies with Fifa and other relevant authorities.

Yet one question remains untouched: who inside the chain of approval allowed falsified documents to pass through?

No report has fully answered it. No official has fully explained it. No internal process has clearly closed it.


That silence carries more weight than the sanctions themselves.

Against this backdrop, Hamidin’s call to treat the matter as “history” feels premature.


It reads as tone-deaf, self-serving and reckless. It asks the public to forget before it understands what actually happened.

That is not leadership. It is narrative control.


The burial before the probe is finished

Hamidin’s message sounds calm on the surface. “Move on,” he says. “Look forward.”

But the matter has not reached resolution. It still sits amid ongoing consequences, regulatory scrutiny, and unanswered questions inside the association.

So what exactly should the public forget?

The falsified documents? The eligibility failure? The approvals that broke down?

Or the structure that allowed all of it to pass unchecked?

When leaders demand closure before clarity, they do not create stability. They create doubt.

This is not closure. It is an attempt to seal the wound while the infection remains inside.

And that is why the statement goes beyond rhetoric. It tests whether Malaysian football is ready to confront uncomfortable facts — or simply repackage them.


A push and pull on change

FAM is also going through statutory adjustments after AFC recommendations. Its extraordinary congress approved amendments aimed at modernising administration, redistributing authority, and improving transparency.

But the direction is inconsistent.

On one side, there is talk of modernisation and accountability.

On the other, legacy structures remain intact, including the honorary president role after affiliate pressure.

That contradiction matters.

Because change cannot move forward if it keeps bending to internal comfort.

When change becomes negotiable, it loses force. It becomes adjustment, not transformation — appearance rather than substance.


A structure marked by weakness

The AFC audit did not point to minor flaws. It described deep structural weakness across multiple layers.

It highlighted weak enforcement of rules, informal decision-making, and concentrated authority in a small circle.

It also flagged gaps in oversight, uneven staffing, and missing accountability mechanisms.

These are not separate problems. They form a pattern.

And that pattern matters because it shaped the environment in which the issue emerged.

A weak structure does not fail once. It normalises failure. It increases the chance of repetition.

That is the uncomfortable reality still not fully confronted.


The missing centre: responsibility

Sanctions exist. Reports exist. Adjustment plans exist.

But responsibility still feels unresolved.

The central question remains unanswered in public terms: who authorised or allowed the falsified documentation process to succeed within the chain of control?

Until that is addressed clearly, every call to move on feels premature.

Because change without responsibility is only administration.

Not correction. Not repair.


History cannot be declared, only earned

Sporting bodies do not regain trust by asking people to forget faster.

They regain trust by proving there is nothing left to hide.

Hamidin’s call to “move on” may sound like progress. But it risks something more dangerous: permission to forget before truth has finished its work.

And that is where the danger lies.

Because history is not declared by convenience.

It is earned through completion. And this matter is not complete.

Not yet.

Not while the answers still sit inside the organisation, waiting to surface.


***


THE PROBLEM



The Small Four must think big in Johor






The Small Four must think big in Johor



Thursday, 04 Jun 2026 8:49 AM MYT
By Praba Ganesan


JUNE 4 — The upcoming Johor state election like the Olympics focuses on the medal tally, with Barisan Nasional, Pakatan Harapan and Perikatan Nasional trying to hog the limelight.

Indeed, it will be a minor miracle if none of them hold the mentri besar post when the counting is done.

Then why bother with the certain also-rans? Because how they fare determines whether they have a future.

To know if they are set to be serious players in the general election — regardless if months away or in 2028.

It can also decide if Malaysia is set to have four significant coalitions, or just three restructured ones.


In the outside lanes

Muda, Bersama, Reset Malaysia and Pejuang can get to the starting line, but are they all just as keen?


Let’s read their vitals.

The easiest one first.

Pejuang did contest in the last Johor polls in 2022. Forty-two races, trounced in all, losing all deposits.

A picture of consistency when eight months later at the general election, they and all their allies under Gerakan Tanah Air lost every parliamentary and state race — 168 in total — and lost every deposit. They might have funded the Election Commission’s Xmas party.

The humiliations included party president Mukhriq Mahathir and his dad, Mahathir Mohamad.

Since the debacle Mahathir has left the party. He plays musical chairs in heading and advising a series of parties and movements bent on race first. He is still prominent in Pejuang’s promotional material even after ditching them.

It’s probably far less difficult to explain quantum physics than to describe exactly what Pejuang is today and what purpose it serves.

If they throw their hat in Johor and sustain their failure performance rate, when is it time to call it quits?

Pejuang wants to partner with others to be relevant. Unfortunately, the intended targets prefer Pejuang being irrelevant.

BN and Pakatan are non-starters and PN has too many suitors. At this pace, Pejuang might talk itself into oblivion.

Muda won one state seat courtesy of co-operation with Pakatan in 2022, Puteri Wangsa.

It’ll defend that one as president Amira Aisya Abdul Aziz (4A) is the incumbent and newly minted as party president.

The tragedy, however, is that ex-president Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman remains a large shadow; Amira lacks charisma, and Saddiq produces more catchy youth content in a week than Muda has in the past three years.

Its new leaders fumble most lines between saying they want youth, youth and youth, and then in the next breath urge all Malaysians to back them.

They have an equally dysfunctional relationship with exclusivity as Umno has, only with colossally less history and victories.

In its last election foray, the 2023 August polls — Perak, Penang, Selangor and Negeri Sembilan — all 19 Muda candidates lost their deposits.

If Amira loses this time, and further loses her deposit, what is the party left with?

Reset Malaysia, let’s be honest, is waiting for a suitable arrangement with PN before nomination day.

PAS are stuck in a three way love fest, holding Bersatu with their right hand reluctantly and reluctant to let go Bersatu rebels on their left.

Already PAS Info Chief Fadhli Shari has declared support for ex-Bersatu man Wan Saiful Wan Jan wherever he contests. That’s not an endorsement that makes Bersatu President Muhyiddin Yassin smile.

It was 39 days or almost six weeks between dissolution and nomination day in Sabah last year.

Hamzah Zainudin’s motley crew face a countdown with no option to reset. Bersatu for their own survival will run down the clock and leave Hamzah ashen.

PAS being PAS will expect the rest to conclude matters for them. Indecision will dominate and Muyiddin’s field marshall Azmin Ali cannot countenance parity for Hamzah’s unregistered group.

And Hamzah won’t touch Pejuang with a long barge pole, which further isolates him. He understands best how home ministers tend to be massively unkind to those out of power, like himself.

Not sure he’d be thrilled to use the mangosteen or tractor for his yikes, independent candidates!

The final outsider contestant is Bersama. Terengganu-born Rafizi Ramli is probably looking at the electoral roll and using several AI tools to spit out the right number of candidates to field.

He is always convinced electoral victory is a formula away rather than a strong, consistent and honest message away.

And PKR, already under fire, will want to squash its former deputy president.

He’d be attacked by his own protege Akmal Nasir, the former PKR youth chief, Johor Baru MP and currently helming the ministry Rafizi exited.

Akmal would be expected by the party to trample on Bersama. It is obvious that Bersama targets PKR seats.

It is unfortunate Bersama is asked to contest so soon after kicking off but it cannot choose to shy away from this battle.



(From left) Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad and Datuk Seri Rafizi Ramli raise their hands together on stage during the official launch of the new political branding 'BERSAMA' (Together) at the PJ Performing Arts Centre in Petaling Jaya. May 17, 2026—Picture by Raymond Manuel



No podium, potential in being competitive

Firstly, the goal for these future champions or far too soon to disappear phenomenons is not to win the state but to establish a beachhead.

Which of the four possess the nous to prevail?

Then look at the measures used to evaluate potential.

The “candidate to deposit loss” ratio enables a plain view of survivability. Can one in eight voters dare support your party?

Pejuang never recovered from 2022 and Muda from 2023. This is the figure used by the Internet to denigrate second tier parties. In politics it is better to be hated than to be laughed at.

Second, exhibiting a spine in electoral arrangements, if it comes to it, matters plenty. Operating from a weakened position they cannot choose to ignore overtures.

The outcome is beyond small players, as BN, Pakatan and PN dictate terms.

But they cannot let the process chip away at their credibility. But being beggars shooed away from the negotiation table downgrades parties, demeans them.

Muda was perpetually treated like that by Pakatan and if they think PN are a classier bunch, they are asking for a repeat.

Malaysians are aware the big boys prefer fewer players and use electoral pacts to bury the competition.

Eighteen years ago Parti Sosialis Malaysia was unregistered but had an MP and assemblyman each thanks to a partnership with Pakatan.

Last year, as a registered party but long ignored by Pakatan, it mustered 6 per cent in Perak’s Ayer Kuning’s by-election and lost the deposit.

The reality check for PSM is that compared to recent years’ outcomes, Ayer Kuning was not a horrible result.

Strangely, Bersama has a chance to fail spectacularly but impress a nation. Rafizi is the only politician east of Mandalay who identifies himself as a kamikaze and thinks that’s a good thing.

Spoiler alert, the Japanese did damage the enemy in the Second World War using kamikaze pilots but ultimately lost the war. But Rafizi was a boarding school Malay language debater, those sorts do not let facts get in the way of a story.

In pursuit of a beautiful defeat, he might spark interest in his party. But that’s the conundrum, he needs to excite people about his party, not just him.

Which means the candidates and their stories. They are the ones who need to run into machine-gun fire in a ritual of democratic zeal. But that’s not Rafizi’s style.

Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad is the natural number two to him not because they were long-time PKR leaders, short-lived ministers and alumni of Malay College, but rather due to Nazmi being happy to let Rafizi corner the attention.

Though, Rafizi might ultimately prove all of us wrong.


Say Rollo Tomassi

In the first-past-the-post dynamics of our Westminster Parliamentary system, it is a high bar to clear for a party to survive infancy.

Until 2008, the country had half a century of a fixed coalition against under-strength and divided opponents. Almost a one-party nation.

By 2020 we accelerated through deceit and backroom deals, into a three-way game.

Parliamentary democracies naturally limit themselves to two sides until untidy and quick splinters occur which crowd the field and frustrate voters.

Johor may be the first of several obstacles to test the mettle of the established three and the newer players.

For the former, to top the game, for the latter, to stay in the game. In a cruel way, it is far harder for the pretenders to stay relevant than for the big three to win.

For the four, it is also auditions. Notch up support for themselves or increase voter turnout or turn into Internet sensations, then the big three have to consider partnerships.

And from there to the general. There are too many moving parts for now.

They all won’t hurt their chances if they put on their strategy wall throughout this election this reminder: Go big or go home!


***


A few comments:

1st - Pakatan was too BIG-hearted in allowing or gifting Muda with one state seat in the Johor 2022 election, namely, Puteri Wangsa. Nuisance newbies like MUDA should be crushed instead of nursed (what a frigging name of MUDA - what happens when the members grow old? MUDA menjadi TUA???)

2nd - PEJUANG has been a sad joke - it'd be better for Mukhriz (nice guy) to return to UMNO - at least there he is still recognisable though he'd never be PM like his OLD MAN. If he doesn't return to UMNO, he'll be crushed into oblivion in the next election - then there will be very little political opportunity for him after GE16 other than to waste his money on meaningless politics (meaningless for him).

I blame his father for bringing him FAR TOO LATE into politics. The OLD MAN was far too arrogant in believing he'd still have control over AAB and subsequently AAB's successor, Najib, thinking they could be relied upon to nurse and mentor Mukhriz into a Mahathir-ised Dynastic premiership. No doubt the OLD MAN still had the ("deep-hidden") power to subsequently get rid of AAB and Najib in unforgivable vengeful retribution but alas by then, arch-foe Anwar was back on the scene (and there were also other ambitious blokes like Moox2 etc).

The OLD MAN's other mistake was typically Asian, believing only the male progeny should or would be the one(s) to succeed his legacy. IMHO, none of his sons were as tough (or even a fraction of) as him, with all 3 inheriting their Mum's 'soft gentleness'. His true political heir should have been Marina Mahathir, a very admirable person who also showed compassion in her work on AIDS-HIV. This is what Wiki has on her (snapshot only))(highlights & emoticons😇 are by moi):

In 2010, she was awarded UN Person of The Year for her volunteer work in combatting HIV/AIDS.[10]

On 28 August 2012, Marina (Left), Hisham Hussein, Chairman of PT Foundation (Middle) and Ambassador of Japan to Malaysia H.E. Shigeru Nakamura (Right)

In 2016 Marina denounced the destruction of Malaysian culture and traditions by what she perceives as 'Arab colonialism'.[11] 👍👍👍💝

In January 2018, following a viral incident of a Muslim man slapping a Muslim woman for not wearing a hijab, Marina warned that Islamization of Malaysia will tear the country apart. She referred to Islamization as "another form of colonisation, a concept that has never been known to being non-violent" 👍👍👍😊


What a PM 💖 she would have been. Alas! 😥😥😥


3rd - PSM, a party not valued especially by the Malays especially those in poverty. I luv them but aiyoyo, wrong party symbol lah - appears too militant, too pseudo-communist lah!


Also appears too Indian, but go to Penang where Chinese Penangites (and Chinese in other places) admire capable politicians and frig their racial origins:

Example 1: 1st Mayor of (predominantly Chinese) Georgetown was D. S. Ramanathan, serving 2 terms from 1958 to 1960. To honour his civic contributions, Scott Road in George Town was renamed to Jalan D.S. Ramanathan.

D.S. Ramanathan


Example 2 - Karpal Singh, the Tiger of Jelutong 
(predominantly Chinese)

Karpal Singh

succeeded in Jelutong by RSN Rayer



Karpal's sons, Ramkarpal (Gelugor parliamentary seat), Jagdeep (Dato Keramat state seat),  Gobind (Damansara parliamentary seat) - all predominantly Chinese constituencies



Example 3 - (late) D.R Seenivasagam - "King of Ipoh", a predominantly Chinese federal constituency in Perak




S.P Seenivasagam (D.R's brother), MP for Menglembu (another predominantly Chinese constituency)





and many others.


Countdown to election: Negeri Sembilan MB announces formal dissolution of state assembly





Countdown to election: Negeri Sembilan MB announces formal dissolution of state assembly



Negeri Sembilan Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Utama Haji Aminuddin bin Harun confirmed the dissolution of the Negeri Sembilan state assembly. — Picture by Raymond Manuel

Thursday, 04 Jun 2026 11:48 PM MYT


SEREMBAN, June 4 — The Negeri Sembilan State Legislative Assembly, which has 36 seats, will be officially dissolved tomorrow to pave the way for the upcoming State Election (PRN).

The announcement was made by Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Aminuddin Harun during a special press conference at his official residence here tonight, bringing an end to weeks of speculation surrounding the timing of the assembly’s dissolution.

Aminuddin said the dissolution was carried out after obtaining the consent of the Yang Dipertuan Besar of Negeri Sembilan, Tuanku Muhriz Tuanku Munawir, during an audience at Istana Besar Seri Menanti earlier today. — Bernama

Negeri Sembilan state assembly to be dissolved on Friday, says MB





Negeri Sembilan state assembly to be dissolved on Friday, says MB


04 Jun 2026, 11:32 pm



Negri Sembilan Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Aminuddin Harun announced late on Thursday that the Negri Sembilan state legislative assembly will be dissolved on Friday.


KUALA LUMPUR (June 4): The Negri Sembilan state legislative assembly is to be dissolved on June 5, paving the way for a state election to be held.


Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Aminuddin Harun said the decision followed an audience with the Yang di-Pertuan Besar of Negeri Sembilan, Tuanku Muhriz Tuanku Munawir, at 8.30pm on Thursday.


Aminuddin announced the decision at a late-evening press conference on Thursday.


Negri Sembilan is the second state to dissolve its legislative assembly this week, after Johor did so on June 1, 2026.


More to come

Thursday, June 04, 2026

SINGAPORE STRAITS TIMES SAYS THEY ARE KAPUT

 

Monday, June 1, 2026


SINGAPORE STRAITS TIMES SAYS THEY ARE KAPUT


This is edited and adapted from Straits Times Singapore here
As usual I have reworded it some.

The self-inflicted loneliness.
MGR risks losing conservatives and reformists who brought him to power.
He is now estranged from his non-Malay voters, progressives and moderates.
finally took office 2022 - after nearly three decades (of talking crap).
His coalition did not win an outright majority 
stitch together unlikely govt with former rivals
after four years cultivating 'hutang budi' 
thrown into jail for abuse of power, sodomy 
less than four years later (2026) mood has shifted markedly

(OSTB: After being duped for 24 years his own supporters can now smell through the chicken sh_t crap in less than four years - since 2022)

  • Poor popular support
  • Among the Malay-Muslim majority, PN remains dominant. 
  • PN huge gains across six states in 2023 state elections 
  • DAP (also full of crap)  
  • UMNO starting to distance itself from MGR 
  • frustration growing within own support base
  • estranged from non-Malay minorities (especially Indians).
  • Sabah polls Nov 2025 brutal defeat for MGR
  • winning just one of 22 seats contested
  • DAP lost all eight seats it contested
  • huge losses set off alarm bells within DAP
  • DAP lost two-thirds of its votes compared to 2020 Sabah polls
  • DAP annual congress in July to decide future in coalition
  • starting to look very lonely for MGR 
  • His own worst enemy
  • his loneliness is for the most part self-inflicted
  • overpromised but underdelivered 
  • Some recent controversies:
  1. pig farming ban in Selangor
  2. “illegal Hindu temples”
  3. UEC –  holders limited to four Chinese studies programmes.
  4. repeated expansion of the sales and service tax 
  5. stricter tax compliance with e-invoicing
  6. R--izi quit Cabinet after losing party position
  7. criticism over alleged vote-rigging and nepotism (party polls)
  8. daughter's rise within the party
  9. MACC “corporate mafia” scandal
  10. abuse powers, to intimidate, manipulate, blackmail business figures 
  11. forced to let MACC chief go in May
  12. MACC investigated former economy minister over RM1.1b govt deal 
  13. increasingly picking fights with journalists, civil society, activists 
  • party convention in Johor, security personnel scuffled with reporters 
  • seeking to question MGR
  • growing discomfort with scrutiny
  • great leader less tolerant of criticism now
  • alienating very constituencies that supported them
  • UMNO worst-ever electoral performance in 2022
  • yet disproportionately large share of Cabinet positions 
  • now UMNO distancing itself from MGR 
  • UMNO partnership already fraying
  • April UMNO withdrew support for Negeri chief minister 
  • In Johor UMNO ended electoral pact  - to contest all 56 seats in Johor
  • Sarawak GPS declared to eliminate DAP in S'wak by April 2027

My Comments:

Well folks when you spend so much time playing in the sh_tter, you are bound to end up inside the sh_thole. This is what is happening now. 

My friends and I spent about 38 years (since about 1988) campaigning not only against this dud-speak but also against his entire entourage of not-too-clever beggars. 

It is a complete failure of some sections of our voting public who until today do not know the difference between a sh_tter and a sh_thole. They really liked the fellow's crap.

However I must give due regard to the Malay Muslim voters - in the 80s and 90s they were his largest support base.  But that support base has now vanished - vaporised into thin air. 

If you are a Malay politician and you do not have Malay support you do not have a future in politics.  This has happened to Najib Razak. it happened to Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad (Dr M lost his deposit). And it has happened to MGR.

Najib got kicked out because he stole from the people.

Dr Mahatir got kicked out because he made the Malays (plus others) poorer. (The Malays could only afford to buy the cheapest tin can 'national' cars - but at exhorbitant prices).

Democracy works. Muck around and you will get kicked out. FAFO.




MIRROR MIRROR ON THE WALL WHO IS THE DUMBEST OF THEM ALL?

 

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

MIRROR MIRROR ON THE WALL WHO IS THE DUMBEST OF THEM ALL?


When should the next general elections (the 16th) be held? The quick answer is tomorrow. The Indians are abandoning the ruling coalition by the busloads and shiploads. 

Parti Bersama has already launched its Sang Kancil logo. Plus a 12 point action plan.  The Kancil and the action plan may still need more polishing and fine tuning. But the signal is clear - they are getting organised pretty quickly. They say between 20,000 to 70,000 supporters have already switched sides to Parti Bersama. 

Zaid Ibrahim says Bersama can win 40 Parliamentary seats. The more time passes, the more organised Bersama will become. If they have more time they may gather 200,000 new supporters instead of just 20,000.

So the longer  the General Election DOES NOT HAPPEN, the higher the risk for the ruling coalition.

The same goes for Hamzah Zainuddin's RESET.  Hamzah is moving quickly with PAS. The more time they have, the more RESET will get better organised.  So the longer the GE does not happen the higher the risk for the ruling coalition. 

Ok folks, do you remember this clown?


Well perhaps another star has just been born.

  • Minister slams ‘deafening silence’ over scrapped Norway missile deal
  • minister condemns lack of strong reaction from other countries to 'Norway's unilateral decision' at the Shangri-La Dialogue.
  • SINGAPORE: minister criticised “deafening silence” from major powers over collapse of deal with Norway for a naval missile system
  • two countries diplomatic dispute this month since Norway revoked export approvals 
  • minister condemned lack of strong reaction from other countries to “Norway’s unilateral decision” at a major defence forum in Singapore.
  • This deafening silence sends a dangerous message that some countries are simply above scrutiny,” he told the Shangri-La Dialogue.
  • was now talking with “real partners” to buy the missile system.
  • government had sent a notice to the company involved, Kongsberg demanding compensation for both “direct and indirect costs”.

MY COMMENTS:

1. Firstly you must read the contract carefully.  International contracts, especially weapons contracts will most certainly have termination and illegality clauses. Here are some examples:

  • Sovereign acts doctrine (especially in contracts involving governments).
  • Regulatory change clause.
  • Legislative change clause.
  • Government action clause.
  • Illegality clause — provides that if performance becomes illegal due to a change in law, obligations may cease.
  • Termination for illegality — a specific provision allowing termination when a legal change makes performance unlawful.

Such changes in the laws can only be made by the government of a country  and not by the missile manufacturer. Therefore the commercial weapons suppliers have no say about any restrictions, export bans, security risk classifications their governments may suddenly impose. 

If there are any such illegality or termination clauses in the contract then compensation and financial liability (to be paid by the weapons supplier) can be disputed. They may escape liability. So read the contract again.

2. But what is the purpose of saying such things aloud at a defense conference in Singapore and pointing a finger at other countries for not speaking up? Why should other countries be bothered at all with a commercial contract between a seller and buyer that does not involve them? The minister has made a fool not only of himself but he has embarrassed his country. Malulah.  

3. Then the missile manufacturer in question Kongsberg supplies missile weapons systems to Indonesia.  

Indonesia selected the NASAMS (National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System) from Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace in 2017. The contract included:

  • Air-defense command posts
  • Radars
  • Launchers
  • Communications equipment
  • Training and logistics support

The system uses American made AIM-120 AMRAAM missiles.

Indonesia is not a NATO member. But Kongsberg still deals with them. Obviously Indonesia is not a high risk country to sell advanced weapons systems.  

So why did the Norwegian government suddenly cancel the export license for the Kongsberg missiles? The red lights on their 'security risk'  radar began flashing. Why? Something must have gone wrong somewhere. Nobody suddenly cancels a contract worth hundreds of millions of Ringgit for no good reason.

So be careful who you hang out with. If you hang out with known trouble causers and the unsavoury folk, other people will take notice. And since even your underwear is Made in China, you have very little bargaining power.  

Jangan jadi bodoh.