Ties between Zahid and Hadi ‘cold’, say party sources
Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi and PAS leader Abdul Hadi Awang had the chance to meet throughout the ongoing Dewan Rakyat sitting to resolve issues involving MN, but did not do so.
PETALING JAYA: Ties between Umno and PAS presidents Ahmad Zahid Hamidi and Abdul Hadi Awang are “cold” according to party sources, while an analyst says the parties’ Muafakat Nasional pact is in danger of ending.
An Umno source said the leaders of the country’s two biggest Malay parties had not met for a long time and did not plan on doing so anytime soon.
A source in PAS also confirmed the two presidents have not met in a while despite MN being said to be at the end of its “life” due to Umno’s objection to Bersatu joining the political pact.
“They haven’t met in a very long time. I can’t even remember when they last met,” said the source.
Meanwhile, another source said both leaders had the chance to meet throughout the ongoing Dewan Rakyat sitting to resolve issues involving MN, but did not do so.
“In Parliament, they did meet when they bumped into each other, but that was that. They didn’t sit down to discuss the direction of their respective parties,” he said.
The ties between both parties have come under scrutiny of late, particularly after PAS decided to contest under Perikatan Nasional in the Melaka polls. Hadi had also accused Umno of breaching the MN charter by refusing to accept Bersatu into the fold.
Led by Umno, Barisan Nasional stormed to a convincing victory in Melaka, winning 21 of the 28 state seats up for grabs. PAS lost in all eight seats it had contested.
While certain PAS leaders claim that Hadi had not rejected MN as a whole, political analyst Azmi Hassan also felt that MN’s time was running out, with the two parties continuing to disagree over Bersatu.
While expecting Hadi to continue rejecting MN if the issue over Bersatu was not resolved, Azmi told FMT that the cooperation between Umno and PAS was salvageable if the Islamist party’s grassroots pushed to work with the BN party.
“The pressure has to come from the PAS grassroots because they are loyal to the party but have a different thinking compared to the leadership when it comes to this.”
But Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia’s Kartini Aboo Talib said Umno needed to keep an open heart by receiving Bersatu into MN, to avoid splitting the Malay vote by competing with PN.
He said Umno and BN could not use its two-thirds majority win in Melaka as a possible indicator of a victory in the next general election (GE15) as PAS was still strong in Kelantan, Terengganu, Kedah and in parts of Perak.
Meanwhile, Bersatu had former Umno and PKR members who had their own strong network and base of support among the Malay voters, he said.
PETALING JAYA: Ties between Umno and PAS presidents Ahmad Zahid Hamidi and Abdul Hadi Awang are “cold” according to party sources, while an analyst says the parties’ Muafakat Nasional pact is in danger of ending.
An Umno source said the leaders of the country’s two biggest Malay parties had not met for a long time and did not plan on doing so anytime soon.
A source in PAS also confirmed the two presidents have not met in a while despite MN being said to be at the end of its “life” due to Umno’s objection to Bersatu joining the political pact.
“They haven’t met in a very long time. I can’t even remember when they last met,” said the source.
Meanwhile, another source said both leaders had the chance to meet throughout the ongoing Dewan Rakyat sitting to resolve issues involving MN, but did not do so.
“In Parliament, they did meet when they bumped into each other, but that was that. They didn’t sit down to discuss the direction of their respective parties,” he said.
The ties between both parties have come under scrutiny of late, particularly after PAS decided to contest under Perikatan Nasional in the Melaka polls. Hadi had also accused Umno of breaching the MN charter by refusing to accept Bersatu into the fold.
Led by Umno, Barisan Nasional stormed to a convincing victory in Melaka, winning 21 of the 28 state seats up for grabs. PAS lost in all eight seats it had contested.
While certain PAS leaders claim that Hadi had not rejected MN as a whole, political analyst Azmi Hassan also felt that MN’s time was running out, with the two parties continuing to disagree over Bersatu.
While expecting Hadi to continue rejecting MN if the issue over Bersatu was not resolved, Azmi told FMT that the cooperation between Umno and PAS was salvageable if the Islamist party’s grassroots pushed to work with the BN party.
“The pressure has to come from the PAS grassroots because they are loyal to the party but have a different thinking compared to the leadership when it comes to this.”
But Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia’s Kartini Aboo Talib said Umno needed to keep an open heart by receiving Bersatu into MN, to avoid splitting the Malay vote by competing with PN.
He said Umno and BN could not use its two-thirds majority win in Melaka as a possible indicator of a victory in the next general election (GE15) as PAS was still strong in Kelantan, Terengganu, Kedah and in parts of Perak.
Meanwhile, Bersatu had former Umno and PKR members who had their own strong network and base of support among the Malay voters, he said.
Hadi is Hot for Bersatu, for now.
ReplyDeleteThings can still change.
Here again, we read about Malay unity...it gets tiresome and offputting.
ReplyDeleteThe nons, if they have not, should wake up and make alternative plans like emigrating.
Why r u people voicing the Non to emigrate?
DeleteOoop… the champions of don't-spook-the-melayu-sensitivities & don't-stand-up-to-ketuanan-natratives farts!
R u sure u r not secretly siding those ketuanan dickheads?
BTW, emigrating to where?
The fair&easy land of free - senior &/or junior, Pomieland etc?
Just remember u might endup in the same pit of shits, except this time around this is YOUR moronic own choice - not yr forebears!