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OPINION | The Pig, the Kancil and the Price of Authenticity
3 Jul 2026 • 4:30 PM MYT
ISpeaking about the impact on pig farmers, Boo questioned the fairness of forcing families who had been in the business for generations to suddenly shut down their operations. He expressed hope that the government would reconsider its decision, arguing that the livelihoods of these farmers deserved to be taken into account.
Predictably, all hell broke loose.
Social media exploded with condemnation. Before long, Bersama's cute little kancil logo had been given an unexpected makeover. Apparently, somewhere on the internet, it is now a pig.
Political satire has always been part of democracy. If you're a politician, sooner or later someone will turn your logo into something your graphic designer never approved.
But what interested me wasn't the meme.
It was what happened next.

When Boo first made his remarks, Rafizi Ramli stood firmly behind him. He praised Boo for having the courage to raise a difficult issue and explained that Bersama deliberately chose ordinary Malaysians as candidates because they spoke honestly instead of relying on carefully prepared scripts.
I actually agreed with him.
For years we've complained that politicians all sound the same. Every speech feels like it has been vetted by three committees, five advisers and one public relations consultant. Every answer is so polished that, by the end of it, you're still not entirely sure what they actually said.
Then along comes someone who says exactly what he thinks.
You may completely disagree with Boo. That's perfectly fair.
But at least now you know exactly where he stands.
And isn't that what we keep asking for?
Then came the backlash.
Many Malaysians were offended and outraged. Even Rafizi admitted he had received warnings that Boo's remarks could trigger a negative reaction.
Then came the campaign guidelines.
Apparently, the candidates are now required to clear their statements with headquarters first.
So much for "speaking from the heart."
Personally, I'd rather have a politician who occasionally says the wrong thing than one who never says anything real.
Not because honest politicians are always right. They're not. They'll make mistakes. They'll offend people. They'll say things we'd rather they hadn't.
That's called revealing who they are.
What worries me more is the politician who has mastered the art of saying absolutely nothing while sounding incredibly convincing.
Those politicians tell every audience exactly what it wants to hear. Spend one night with a Malay audience and they sound like champions of Malay rights. Spend the next with a Chinese audience and suddenly they're speaking the language of inclusivity. Visit business owners and they're pro-business. Meet civil servants and they're pro-government. By polling day, everyone thinks they're on the same side.
After polling day, nobody really knows what they believe.
Democracy isn't about electing people who never offend anyone.
It's about electing people who let us know where they really stand before we vote.
Ironically, I thought Rafizi's original defence of Boo made far more sense than the campaign guidelines that followed.
Within a day, the promise of authenticity had quietly become damage control.
That makes Bersama look suspiciously like every other political party that promises to do politics differently - right up until doing politics differently becomes politically inconvenient.

If we really want ordinary Malaysians to enter politics, we have to accept that they won't always sound like seasoned politicians. They'll say the wrong thing. They'll phrase things badly. They'll occasionally offend people.
That's the price of authenticity.
The alternative is a political culture where every speech is scripted, every sentence is tested, and every opinion comes with a disclaimer approved by the communications team.
I'll take the occasional awkward truth over the perfectly rehearsed performance any day.
What disappointed me most wasn't Boo's remarks.
It was how quickly Rafizi abandoned the very principle he had defended just a day earlier.
Leadership isn't tested when everyone applauds. It's tested when the criticism starts.
If your commitment to authenticity lasts only until the first social media storm, perhaps it was never authenticity in the first place.
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