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Malaysian Indians are kingmakers, can be radicalised to look beyond PH and DAP By Prof Ramasamy Palanisamy

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Publish date: Sat, 29 Jul 2023, 04:58 PM

INDIANS are not passive or ignorant of their political strength in the country. It is just that they don’t have proper, effective and dynamic leadership to tap their strength and vitality.

Indians have a king-making presence not just in a few constituencies but in about 60 electoral constituencies, both parliamentary and state.

Indian presence is more than 10% in some constituencies, in some more than 15% and there are constituencies where Indians have a presence of more than 20% or even more than 35% in a small handful of constituencies.

All in all, even if the Indian population is about 7% or 8% of the total population, when it comes to their electoral strength, they are a force to be reckoned with.

Yes, the vast majority of Chinese and Indians are with the Paaktan Harapan (PH) coalition, a shift that took place after 2007.

Among Indians, what was once thought impossible deserted the BN in droves to align with first the Pakatan Rakyat (PR) and then the PH after 2008 and onwards.

Today, given the race and religious politics of the opposition, namely the Perikatan Nasional (PN), the non-Malays have little choice but to vote PH or the unity government.

Fear or insecurity in politics is ephemeral in the country. It cannot be taken for granted that the non-Malays are the fixed deposit for the PH.

Remember HINDRAF?

But things might change under favourable political and social circumstances. I agree that Indians might be kingmakers in about 60 electoral constituencies; their kingmaking prowess will vary in accordance with their percentage of presence in the constituencies.

It is not that Indians are ignorant of the changing circumstances of the country. Under certain trying circumstances, Indians having nothing much to lose in material terms might be more easily radicalised than the Chinese.

The 2007 HINDRAF (Hindu Rights Action Force) movement was one example of Indian radicalisation for betterment.

There have been a number of historical antecedents to the HINDRAF movement where Indians fought tooth and nail against the colonial and post-colonial governments.

The majority of Indians in the country are members of the working class concentrated in urban areas. They might not have the wealth of the Chinese community but they can be radicalised under proper progressive leadership.

For more than 60 years, Indians caught in the web of MIC servile politics became a passive community depending on breadcrumbs from the government.

Indians want reforms that will make far-reaching, meaningful changes for their community. They are not beggars in the country. Without the sweat and toil of their ancestors, development might have been hampered.

It cannot be taken for granted that Indians have no choice other than PH. They are attracted to the reforms promised by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim and the unity government. Their continuous support for the DAP and PKR cannot be taken for granted.

Not weaklings

Indians might be opposed to the extremist politics of the PN but there is no guarantee that they will not be open to other kinds of political formations in the future.

It is a challenge for Anwar to address the social and economic needs of Indians. Sweet words and endearments might only have a superficial effect.

It is not that Indians are not aware of their electoral strength or the power to mobilise for their betterment. Those who believe that Indians are passive and don’t have the numerical presence to bring about meaningful change should just look back at past history.

The absence of effective and progressive leadership is something that is lacking in the community.

The past leadership of Indians in ethnic or multi-racial political parties might not have had the desired effect. Their leaders were too prone to succumb to the majoritarian needs of society.

Indian leaders in the MIC were effective in disciplining the Indians but there were no beneficial programmes for Indians.

Let us take the Indian community seriously as they are citizens of the country who have contributed much to the development and well-being of the country.

Those powers to be who neglect Indians on the basis of race, religion or their numerical weakness will be condemned to repeat the unsavoury aspects of the country’s political history. - July 29, 2023

Prof Ramasamy Palanisamy is the former DAP state assemblyman for Perai. He is also the former deputy chief minister of Penang.

The views expressed are solely of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Focus Malaysia

 

https://focusmalaysia.my/malaysian-indians-are-kingmakers-can-be-radicalised-to-look-beyond-ph-and-dap/

Discussions
1 person likes this. Showing 13 of 13 comments

DickyMe

Vote for MUDA and PSM.

2023-07-29 20:59

Zhuge_Liang

Prof Ramasamy has already stayed for 3 terms, enough loh.
Please stop to talk bad about DAP.
Must be a grateful person, not a sour grape.

2023-07-29 22:09

ykloh

The dropped indian former assemblymen are being replaced by their own kind. What's their basis of the outburst. Quoting Xi in their outburst is totally inappropriate. There is even talk of joining Bersatu. DAP is their best platform.

2023-07-29 23:29

DickyMe

DAP has become weak with Anthony Loke behaving like a lapdog to PKR and UMNO.
DAP have given too much space and has been ball licking majority.

2023-07-30 00:01

qqq47660

its not call lapdog..............its call different circumstances.

when u are opposition, u simply bark is acceptable.

2023-07-30 00:42

ks55

Indian king maaker? Do a bit of analysis give you the answer they are fence sitter. Which party offer better deal, they will go for it. Remember PPP? Where is the party now? Who was the last Party President?

2023-07-30 02:45

ks55

DAP sacrifies the most to form Unity Govt, otherwise MALAYSIA will fall to the hand of PN/PAS coalition, the political parties in Sabah and Sarawak acted as fence sitters.

2023-07-30 02:52

qqq47660

I want umno to do well but not too well. Problems also if umno do too well

2023-07-30 09:53

qqq47660

There is no proof Indians want to vote for pn

2023-07-30 09:55

DickyMe

The only option is Muda or PSM.
Lapdog's bend down to circumstances.
It's called unprincipled!

2023-07-30 12:45

qqq47660

its call real politic

unprincipled is a different thing.

2023-07-30 15:14

DickyMe

What does real politic mean? Fake politics means lying to voters, that I know and many Malaysian politicians are around.

2023-07-30 15:28

Thirai Thiraviam

DAP now has a credibility issue with the Indian community. It started with the appointment of V. Sivakumar and the elevation of V. Ganabatirau. Not only are both from the minority Telugu community, both cannot go beyond paying lip service to the concerns of the community. To make things worse, Sivakumar, the only Indian Malaysian in the PMX cabinet, having appointed his domestic partner and her son to key positions in MOHR, has been caught with his hand in the cookie jar, becoming a national embarassment in the process. That said, it is good that they retired P. Ramasamy. While he did well in the early years, he has become more and more divisive and resentful. His continued role as the Penang Hindu Endowment Board chair also has, I believe, created uneasiness among many Indian voters.

2023-07-31 10:34

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