Friday, October 24, 2008

Najib: Umno leaders must look beyond the party

KUALA LUMPUR: The time has come for Umno leaders to look beyond the party and members if it wants to stay in power, said Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.
The Umno deputy president admitted that there was a tendency for party leaders, particularly at divisional level, to look at Umno within the context of just Umno alone.
“I have always said that holding a post in Umno, say as a divisional head, it not the end of it all.
“It’s just the beginning of your responsibility and your responsibility is not only to the members of Umno but also to the people at large,” he told reporters on Thursday after the soft launch of Malaysia Savings Sale 2008.
The Deputy Prime Minister said Umno leaders should realise that if they want to stay in power, they have to appeal to the wider audience.
“This includes all sections of people incuding those who are not Umno members and non-malays as well,” he added.
He was commenting on former deputy Prime Minister Tun Musa Hitam’s remarks that Umno had “penyakit tua” (grown old) and had become too introverted and needed to change if it wanted support from the people.
Najib said in terms of party leadership, many members feel there was a need for generational change in Umno at all levels.
“For me, this is a natural process in the party,” he added.
On views that the Umno elections were too far away and, therefore, might give rise to even more money politics, he said, the party had given its full mandate to the disciplinary board to act on this.
He said the party president Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi had even met the board chairman Tengku Rithauddeen to ask that it act sternly to curb the menace.
He said the party election had been fixed for March and as of now there was no change.
On the Umno president saying in Sabah recently that there was nothing wrong in Datuk Seri Ali Rustam Mohd Ali going for the deputy post as an indication that Pak Lah wanted the Malacca Chief Minister as his (Najib’s) deputy, Najib said: “it’s not wrong.”
“Any member can contest for any post in the party with the condition that he fulfils the requirement in the party constitution,” he said.
Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin is the favourite in the Umno deputy president post and has qualified to contest the seat.
But following Abdullah’s remarks in Sabah, there was a surge in the nominations for Ali Rustam who is also vying for the post.
He (Ali Rustam) has not reached 39 nominations yet, the number needed to be eligible to contest the post.
On nominations from the Pekan division which has yet to have its meeting, Najib who is the division chief was non-committal. “Wait first. I haven’t thought about it,” he said.

tunku : a leader must serve all not only certain group. if he fails to serve all then he should not be a leader and we should not elect such leaders to lead us. as for ali rustam surging nominations, that was pak lah indirectly directive to divisions to nominate ali rustam by bashing muhyiddin and tun mahathir. he can do that but not others.he had now gone personal with muhyiddin.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

UMNO actually doesn't have to work hard if they work hard enough. Common guys, the malays are the majority in this country, and the simple rule is that those who unites the majority of the malays win. Simple. Malays shall be the majority for quite a while still. this rhetoric about being leader for all (e.g KJ claiming to be the leader for Barisan) is a lot of hogwash. You as a Malay would not even get there without first getting the malay support.

Once you are in power, to remain relevant, you'd then have to bring everyone forward, all malaysian of all race and gender.

There is no point picking on your own kind just to garner popularity with the few others. They would smile, but there is still no guarantee you'll get their vote.

We must not forget, that all this political righteous talks may appeal and makes sense to the middle class malays, but the middle class only accounts for at most 30% of the voting power. the remaining 70% remains with the lower income - those who needs protecting and emotional/passionate about their position. One person one vote, the loudest, righteous middle class people like us, still count for one vote only.

Thanks

Anonymous said...

Muhyiddin himself has long 'attacked' Pak Lah personally, and he's becoming 'braver' since Tun is on his side.
Now, if we're talking about a capable leader, is it safe for us elect Muhyiddin since he's some-sort of a 'proxy' to Tun and how did he managed to garnered his massive votes if it's not for Tun?