Financial Times and Reuters have got good news for Malaysians that the 
Prime Minister, Dato’ Seri Najib has finally stated his confidence in 
Barisan Nasional winning 2/3 majority in the upcoming election.  His 
confidence means a lot to the business people, especially, as many of 
the group are worried over the credibility and ability of the 
Oppositions in handling the economy. 
 
The fact that Anwar Ibrahim had also stated that this could be his best 
chance of victory ever, is taken as a mere political statement from a 
man who has a been shooting his own foot again and again during these 
critical hours.   
 
Pushing his sex-scandals aside, Malaysians are keeping their eyes on 
Anwar for his name keeps popping up in the investigation over the bloody
 Lahad Datu terrorist invasion.  Until todate, Anwar fails to explain 
the reason behind his meetings with MNLF leaders and what were ‘his men’
 doing in Phillipines just days before the invasion?   
 
It couldn’t be a co-incident that he must brought up the issue of 
Malaysia losing Sabah or all the fuss about the identity cards being 
issued not according to procedures to the immigrants in the state, prior
 to the bloody incident. 
 
But the greatest mistake Anwar made in handling this issue, is that he 
tried to shut the medias from digging out the truth from him by 
threatening to sue them if they ever asked about why he didn’t sue 
Reuters or the Philippines media who first reported the stories about 
him being the one behind the whole incident. 
 
He could have gained a lot just by suing those medias but he didn’t, 
which most certainly because there are concrete basis to it.   
 
No one in the right mind would vote for a man who didn’t care less about
 the lives of the people.  No one in the right mind would vote for a man
 who had actually made a deal to give away a state to the terrorists so 
that he could become the Prime Minister. 
 
What sort of country would it be, if the Prime Minister himself, is the traitor? 
 
Just like all his other problems, nobody did anything to Anwar, but 
himself.  This is a common problem of a man so desperate, so eager, so 
anxiously excited for power. 
He could have fought a decent fight, work very hard to show his party’s 
credibility and served the people in his constituency well, and may one 
day win the hearts of Malaysians that they might forget his dirty filthy
 stinking stories.  But he chooses to fight dirty, go through backdoors 
and create unrest.  ‘Arab Spring’ is his dream, so how could we not see 
his connection with Lahad Datu bloodshed? 
 
While Anwar is always on the ‘attack’ mode over the government and 
everything that spells BN, it is very much the opposite with Dato’ Seri 
Najib.   
In contrary to Anwar, The Prime Minister would rather talk about his achievement than ‘attack’ his political enemies.   
 
In the interview with Financial Times, for example, Dato’ Seri Najib was
 obviously engrossed with his work as the Prime Minister and as the 
party leader.  He explained, very matter-of-factly about how a strong 
government is necessary to accelerate the process of transformation in 
the country.  He also pointed out how he has reformed UMNO and 
deliberately changed internal rules to make a potential leadership 
challenge easier.
He doesn’t need to brag either, as the numbers speak for themselves. 
 Malaysia is now being aided by an economic programme that the 
government launched in 2010 to double per capita income to $15,000 by 
2020.   This has led to external confidence whereby foreign holdings of 
Malaysian government bonds jump by 550 per cent to RM215 billion 
(USD69billion) since 2009, according to HSBC.
The only thing that the Prime Minister has to say about the Oppositions 
is that he thinks it is too risky to put faith in a coalition that does 
not have a clear sense of direction and with a manifesto that is not 
credible.
Needless to look at the numbers, the personalities of the two figures 
should be sufficient enough to help Malaysians make a choice.  One is 
very unpatriotic, insensitive, a traitor and forever anxious for power 
and the other one is very calm, rationale, elegant and brilliant. 
There is no doubt that two third majority wouldn’t be a problem for Barisan Nasional.  
 
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