Within Pakatan Rakyat the concept of youth is unsurprisingly
expressed in ways as diverse as the parties of the dysfunctional
coalition. Clever DAP packages it as irreverence and rebellion, best
summed up by their slick but ultimately meaningless "Ubah Rocket Style"
video. They also make voting for them look like youthful defiance,
which, as we shall discuss later, is simply not true.
PAS promised us a youth revolution in the party two years ago but is
still run by a gerontocracy. At last year's Muktamar its youth division
asserted itself by moving a motion against K-pop on the grounds it is
"excessive entertainment". We wonder if they told that to the DAP youth
singing along to Ubah Rocket Style?
There is also the fact that PAS in Kelantan issues summonses to young
people for, of all things, giving one's girlfriend a piggy-back. So
much for being tolerant of youthful exuberance.
At PKR youth was embodied by the ambitions of Azmin Ali, the prime
offender in the damaging civil war in Selangor; Rafizi Ramli, an early
victim of that war; and Nurul Izzah Anwar, the dynastic successor to
Anwar who has squandered her career prospects by offending anyone and
everyone from the police to Muslim scholars.
So when it comes to youth, as with everything else, PKR-DAP-PKR don't
have much in common but they are united by one deceitful construct: The
notion that voting for them is somehow the right thing for the young to
do, because Pakatan MPs are the outsiders - even underdogs - and
therefore, electing them is a virtuous act.
Nothing could be further from the truth. As its seat allocation
process proved, there has been no real generational shift within
Pakatan. Aging party hacks desperately cling to their seats or use their
status to settle disputes, as Lim Kit Siang, 72, proved in Gelang
Patah.
The real way to honestly engage youth is to have workable measures to
help young people through tertiary education and into the workforce and
then to stop pretending they want anything different from all
right-minded Malaysians: A stable economy, jobs, healthcare, tolerance,
moderation – the basics.
Datuk Seri Najib Razak understands this. That's why when he is
addressing young people he doesn't gesture to the crowd like a rock star
(Anwar's favourite motivational trick before his adoring fans). Najib
articulates exactly the same ideas to an 18-year-old as he would to a
50-year-old, in a serious and easy to understand way.
The real act of youthful defiance at GE13 would be to vote for the
party that is reforming itself after 55 years in power; the party that
is kicking out old candidates in favour of new ideas; and doesn't
patronise young people along the way. That means a vote for BN.
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