Wednesday, May 1, 2013

OPPOSITIONS FALLING APART AND ARE DESPERATE AS THEY LOSE GRIP ON VOTERS

Relationship between parties in Pakatan Rakyat (PR) are with leaders of each party scramble for votes as polling is getting nearer and the fear of losing is becoming real.
PAS and DAP are two parties that have never been singing the same tune since the pact began before 2008 general election and they are still going after each other’s throat.
PAS has insisted that the party would set up and Islamic state and the Hudud Laws would be implemented if the pact wins Putrajaya while DAP is dead set against it to the extent that DAP chairman Karpal Singh had said: “Over my dead body” over PAS’ insistence.
And the debate has now become a verbal clash that cannot be stopped because each party tries to convince their respective voters that they (voters) would not be short-changed if they win Putrajaya.
The latest was the statement by Johor DAP deputy chief Norman Fernandez calling voters in the state not to vote for PAS based on PAS’ insistence for an Islamic state.
Trying to cool down the heat, Karpal said Norman should not make the statement as this would jeopardise the chance of DAP and PAS to win some seats in the state.
The reality is that leaders of the three parties in the state knew they have a slim chance of performing the 2008 act and in desperation, they try to cover whatever differences between them from the knowledge of the public.
The opposition pact is now in deep mud as voters, who in 2008 voted them in have now changed according to the performances and act during the last five years.
States won by the opposition pact such as Kedah, Selangor, Kelantan and Penang are finding it hard to fulfill their promises and pledges as they do not know how to administer.
Voters now found that leaders of the opposition pact are only good in ‘political talks and promises’ but are never good in managing the states, what more the federal government.
Voters now realize that the opposition pact is playing segmented politics – DAP for the Chinese, PAS for Islam and PKR only for Anwar Ibrahim – and is not interested in truly bringing about the so-called change on the so-called weaknesses of the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN).
Thus, in desperation, the three parties segmentised their target revealing the truth about their own agenda – not for all Malaysians as they propagate through their manifestos.
In desperation, each party in the opposition pact now scramble hard to convince their respective segment foregoing the Malaysian concept.
They are in reality practicing divisive politics that very dangerous for existence of the multi-racial and multi-religious Malaysia.
It is time that voters ‘flush out’ such politics and opt for a wholesome Malaysia – 1Malaysia.

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