Daim's predictions
2012-03-01 18:52
By TAY TIAN YAN
Translated by DOMINIC LOH
Sin Chew Daily
Translated by DOMINIC LOH
Sin Chew Daily
If you want to know what is in store for the country's political future, you've got to ask Tun Daim Zainuddin.
Prior to the last general election, Daim predicted that the BN would
lose five states. Almost no one believed him, but he got it all correct.
Daim has since become a soothsayer few can afford to overlook. Some
call him a great fortune-teller, others say he is a political sorcerer.
One day, I went to his office with a colleague, and wanted him to
show us a way on the country's current political state of affairs, and
how he would predict the outcome of the next general election.
A low-key, somewhat mysterious person, Daim always leaves much to be
speculated, from his stint as the country's finance minister to the
business empire he has built.
It took a lot of effort for us to get an appointment to meet him and conduct a face-to-face interview.
No matter how people look at him, all share a common impression of
him, that he is an extremely shrewd man, and the great power that he
once had with him proves this point.
Well acquainted with the modus operandi of the government, he knows where the BN's weaknesses lie, as well as its many problems.
He has Umno at his finger tips. Thoughts that prevail in the party,
its organisation, and the roles played by individual leaders in the
party are all within his grips.
The varied info channels available to him and his broad business
perspectives have allowed him to identify the blind spots in Umno and
BN, and more objective facts.
As a result, he put it candidly that the 2008 political tsunami
served BN and Umno just right, as they were excessively arrogant and
conceited, thanks to the landslide victory secured in 2004. The same
also made them overlook the changes that were subsequently taking place
in the country as well as the various signals and warnings.
The leaders failed to respond to the voices of the public, and the
voters decided they had to teach the ruling coalition an important
lesson through the ballots in their hands.
The sudden surge in the number of seats won by the opposition was a
good thing for the country's democratic development, according to Daim.
Indeed, the government needs to be supervised and the rakyat now have an option.
Daim felt Najib had tried hard to implement the changes after he took
over as the prime minister, but he conceded that the "cow-gate"
incident had dealt a serious blow on the government.
He revealed a political strategy: Most issues would normally be
sedimented within 14 days. In other words, Malaysians have short
memories, and many issues that are unfavourable to the government could
only work their influences within only two weeks, after which they will
be obliterated from the people's minds and there is no need for the
government to get excessively concerned.
Nevertheless, if an issue outlives the 14-day cooling-off period,
something is going to be not very right. With the NFC scandal holding on
for so long and the government not taking any proactive steps to tackle
it, the same could work to the disadvantage of the ruling coalition.
As for the other things like whether BN is capable of recapturing the
lost states, the status of Najib after the election, the future of MCA,
Pakatan's problems and the fate of Anwar Ibrahim, they will all be
addressed later in the exclusive interview.
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