Hari ini UMNO mencipta sejarah paling bodoh di alam buana memilih dua manusia yang menunggu masa untuk disintuklimau dan mandi bunga oleh pejat, lipas, cicak dan mengkarong di Sg Buloh.
Apakah para pemimpin dan ahli UMNO dikuasai iblis dan syaitan memilih pemimpin yang dibebani berpuluh tuduhan rasuah, salahguna kuasa, korup, pengubahan wang haram sebagai pemimpin parti? Apakah mereka fikir berjuta rakyat Malaysia bodoh, dunggu kaldai, lembu dan kerbau akan menyokong parti yang dipimpin para perompak, maharaja koruptor itu?
Nampaknya ahli-ahli UMNO buta matahati dan tidak insaf terhadap penentangan rakyat terhadap para lanun, perompak, pembelit, penipu dan puak munafiq yang menguasai parti itu hingga UMNO/BN ditendang rakyat dari Putrajaya pada PRU 14.
Muka-muka perompak yang sama kembali berkuasa sekarang. Mungkin Allah hendak menunjukkan sekali lagi manusia mungkar, super munafiq ini akan dilaknati, dan UMNO akan kecundang sekali lagi kalau mereka tidak kembali ke jalan yang lurus.
UMNO sudah hilang sakral keramatnya. Hilang maruah, hargadiri, kredibiliti dan semangat perjuangannya sebagai pembela rakyat, agama dan tanahair tercinta. Masa depan UMNO semakin gelap, pudar nur keimanan pimpinannya, dan ia akan terus menyalak gunung namun sia-sia sahaja. Ia memilih para pemimpin Melayu yang bangsatkan Melayu maka UMNO akan menjadi parti bangsat yang akan ditolak oleh orang Melayu kelak. - Yahaya Ismail
Menteri kenakan MP dari PAS -
di zaman UMNO 30%,di zaman PH 40%
MP Rantau Panjang (Pas) YB Siti Zailah Yusuf tanya soalan kepada YB Anyhony Loke (Menteri Pangangkutan) berkaitan pembinaan ECRL melibatkan kawasan beliau terutamanya, beliau menuduh kerajaan PH menganaktirikan kerajaan Kelantan. Megapa kuota bumiputra hanya 40% sahaja? soal beliau.
Dengan selamba menteri jawab, " Mengapa dulu tidak tanya kerajaan Bn tentang perkara ini? Dulu zaman Bn hanya dapat 30%. Bawah kerajaan PH, dirunding semula dan dapat dinaikkan dari 30% kepada 40%.. Itu jawapan menteri.
Maka, meyalak habis lebai2 dalam dewan. Marah sungguh mereka kalau sentuh nama Umno/Bn kawan baik mereka itu. Lihat perangai lebai. Zaman Umno, ECRL diwujudkan dan Umno/Bn dah buat macam2 perjanjian yang samasekali tidak menguntungkan rakyat dengan kos yg terlalu tinggi.
Bila PH perintah, mahu tidak mahu terpaksa teruskan projek tersebut tetapi banyak rundingan dibuat semula agar kos dapat dikurangkan.
Kalau zaman Umno mereka runding dapat 30% saja, tetapi zaman PH kita runding dapat 40% untuk kontrak pekerja tempatan, adakah itu maksudnya kerajaan PH menganaktirikan Kelantan dan Umno itu sayang kepada Kelantan? Maka, wajib jatuhkan kerajaan PH dan wajib sokong Umno?
Zaman Umno/Bn, mereka rampas royalti, tapi dizaman PH, kita kembalikan royalti minyak itu adalah tanda kerajaan PH anaktirikan Kelantan dan Umno dulu sayang kepada Kelantan? Maka, jatuh fatwa haram sokong PH dan wajib sokong Umno?
Sebab itu aku kata, lebai memang jual agama... - Wfauzdin NS
At 94,Dr.M has a new goal to
reunite Malays.But what for?...
As Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad turned 94 on Wednesday, well-wishers marvelled at his political staying power, while analysts wondered what new tricks the elder statesman of Asian politics might have up his sleeve.
Mahathir’s return to the apex of power last year – after a famous election victory over one time protégé Najib Razak – was widely seen as the greatest feat of a political career that stretches back to the 1940s.
That achievement came about because Mahathir quit the United Malays National Organisation (Umno) he had helped build during his first stint as prime minister, from 1981 to 2003, and joined the multiracial opposition he had spent so much of his colourful political life knocking down.
Umno, with its policy of admitting only members who are of Malay or indigenous [bumiputra, or sons of the soil] heritage, had for six decades until last year’s election been the country’s single most important political force – even though it was part of the multiparty Barisan Nasional coalition.
Malays and the indigenous peoples of peninsula Malaysia and Borneo make up about 67 per cent of Malaysia’s 33 million citizens. With Umno out of power, the now ruling Pakatan Harapan coalition includes several parties vying for support from that hefty ethnic vote bank.
Among them is the Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (PPBM, or Malaysian United Indigenous Party), which Mahathir formed to contest the polls after he split from Umno.
Political analysts say, based on recent intimations by Mahathir, that the veteran politician’s next major political manoeuvre is to reconsolidate – in his favour – Malay support that was splintered by last year’s election.
Umno is a shadow of its previous self, but remains a potent force because its leaders – including the deposed ex-prime minister Najib – continue to use racial rhetoric to shore up support. In terms of size, it remains the country’s biggest Malay party, with three million members.
The Islamist Parti Se-Islam Malaysia (Malaysian Pan-Islamic Party), is also formidable – with about 800,000 members. Both parties form the present-day opposition.
Mahathir’s return to the apex of power last year – after a famous election victory over one time protégé Najib Razak – was widely seen as the greatest feat of a political career that stretches back to the 1940s.
That achievement came about because Mahathir quit the United Malays National Organisation (Umno) he had helped build during his first stint as prime minister, from 1981 to 2003, and joined the multiracial opposition he had spent so much of his colourful political life knocking down.
Umno, with its policy of admitting only members who are of Malay or indigenous [bumiputra, or sons of the soil] heritage, had for six decades until last year’s election been the country’s single most important political force – even though it was part of the multiparty Barisan Nasional coalition.
Malays and the indigenous peoples of peninsula Malaysia and Borneo make up about 67 per cent of Malaysia’s 33 million citizens. With Umno out of power, the now ruling Pakatan Harapan coalition includes several parties vying for support from that hefty ethnic vote bank.
Among them is the Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (PPBM, or Malaysian United Indigenous Party), which Mahathir formed to contest the polls after he split from Umno.
Political analysts say, based on recent intimations by Mahathir, that the veteran politician’s next major political manoeuvre is to reconsolidate – in his favour – Malay support that was splintered by last year’s election.
Umno is a shadow of its previous self, but remains a potent force because its leaders – including the deposed ex-prime minister Najib – continue to use racial rhetoric to shore up support. In terms of size, it remains the country’s biggest Malay party, with three million members.
The Islamist Parti Se-Islam Malaysia (Malaysian Pan-Islamic Party), is also formidable – with about 800,000 members. Both parties form the present-day opposition.
Selamat ulangtahun hari kelahiran Dr.M dan Dr.Hasmah
Malays already benefit from affirmative action following racial violence in the 1960s sparked by a yawning wealth gap between the ethnic group and Malaysia’s wealthier Chinese minority.
“This [invitation to PPBM] is not a racist sentiment,” emphasised Mahathir. “We are just inviting members [to join]. There are already four Malay parties, enough. Malays must learn that politics is a serious matter … if there’s a problem, tell us, do not just start a new party.”
He later walked back his comments somewhat – amid pressure from multiracial coalition partners – but observers said his message to the Malays was clear: let PPBM be the new Umno. Wong Chin Huat, one of the country’s prominent political scientists, told This Week in Asia the prime minister was trying to use one stone “to kill several birds”.
“At the very least, it can sow the seeds of division in Umno. If they do jump over, it may strengthen Bersatu’s position in Pakatan Harapan,” Wong said.
Bersatu at present holds 26 parliamentary seats, making it the second smallest party in Pakatan Harapan. Thirteen of its MPs are ex-Umno lawmakers who crossed aisles after last year’s vote.
Wong and others in the commentariat are convinced, however, that Mahathir’s latest move is not just about hollowing out a deposed political foe.
Rather, they believe Mahathir is upping the ante in his rivalry with an ally, Anwar Ibrahim – leader of the Pakatan Harapan’s biggest party, the Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR, or People’s Justice Party).
Anwar was deputy prime minister to Mahathir during the senior politician’s first stint as prime minister, but the two had a falling out that resulted in Anwar being sacked and subsequently jailed for sodomy and corruption – convictions international rights groups say were trumped up by the then ruling administration.
They patched things up before last year’s election, and as part of an agreement, Mahathir must hand over power to Anwar within two years. The talk among Pakatan Harapan insiders is that Mahathir’s preference is to hand over power to another leader from PKR, the Economic Affairs Minister Azmin Ali, rather than Anwar.
The young minister, formerly chief minister of the state of Selangor, has grabbed headlines recently after allegedly featuring in a series of leaked sex videos. He denies involvement, and claims the videos were doctored to hurt him politically. PKR, which is helmed by Anwar as its president and Azmin as its deputy president, remains the biggest party in the ruling coalition, with 50 seats.
“[Mahathir’s Bersatu] is the party with the least number of seats, so it needs to have leverage to bargain and have its voice heard within Pakatan Harapan,” said Azmil Tayeb, a political scientist with Malaysia’s University of Science.
“Since the coalition gets weak support from Malay voters – still dwindling since the elections – Bersatu can use the ‘Malay unity’ card for leverage. Speculatively, it can also be used to check Anwar’s rise to power within Pakatan Harapan since Mahathir might be able to use the Malay unity card to convince other leaders to back his [preferred successor] instead.”
And Awang Azman Awang Pawi, a politics professor at the University of Malaya, said Mahathir was undoubtedly seeking to ‘defend his position’ amid rising pressure from Anwar’s camp for him to step down.
“Mahathir could have asked the opposition members to join Bersatu, or PKR or Amanah [another party in Pakatan Harapan], not just Bersatu. Clearly there are political motives to strengthen Bersatu so it is no longer a minority party,” he said.
Others in Umno, such as its president, former deputy prime minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi – mired in corruption charges like his former boss Najib – has struck back hard at Mahathir’s offer.
Zahid said his party would never work with Bersatu because of its strong ties with the Democratic Action Party, the Chinese-dominated Pakatan Harapan constituent party that has long been vilified by Umno as anti-Malay.
Mahathir, pressed by the media on Monday on his motive behind trying to unite the Malay political ground, had this to say: “We appeal to the Malays to be sensible about politics. You have 10, or 50 parties, for what?” The answer to that rhetorical question may be in Umno’s track record as a near monolithic political voice for the Malays, some observers say.
“The idea of one Malay party is playing politics to rally support and build strength [for Bersatu] … I doubt having a sole Malay party will distribute equally the advantages to all layers of Malay society,” said Kartini Aboo Talib, a professor in policy analysis at the National University of Malaysia.
The Umno-led Barisan Nasional did that “and yet the results scattered spatially and [created] new social hierarchies with significant income gaps,” she said. - scmp
Pindaan Had Umur Mengundi: Pembangkang Setuju
Hat mana dah jadi menteri,tim.menteri,wakil rakyat dan senatot tu....
jgn lupa bank in paling tadak pun RM5k seoqhang...indahnya nikmat berkosa...- f/bk
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