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Three things we learnt from: DAP’s 2023 national congress

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Publish date: Mon, 11 Sep 2023, 09:30 AM

PUTRAJAYA, Sept 11 — DAP leaders and members convened at this year’s annual congress held at the administrative capital yesterday as a ruling party after years of political and social tumult.

Today, it is part of the unity government but placed in the awkward position of having to work with a sworn foe — Umno.

This rather unexpected alliance has sparked great interest in the party’s 2023 convention held at the administrative capital, be it from sceptics with little faith that the allegiance will last or optimists who see it as a new period for genuine bipartisan collaboration.

Here are the three things we learned from the DAP’s 2023 congress:

At the height of its power

Emboldened by the party’s recent election victories in both the 15th general election and the six state by-elections, the party is currently capitalising on its continued electoral successes even if it meant less influence for the single largest party in the federal administration.

In GE15, DAP’s federal seats tally of 40 out of 42 contested is a testament to the support of its voter base. Instead, DAP emerged with four ministers as compared to its other coalition partners.

In the six state elections, DAP also won 98 per cent (46 out of 47 contested) of the seats it contested, making it the best-performing party nationally. It also won the most seats in Selangor and Penang, eclipsing Pakatan Harapan (PH) ally PKR.

Apart from 40 Members of Parliament, DAP also boasts 80 state assemblymen and four Dewan Negara senators.

It appears committed to work with Umno

Anthony Loke, the party’s secretary-general, drove home messages in his policy speech that were clearly aimed at assuring Umno, whose top leaders were present at the congress. Among them was Umno president himself, Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.

While Loke may have asserted the DAP’s unwillingness to back down on its push for multiculturalism, the tone was softened when it comes to Bumiputera rights. This marked a significant departure from past speeches whereby party leaders were unrelenting about racial equality, even if it was mostly vague (intentional or not) about the contentious issues around special Bumiputera privileges.

At this year’s congress, the party passed nine resolutions that included recognition of the community’s “special rights”. Yet it also said it remains committed to protecting the rights and interests of other races and communities as enshrined in Article 153 of the Federal Constitution.

Whether or not this entails adjusting — or even foregoing — the party’s “Malaysia for Malaysians” goal is unclear. But what is definitely clear is the party is willing to make compromises, and likely for the sake of keeping the unity government’s political agreement intact and stable for at least until the next term.

Reception of Umno is warm... for now

It remains to be seen if the party — which has been continuously painted negatively by Islamist PAS and Malay nationalist Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia as a bogeyman bent on usurping Islam and Malay political power — will continue to maintain its power base in the long run now that it is allied with former enemy-turned-partner Umno.

But at the surface, all seems well, for now at least. Zahid, who attended the congress flanked by some of the DAP’s once harshest critics from Umno, including its secretary-general Datuk Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki, was greeted by the party members with zeal. Even Zahid himself looked surprised by the boisterous welcome.

Still, whether or not the warm reception reflected what genuine thoughts the grassroots outside the convention had about Zahid is unclear. This year’s assembly concluded with little debate, even then whatever discussion that took place was held behind closed doors, safe from the critical eyes of the media.

And with Zahid’s corruption fiasco again placing the unity government under intense public scrutiny, after the prosecution agreed to discharge him from all 47 corruption, money laundering and criminal breach of trust charges, all that mood for love might just change.

 

https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2023/09/11/three-things-we-learnt-from-daps-2023-national-congress/90091

Discussions
Be the first to like this. Showing 8 of 8 comments

BursaVulture

3 things we learn from DAP

"If you wish to be a success in the world, promise everything, deliver nothing." - Napoleon Bonaparte

"Do as I say, not as I do."

"You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain."

2023-09-13 09:20

stockraider

Dap is doing the right thing to protect msia mah!

2023-09-13 10:39

DickyMe

YES! The right thing by being a LAPDOG by licking UMNO's butthole.

2023-09-13 13:15

gohkimhock

@DickyMe then what is your solution? Let the evil PN take over this country? What a political noob.

2023-09-13 13:36

DickyMe

There is no solution for decades. This nation is going to the gutter with racist and extremist generation. A third force like Muda, PSM and Borneo partnership is necessary to keep this nation on track. The current leaders are a bunch of hypocrites. Muda needs to spring clean itself and get rid of traitors from within the party.

2023-09-13 15:53

DickyMe

You think you made the right choice, but till date voters are taken for a ride by all parties including DAP. None of them kept their promise. End of the day "adjustment" which also means "closing an eye on wrong doings" is what they prefer. All the talks about integrity, transparency are just "farts".

2023-09-13 15:56

gohkimhock

I have mentioned many times. This is not a PH govt. It is a mixed govt. Everything must be compromised. Next time give PH a stronger mandate.

2023-09-13 16:08

DickyMe

You can justify appeasement politics which ever way that fits your narrative and massages your ego. The reality is you sold your soul to the devil.

2023-09-13 17:22

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