Written by  Maclean Patrick, Malaysia Chronicle  
Malaysians from all quarters are calling for a change of government. Many 
agree that Prime Minister Najib Razak should step down to save Malaysia from 
further embarrassment. And yet, UMNO supporters, while they feel disillusioned 
by Najib and wife Rosmah Mansor, they have little in the form of 
alternatives.With his credibility in tatters due to gross mismanagement of recent issues, 
especially the Bersih 2.0 rally for free and fair elections, it is a wonder that 
Najib is allowed to lead the BN to seek a new mandate via General Election 
number 13.
Yet Najib can remain in power as long as he wants, with or without GE13; as 
long as he can keep 2,700 UMNO delegates happy. This is the truth behind 
Malaysia’s brand of democracy. Malaysians are never able to pick a Prime 
Minister of their own choice. Instead, Malaysians are left to accept the choice 
UMNO makes when it chooses its president at its General Assembly.Najib has announced that the UMNO general assembly would be held at PWTC from 
Nov 28 to Dec 3. The assembly will begin with the UMNO international forum on 
Nov 28 and 29. The party's Wanita, Youth and Puteri movements will hold their 
pre-council meetings on Nov 29 and assembly the following day. The UMNO general 
assembly will be from Dec 1 to Dec 3.
It did not say the party polls will be held at the same time, and based on 
this, the presumption is it won't.  Unless  there is a further announcement from 
the Supreme Council, the presumption is party polls will be held next year as 
Najib has already obtained an 18-month postponement that won't kick in until the 
second part of 2012.This year’s assembly comes on the back of a year of gross mismanagement and 
fumbles by the Najib administration and whether this translates to a change in 
leadership at the helm of UMNO, is open to discussion. Already there is talk 
that the gears have started turning and a new leader will soon be unveiled in 
UMNO.
The presidential candidates 
Najib, Muhyiddin, Tengku Razaleigh and even Abdullah Badawi are the rumoured 
to be interested in the president’s seat. And though everyday Malaysians may 
cringe at this list, the UMNO delegates who will be the ones to deliberate and 
then vote. They will have no qualms about choosing the personality that best 
serves their interest.Muhyiddin has certainly made his mark when he spoke on behalf of the 
government that 100 BN lawmakers would be given RM100,000 grants to use within 
their constituencies. This come on the heels of complaints by the lawmakers that 
Putrajaya was more interested in putting money into large scale projects and not 
in developing rural constituencies.
This was a simple task for Muhyiddin, administration comes easy to him. He 
climbed the political ladder in UMNO’s homeland of Johor to finally secure his 
seat as deputy president of UMNO. And this is would definitely be highlighted to 
the delegates. If this is a criteria UMNO delegates take into account in 
choosing their presidents, then Malaysians may have a good administrator as 
Prime Minister, but also one who is potentially cruel.
Muhyiddin does not hide his thoughts on what Malaysia should be like. His 
famous, “Malay first, Malaysian Second” statement epitomise his overall stand on 
how Malaysian society should be organised. Malays on top and the rest, on the 
bottom.Tengku Razaleigh’s latest upstart, Amanah, is seen by many as a third force 
in the Malaysian political landscape. The strength of Amanah will rest in its 
ability to touch base with youth who show interest in politics and seeing change 
in the way Malaysia governs itself. In the right hands, Amanah could be a huge 
tool but does Razaleigh hold enough influence amongst the younger delegates to 
deny Najib a second term as UMNO president.
Abdullah Badawi came out from obscurity to talk to Ambiga Sreenevasan during 
the days leading to the Bersih July 9th march. It surprised many and was seen as 
enough of a threat to Najib that the very next day, news emerged of whether 
officials involved in the investigation of the Australian banknote scandal had 
tried to bribe Badawi. Abdullah Badawi dismissed the claims and has since kept 
himself quietly in the background.
Unlike Najib or Muhyiddin, Badawi personally has less to hide except maybe an 
over-ambitious son-in-law, who is slowly positioning himself as the good guy 
alternative to fumbling Najib and the “Malay first” Muhyiddin.And as Muhyiddin applies pressure from within UMNO, Amanah applies it from 
outside. As for Badawi, he can basically play only one role -  the bungling  but 
good-guy role. As for Najib, Malaysians saw him lying public over the Bersih 
rally. Few think highly of him at all.
UMNO delegates have their own 
criteria
Yet UMNO delegates rarely choose their president based on the measures that 
other Malaysians would expect.While Malaysia needs a Prime Minister who is fair and is responsible towards 
all the various communities, UMNO’s president is expected to safeguard Malay 
status first and ensure the survival of UMNO-owned or linked businesses next. 
And this conflict of interest has been the scourge of the nation for as long as 
Barisan Nasional has been in power.
The constant bickering within the UMNO elite may actually weaken UMNO’s 
stranglehold on the government. It was internal conflicts within UMNO that led 
to the loss of 5 states in the 2008 general elections. The mechanism of choosing 
the UMNO president has spawned a culture of money politics and jockeying for 
positions within factions in the party.For all its rhetoric of being stable and being a bastion of Malay rights, 
UMNO is a fragmented party with various factions eyeing the top spot and come 
General Assembly 2011, these factions will bare their teeth as the battle to 
govern Malaysia begins in earnest. Provided of course that Barisan Nasional wins 
GE-13.
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