May 18, 2013

The New Cabinet-Calling a Spade, A Spade


Love him or hate him, he is 'worldly wise' when he wants to. And that is Kadie Jasin for you.

But he is in his element in his incisive analysis of the new PRU Cabinet just sworn in.

After reading his article, I think there was gross spatial and demographic misrepresentation in this cabinet and manifest a classic-lose-lose for everyone.

Why, oh why has the nation's new government touch the nadir of all times?

The writings are on the wall for a possible implosion with two Sarawkian winning parties beackpeddling on their appointments.

Would they become PKR friendly to keel over the BN victory boat?

Do read this article which I have pasted in verbatim.

SIDE VIEWS

Doing ‘congak’ on transformational Cabinet — A. Kadir Jasin
MAY 18, 2013

MAY 18 — When I came across a Star newspaper report of May 16 headlined “A well-balanced Cabinet of 32 ministers” my brain went into rewind mode, taking me back to my Malay school days in the 1950s when “congak” and “ujian akal” were both loved and loathed by the pupils.

“Congak” was mental arithmetic and a regular subject. We would be given, in quick succession, questions concerning addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. We would have to answer them without the aid of any instrument — not even a pencil. We had to do the calculation in our mind and answer verbally.
The “ujian akal” was a general knowledge test. We were asked on subjects that were not often taught in the classroom. Only if we did extra reading and observed everyday events would we be able to answer them.
Using the basic principle of “congak” and knowledge of general affairs, for which I did not fair badly, and applying them to, "The Star’s “well-balanced Cabinet” labelling, I came up with the following mathematics:

1. The Indians, who account for 7.1 per cent of the population, according to the 2010 Census, are represented by two ministers. In addition they have four deputy ministers.

2. The Chinese, who account for 22.9 per cent of the population, are, by choice and by their dismal contribution to the BN election victory in the May 5 polls, are not represented. There is, however a nominated Chinese in the transformational Cabinet.

3. There are 32 Cabinet ministers and 24 ministries, including the Prime Minister’s Department (PMD). In the PMD, there are eight ministers. Deputy ministers are not Cabinet members.

4. Sarawak, with the population of 2,506,500 where the state BN won 25 out of 31 seats, was awarded six Cabinet posts. It works out to one minister for every 417,750 Sarawakians. Counting deputy ministers, the “Bumi Kenyalang” (Land of the Hornbills) has 10 federal posts.

5. Sabah with the population of 3,214,200, where the BN won 22 out of 25 seats, was also given six Cabinet jobs, working out to one minister for every 535,700. Counting deputy ministers, the “Negeri Di Bawah Bayu” (Land Below the Wind) has 10 federal posts.

6. On the contrary, Johor, which has the population of 3,305, 900 and contributed 21 parliamentary seats (out of 25), has only three full ministers, working out to one minister for every 1,101,966 proud Johorians.

7. But the Johorians can spare their handkerchiefs. They are not the ultimate victims of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s “congak”. The real “anak tiri” are the Selangorians of whom I am one. There are 5,037,600 of us and five BN MPs but not a single minister. Talk about “congak” and about regaining Selangor in future elections! (I am not counting Paul Low Seng Kuan because I am not sure who he represents.) This is perhaps the prime minister’s way of teaching Selangorians a lesson.

8. But Selangorians need not shed tears. The two million Kedahans are no better. After returning the state to the BN and contributing 10 Dewan Rakyat seats (out of 15), they get only one minister post.

9. Perakians are luckier. They gave 12 out of 24 parliamentary seats to the BN and got three ministers in return. The people of Perlis, Kelantan, Pahang and Negri Sembilan can count themselves lucky. They have more menteris despite having fewer MPs.

10. Perlis (3 seats, 1 minister), Kedah (10/1), Kelantan (5/1), Terengganu (4/2), Pahang (10/2), Penang (3/0), Perak (12/3), Selangor (5/0), Wilayah Persekutuan (4/1), Negri Sembilan (5/2), Malacca (4/0), Johor (21/3), Sabah (22/6) and Sarawak (25/6).

11. Women, who make up 49 per cent of Malaysia’s population and are a rising force in the economy, are represented by only two ministers and both of them are from Sarawak.

12. And Wanita Umno members, the backbone of Umno’s campaign machinery and the most loyal to the party, are the ultimate losers. They were left out in the cold for the first time in decades. They have no representative in the Cabinet.

In short, the “congak” does not quite add up and the mathematical logic is lost in what appears to be a haphazard arrangement that disregards the key elements of our demography and in the distribution of seats won by the BN. And the Cabinet could only become larger and unruly despite the BN winning proportionally fewer seats in the House of Representatives since the 1969 general election.

Then again, who are we to complain? Our peasant way of looking at things counts for nothing against the brilliance and cleverness of the people who make up the prime minister’s council of advisers — the political secretaries, the special advisers, the special officers and the Blue Ocean consultants. Wallahualam. —
kadirjasin.blogspot.com

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insider.

May 15, 2013

The New Malaysian Cabinet-New Warriors or Wooden Horses?

All the President's Men
So much has been said and commented on Najib's new Cabinet line-up. Some in jest.

I will also give my personal take on this matter.

No comments on PM as he doubles up for the Finance portfolio. I guess he needs to hold on to this critical position as money is power!

As for Deputy PM Muhyideen, I think he should have moved on to Defense as he had his chance at the Education portfolio which he has showed little headway except for studies and semantics.

For Ahmad Zahid Hamidi , I think he has inherited a very powerful ministry with its obligations and responsibilities to ensure that the country continue to open up and be on the route firmly to become  a more open democracy; with less rein over public debate and engagement as well as over the mainstream media. If he continues with the earlier stoic unwieldy stance of Hishamuddin, then he will not see any progress either. Apparently he has started on the wrong foot after his swearing in. Wonder whether his outburst was rightly reported.

Ismail Sabri has been promoted to the Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Ministry, replacing the inept Nor Omar. This should be a challenge to him after his quite high profile stint at the Domestic Trade portfolio. If he does well here, he should go further up the UMNO leadership ladder unlike his predecessor who was inadvertently caught in the hairy quagmire of bird nests and plastic fish buckets.

Shabery Cheek has been promoted to the Ministry of Communication and Multimedia after procuring a Olympic medal through badminton and a bronze in diving to boot! . Let us see how he can deal with the fast moving pace of ICT now that he has left the sporting arena. As for Nazri Aziz, he has taken over a portfolio finally though it may have just be a junior Ministry of Tourism and Culture. Wonder whether he can make headway at this post as he has shown himself as too uptight for a job of selling the country to tourists.

Shafie Apdal is cocooned once more in his old Ministry of Rural and Regional Affairs and so is Anifah Aman in Foreign Affairs. Maximus Ongkili moved on the Energy, Green Technology and Water while a new man, Ewon Ebin, takes over his Science Technology Portfolio. Will Ongkili solve the Langat 2 problem this time around when Peter Chin failed miserably due to political pressure?

Deputy MIC President, S.Subramaniam went on the carousel and got shunted off to deal with doctors, pharmacists, nurses and the medical profession at the Ministry of Health while his boss G.Palineval took on the Natural Resources and Environment post. With the poor oral skills in Bahasa Malaysia, I think he may have some teething problems dealing with the the NGOs in this area. It will be worse for him if he is not good on the international stage as this is a high profile post.

Ahmad Husni Hanadzlah stayed put as Finance Minister II and so did Mustapha Mohamad in International Trade. The same goes for Jamil Baharom in the PM's Department.

There are just too many Minister in Najib's Department  Unless we have viable and useful portfolios for them,they will just be cutters of ribbons and ceremonial decorations. Idris Jala seems to be omnipresent in spite of shifting premises for his PEMANDU programmes and predicting a bankrupt nation by 2019. The inclusion of two so-called experts in Paul Low and that wizard CEO from Maybank, Wahid  seems appealing but will they contribute meaningfully in fighting corruption and upping the economy?

Shahidan Kassim and Joseph Kurup also made their return to higher positions in the PM's Department along with newbies, Nancy Shukri  and Joseph Entulu  from Sarawak.

New blood in the form of Fadillah Yusoff of Sarawak took over the Works Ministry. In  youth and sport, we see Khairy Jamaluddin Abu Bakar helming the Youth and Sports Ministry.  His deputy, Razali Ibrahim is now placed away at the PM's Department. Similarly, Douglas Uggah Embas is now shifted over to the Plantation Industries and Commodities.

Meanwhile Richard Riot, representing the non-Chinese component of SUPP bagged the Manpower Ministry while new man, Hasan Malek was chosen as the new Minister of Domestic Trade, Cooperatives and Consumerism. Another Sabahan, Abdul Rahman Dahlan clinched the former Ministry of Well-being,Housing and Local government which was under the MCA.

Yet another Sarawakian took over the Women, Family and Community portfolio while Tengku Adnan was resurrected to his former Federal Territories Ministry despite the Lingamgate fiasco.

PPP found political survival despite being wiped out totally in the 13th GE. A token member, Loga Bala Mohan was made a Deputy Minister to assist in the Ministry of Federal Territory. So, I guess there is also a role for PPP in the up-coming Taipusam festival at Batu Caves now.

Controversial Waytha Moorthy, the disputed Hindraf head was rewarded with a Deputy Ministership in the PM's Department. Wonder what he can do now that he is possibly on solo mode. Will he take away the thunder of Indian affairs from the MIC?

As much as the opposition dislike them, they are sighing relief that the likes of Jamaluddin Jarjis, Ali Rustam  and Isa Samad did not make it into the Cabinet and political office this time around.

It's still early days and the KPI's are just about to be drawn out.................

Najib's New Team

Love them or hate them, but live with them for five more years.

This is the list of political administrators (The Executive) of the 13th Parliament of Malaysia.

The Tour de Force A Team  or lame duck?




Prime Minister
Najib Razak (UMNO)

Deputy Prime Minister
Muhyiddin Yassin (UMNO)

Prime Minister’s Department:
Ministers:
1. Jamil Khir Baharom (UMNO)
2. Abdul Wahid Omar (Senator)
3. Idris Jala (Senator)
4. Joseph Kurup (PBRS)
5. Shahidan KAssim (UMNO)
6. Nancy Shukri (PBB)
7. Paul Low Seng Kwan (Senator)
8. Joseph Entulu Belaun (PRS)

Deputy Ministers:
1. Razali Ibrahim (UMNO)
2. Waytha Moorthy Ponnusamy (Senator)

Ministry of Finance
1. Minister of Finance 1: Najib Razak (UMNO)
2. Minister of Finance 2: Ahmad Husni Mohamad Hanadzlah (UMNO)

Deputy Minister of Finance
3. Ahmad Maslan (UMNO)

Ministry of Transport
1. Minister: (Acting – post being held open pending MCA decision) Hishammuddin Hussein (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Ab Aziz Kaprawi (UMNO)

Ministry of Defence
1. Minister: Hishammuddin Hussein (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Abdul Rahim Bakri (UMNO)

Ministry of Home Affairs
1. Minister: Ahmad Zahid Hamidi (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar (PBB)

Ministry of Education & Higher Learning
1. Minister 1: Muhyiddin Yassin (UMNO)
2. Minister 2: Idris Jusoh (UMNO
3. Deputy Minister 1: Mary Yap Kain Ching (PBS)
4. Deputy Minister 2: P. Kamalanathan (MIC)

Ministry of Works
1. Minister: Fadillah Yusof (PBB)
2. Deputy Minister: Rosnah Abdul Rashid Shirlin (UMNO)

Ministry of International Trade & Industry
1. Minister: Mustapa Mohamed (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Hamim Samuri (UMNO)

Ministry of Foreign Affairs
1. Minister: Anifah Aman (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Hamzah Zainuddin

Ministry of Domestic Trade, Co-operatives and Consumerism
1. Minister: Hasan Malek (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Ahmad Bashah Mohamad Hanipah (Senator)

Ministry of Communication & Multimedia
1. Minister: Ahmad Shabery Cheek (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Jailani Johari (UMNO)

Ministry of Human Resources
1. Minister: Richard Riot Jaem (SUPP)
2. Deputy Minister: Ismail Abdul Muttalib (UMNO)

Ministry of Rural & Regional Development
1. Minister: Shafie Apdal (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Alexander Nanta Linggi (PBB)

Ministry of Urban Wellbeing, Housing & Local Government
1. Minister: Abdul Rahman Dahlan (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Halimah Mohamad Saddique (UMNO)

Ministry of Youth & Sport
1. Minister: Khairy Jamaluddin Abu Bakar (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: M. Saravanan (MIC)

Ministry of Health
1. Minister: S. Subramaniam (MIC)
2. Deputy Minister: Hilmi Yahaya (UMNO)

Ministry of the Federal Territories
1. Minister: Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: J. Loga Bala Mohan (Senator)

The Ministry of Plantation Industries & Commodities
1. Minister: Douglas Uggah Embas (PBB)
2. Deputy Minister: Noriah Kasnon (UMNO)

Ministry of Energy, Green Technology & Water
1. Minister: Maximus Johnity Ongkili (PBS)
2. Deputy Minister: Mahdzir Khalid (UMNO)

Ministry of Agriculture and Agro-Based Industry
1. Minister: Ismail Sabri Yaakob (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Tajuddin Abdul Rahman (UMNO)

Ministry of Tourism & Culture
1. Minister: Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz (UMNO)
2. Deputy Minister: Joseph Salang Gandum (PRS)

Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation
1. Minister: Ewon Ebin (UPKO)
2. Deputy Minister: Abu Bakar Mohamad Diah (UMNO)

Ministry of Natural Resources & Environment
1. Minister: G. Palanivel (MIC)
2. Deputy Minister: James Dawos Mamit (PBB)

Ministry of Women, Family and Community Development
1. Minister: Rohani Abdul Karim (PBB)
2. Deputy Minister: Azizah Mohamad Dun (UMNO)

Ministers: 30
Deputy Ministers: 27
Total: 57
Total ministries: 24
Senators reappointed: 1
New Senators: 5
Backbenchers: 82

May 13, 2013

The Moon is a Balloon

See the moon at its best as it arises over Mount Victoria Lookout in New Zealand.

The Moon to Behold!

Such a wondrous sight to behold!

For David Niven, his world was a balloon!

May 12, 2013

EC: Issues for the 2013 Constituency Delineation

Less Easy this itme

I took this from the Sundaily dated today, 13 May 2013.

I think it brings out some issues with regard to the process of doing this exercise.

Very educational.

"The Election Commission (EC) may find itself faced with obstacles when it gets to the task of re-delineating the electoral constituencies.

This will especially be so in Penang, Kelantan and Selangor where Pakatan Rakyat (PR) not only controls but holds two-thirds majority after the recent general election.

Under Article 113 of the Federal Constitution, the EC has to review the division of federal and state constituencies, and recommend changes as necessary every eight to 10 years.

The last re-delineation exercise was conducted in 2003, making this year the deadline for a review of the 222 parliamentary and 505 state constituencies.

The re-delineation process requires either a simple majority in the respective legislative assemblies to approve the recommendations (if there is to be no change to the number of seats) or a two-thirds majority if there is to be an increase in the number of seats.

If the states do not consent, the constituencies will remain unchanged.

Barisan Nasional has two-thirds majority only in Perlis, Malacca, Johor, Sabah and Sarawak.

In Penang, Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng told a press conference yesterday said any redelineation exercise which does not uphold the "one-person-one-vote" principle is a no-go for the PR government.

He said the upcoming redelineation exercise must emphasise this value, and PR will not agree to any new delineation of constituencies at the parliamentary or state level if the precept is not upheld.

The disparity between votes and seats won has led critics to allege gerrymandering, the practice of creating partisan-advantaged constituencies, as the cause for the inequality.

Several quarters have called for a more equal representation in the constituencies, and for equal weightage in votes between rural and urban seats.

The Malaysian Bar has also called on the EC to give effect to "as equal as possible" a representation in each seat, whether parliament or state.

Bar Council president Christopher Leong said the process must be underpinned by principles of equality.

"A delineation exercise must be conducted with the objective to achieve equality, and equal representation as far as possible.

"It must not be lopsided, where an MP of one constituency represents 100,000 people while another speaks for only 15,000 people," he said.

Some parliamentary constituencies, like Kapar in Selangor and Gelang Patah in Johor, have over 100,000 voters while the smallest seat is Putrajaya with 15,000 voters.

Leong added that while urban constituencies will have more people due to economic opportunities, this does not mean depriving urbanites of a fair voice in the legislative assemblies.

The Sundaily"

The Pakatan Second Echelon Moves Up

Nazmi
The 13th General election allowed these few the opportunity to show their prowess to move into pivotal positions in the alternative front.

Nurul Izzah

Rajiv

Hannah

Auyong

Will they bring change to the Malaysian populace?

Gobind

We will see their performance in both the Federal and State legislatures.

Bee Yin

Tony

The True Face of Malaysia's Protector of Democratcy

This is Ambiga; a face that is synonymous with the Bersih movement in Malaysia.

Will there be True Democracy in Malaysia?
This picture is a reflection of her contemplating the future for Malaysia.