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八点最热报 | 面对柔佛国阵宣布56席全打,安华昨天直接回击,如果国阵选择单飞,希盟也会全面开战。安华究竟是硬装出来的没在怕。还是被巫统过份地压到不能不摆硬了?(主播:萧慧敏)

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00:00Before watching the video, remember to check out trending websites for more content!
00:04When the Johor Barisan Nasional coalition issued the shocking signal of fighting for all 56 seats...
00:09The war drums had not yet truly sounded.
00:12The fire had already spread to their own people.
00:15Prime Minister and Simon Bazaar President Anwar Ibrahim made a rare strong statement yesterday.
00:19If Barisan Nasional chooses to go solo in the Johor election
00:22Simon will not back down.
00:23It even led to a nationwide showdown.
00:27This is a tough statement.
00:28Is it genuine confidence or has it been forced into a corner?
00:33For a unity government
00:34The most dangerous party now is no longer just the opposition.
00:37Instead, allies began testing each other's limits.
00:41UMNO wants to prove that it can fight without Simon.
00:44Anwar must respond.
00:46Simon is not someone who can only be pressured into negotiations.
00:48We can't just let UMNO keep using resources to sustain itself.
00:52Then he prepared to stab himself.
00:54UMNO uses Rongfo Week to bid for Taiwan's election.
00:56Anwar immediately retaliated with an even stronger, asymmetrical approach.
00:59A Trump-style political game
01:02A full-scale event is unfolding within the unity government.
01:06Azmi Hassan, member of the National Council of Professors
01:08In the interview, he pointed out
01:09Johor UMNO's tactics
01:10That's essentially Trump-style maximum pressure negotiation.
01:14Let's discuss the conditions to the most extreme extent first.
01:16Push the bottom line to the furthest point until the real negotiations begin.
01:19The opponent has no room to win by too much.
01:21The likely outcome is...
01:24UMNO verbally calls for all-out war
01:26Reality, however, will still return to a system of allocation.
01:29Because the real secret behind this play
01:32It might not be a table flip, but rather the price per table.
01:35On the surface, Anwar's response appeared even more forceful.
01:38If you want to go solo, I'll fight you head-on.
01:41If you want to break up the game, I won't back down.
01:43If you're going to test me, I'll respond with several times the force.
01:46But the problem is
01:47An alliance that originally relied on a united government to maintain stability
01:51Why the sudden shift to the topic of all-out war?
01:54Political scientist Pan Yongqiang believes
01:56The purpose of this posture
01:58The goal is to maintain the confidence of Simon's supporters.
02:01Show UMNO that it will not be suppressed
02:03Not afraid of bloodshed at the negotiating table
02:06Because in the logic of politics
02:08Sometimes it's not that you're really ready to go to war.
02:10Rather, you must not let your opponent think you are afraid to fight.
02:13Meanwhile, the Johor UMNO's so-called 56 seats are now open for full-scale competition.
02:17That was ostensibly a local election strategy.
02:19It's actually a display of chips.
02:22UMNO's current logic is very clear.
02:24The central government can cooperate
02:26But the local area must prove its strength.
02:29Only those with strength have the right to negotiate.
02:31Especially in Johor
02:33Malacca
02:34These areas in Negeri Sembilan
02:35UMNO is trying to create an impression
02:37I still have the ability.
02:39But if the two sides really go to full-scale combat...
02:42What will happen then?
02:43Both commentators believe
02:45There was no winner in this battle.
02:48Only when the risk escalates
02:49For Simon and Barisan Nasional
02:51It's all a dangerous gamble.
02:53Because for Simon
02:55Malaysia's Blessed Land has limited competitiveness.
02:57City votes alone cannot guarantee a national victory.
03:00As for UMNO
03:01They are no longer the absolute hegemons of the old era.
03:04Fighting alone means further shrinkage
03:07Even more fatal is the third-party variable.
03:10National League
03:10As long as military unification and Simon completely break apart
03:13Malaysian tickets are further dispersed.
03:14Political polarization intensifies
03:16The Perikatan Nasional (PN) coalition is especially one-party.
03:17They will then be able to secure their core base.
03:19The result was a two-sided battle.
03:22Third-party harvesting
03:23This is the Malaysian political section.
03:25Jade Cudgel Fight
03:26The story of the fool who profited
03:30In response to the Barisan Nasional coalition's announcement that all 56 seats in Johor Bahru would be contested
03:32Anwar responded directly yesterday.
03:34If Barisan Nasional chooses to go solo
03:36Simon will also go all out.
03:38Anwar was just putting on a brave face, pretending not to be afraid.
03:41Still being excessively suppressed by UMNO
03:43We have no choice but to be firm.
03:44Political scientist Pan Yongqiang believes
03:46Anwar's move
03:47It's a must-win game.
03:49Mental defenses: lose the fight, but not the morale.
03:51Members of the National Professors Council
03:53Azmihassan also believes
03:54Anwar's tough response
03:56More like a pre-war mobilization
03:58At the same time, it is also telling allies
03:59Simon is not simply someone who can passively accept conditions.
04:02His attitude basically means he wants to say
04:05Able to maintain the confidence of Simon's supporters
04:10This is tantamount to sending a message to the Barisan Nasional coalition.
04:14Simon is not afraid
04:17I won't worry about this comprehensive guidance.
04:21Hopefully, this will help maintain the confidence of all supporters.
04:26This also shows that his stance is that of a prime minister.
04:31Or Simon's leader
04:32He also wanted to suppress the momentum of the Barisan Nasional coalition.
04:37Ensure that it does not deflate.
04:40As for the final outcome...
04:44Is it a comprehensive approach to counseling?
04:46He coordinated a lot of things.
04:49Space for negotiation
04:51But you cannot lose your momentum.
04:56Lose in people but not in politics
04:57This is the message conveyed at yesterday's conference.
05:27The past three years
05:28UMNO is slowly recovering its strength by leveraging its governing resources.
05:30Some believe that the Johor BN's current stance on single-parent status is flawed.
05:33The real purpose behind it
05:35It's very likely that the table won't be flipped immediately.
05:37Instead, we need to create a
05:38I still have a strong political presence.
05:41Pan Yongqiang pointed out
05:42UMNO's 56 seats made a call
05:44It's just using Johor as a base to set up shop.
05:47The current political ranking is the result of the full-scale war that began in 1922.
05:54The outcome of such a conflict would then be at the congressional level.
05:57Barisan Nasional has only about twenty seats left.
06:00Mainly military unification
06:02He may have relatively stable power in several southern states.
06:07Johor, Selatan and Malacca
06:10But in other places
06:11He basically lacked the strength to wage a full-scale war against Ximen.
06:19Are you saying it's in Penang?
06:22Does Perak or Selangor have this capability?
06:25No
06:25So, what is the sphere of influence of the northern island of Huijiao?
06:30Even a military reunification might not meet the necessary conditions.
06:33Therefore, the military unification was only initially chosen to take place in Johor.
06:37He wants an early election.
06:39He also wants to run for a full-scale election.
06:41He wanted to create an overall aura throughout Johor.
06:47Come and suppress Ximen
06:50They will have greater bargaining power in the next general election.
06:54Using the Johor clash as a way to gain leverage in the national election
06:57Azmihalsan even described
06:59Johor UMNO's entire operation
07:02It's basically a Trump-style negotiation tactic.
07:04First, say the harshest words.
07:06stretch the posture to its fullest extent
07:07Then let the other party negotiate.
07:09I believe Azmihassan used Ala Trump's technology.
07:13You said some very serious
07:16When you negotiate in the final days
07:17You don't have to lose many stages.
07:20Because you have already expressed this state.
07:22Therefore, I believe Azmihassan will run.
07:2540 tables
07:26Because they are the chiefs.
07:2812 tables
07:29Baqatar al-Halaban election
07:31other places
07:32I believe Azmihassan will run.
07:34They want to run for office.
07:38Locations of Muda and Baqatar Haraban
07:47It's a lose-lose situation, and neither side can afford to lose.
07:51Simon knew that facing the Malay heartland alone would not be easy.
07:54UMNO is also well aware that it is no longer the one-party dominant UMNO of the past.
07:59More importantly, what if Simon completely breaks ties with Barisan Nasional?
08:02The biggest beneficiary is the Perikatan Nasional (PN) coalition.
08:05Because as long as the Malay vote continues to be divided...
08:07The Perikatan Nasional (PN) coalition, with its strong Malay base, is a powerful one-party state.
08:10This would allow them to continue reaping the benefits of Yu Weng's power.
08:12Azmihazan described
08:14This is actually a dangerous gamble.
08:16I consider gambling to be extremely dangerous.
08:19Because it was chosen last
08:20We see that they have more than 70 party members.
08:24But three or four years later
08:26Many things will change
08:27I believe the two leaders of the al-Qatar al-Haraban
08:29Datues Lanai
08:42However, Pan Yongqiang believes
08:44Neither side has actually reached the point of truly overturning the table yet.
08:48Because what the military unification truly wants to do now is...
08:50More like Johor, Malacca, Negeri Sembilan
08:52These relatively dominant states
08:54First, demonstrate your strength
08:56Then this political momentum
08:58Negotiations on seat allocation after bringing it back
09:00The military unification did not mean that a government would be established at the central level.
09:05Military unification is at least at the level of the central government.
09:08It did not say that it would withdraw its support for Anwar.
09:13Therefore, the situation for Anwar or the unity government
09:16The situation of the central government
09:18It wasn't described as extremely serious.
09:20Military reunification is just a way of saying
09:22His area of ​​advantage
09:24First, demonstrate your strength
09:26Therefore, in the subsequent negotiations regarding the allocation of electoral districts...
09:29Then use this prestige to suppress Ximen.
09:33Or this Anfa
09:34But the situation has not yet reached a point where...
09:37The upcoming national elections are just around the corner.
09:40So, the military unification and Ximen
09:43We'll probably have to wait and see what happens in the south in the second half of the year.
09:47The changing situation in these three states
09:50Or the heat of the national election only being determined by the election results
09:58When a government begins to need to draw its sword against its allies
10:01The problem then goes beyond just the election strategy.
10:04Rather, the power structure has begun to loosen.
10:06Rong Fuwu unified the 56 seats and won them all.
10:08Bid Anhua had no choice but to fight back.
10:10We have no choice but to draw our swords
10:12We had no choice but to bring the words "all-out war" to the forefront.
10:16Because for Ximen today...
10:18The issue is no longer just about winning or losing the weekly election.
10:20Instead, a more dangerous signal began to emerge within the alliance.
10:24Someone is testing us.
10:25Would I be better off without Anwar?
10:28Once weakness is shown
10:29It may not be just the Johor negotiating table that has been lost.
10:32Rather, it is the control of the entire unity government.
10:34The current situation still appears to be one of cooperation among allies.
10:37That actually felt more and more like the eve of a showdown.
10:40The final question isn't about who wins or loses.
10:43The question is how long Anwar can hold out.
10:46How many more can Ximen hold?
10:48How many bargaining chips are left for a military unification?
10:50More importantly
10:51When the next election really comes
10:54This team was already barely cobbled together.
10:57Will we still stand on the same side?
10:59Or perhaps it was the sound of the war drums?
11:00The one who stabs the idle team in the back is one of their own.
11:05Today's headline in the Hong Kong South China Daily is:
11:07When the drums of the Malaysian election sound
11:10Comments on whether Anwar's solidarity coalition has come to an end
11:14Point out
11:14The chances of Anhua winning a new round of authorization are becoming increasingly slim.
11:20The biggest problem isn't how strong his opponents are.
11:22The real question is whether his allies are still willing to go this far with him.
11:26When allies start to view each other through an election-centric lens...
11:30The alliance is already in its final countdown.
11:32Anwar calls for war
11:34Barisan Nasional (BN) calls for retreat
11:35Rafael's other Lu Zhao
11:36Perikatan Nasional (PN) is sharpening its knives off the field.
11:38This is a place where everyone is calculating.
11:40But no one really saw the moment of the move.
11:43The war drums were thunderous, driven by Anwar.
11:45But the echoes coming from all directions
11:48They no longer walk in unison.
11:50YoYo Television Series Exclusive
12:00Subtitle volunteer Yang Qianqian
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