- 6 hours ago
八点最热报 | 就在领导的团结政府执政迈入第三年,希盟却是内忧外患。现在巫统解散它执政的柔佛州议会,宣布带领国阵单飞。而在内,拉菲兹退出公正党、自立门户成立“同心党”。这一切乱局背后,还有一个更深层的问题…(主播:萧慧敏)
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00:04Even with a united leadership, the government is in its third year in power.
00:07Simon is now facing both internal and external troubles.
00:10Apart from the one-party-led Perikatan Nasional
00:12There are also UMNO hawks led by Akmal, the head of the Ujong Group.
00:15In addition to constantly harping on issues of race and religion
00:18Now UMNO has gone even further by dissolving the Johor state assembly it governs.
00:22Announces leadership of Barisan Nasional's Danfie and Simon in a duel.
00:26Also, it will allow him to fight for power alone in the next general election.
00:29Meanwhile, Nerafizi left the People's Justice Party to start his own party, the United Heart Party.
00:34There was internal dissent and external encirclement.
00:36The Anwar government is standing on a leaky stage.
00:41But behind all this chaos lies a deeper problem:
00:45Not a rift in the alliance
00:47Rather, it was Simon's inescapable original sin of race and religion.
00:51The curse of race and religion on him
00:54The unity government under Anwar's leadership over the past two years
00:56Boosting the economy, attracting investment, and stabilizing the old image
00:59The data has not been without improvement.
01:01Foreign capital has indeed returned.
01:03But the problem is
01:05Malaysian politics today is no longer what it used to be.
01:07Whoever manages the economy well will win.
01:10It's not about who's better at stirring up racial and religious issues.
01:13Simon was ultimately Zhu Bajie (Zhao Jingzi).
01:16Neither inside nor outside is a good person
01:17The upcoming Johor state election
01:19This will be Simon's trial ground on issues of race and religion.
01:24After Simon's unity government came to power
01:26His opponents never compared their economic policies to his.
01:30They were competing to see who was more like one of their own.
01:32Who is more Malaysian?
01:33Who is more Islamic?
01:34Thus, Simon was forever dragged into the battlefield he was least suited for.
01:39Anwar's attempt to appease far-right Malays
01:42There is also support from extremist religious elements.
01:43This resulted in disappointment among both Chinese and Indians.
01:46And the Malay vote can't be caught up.
01:48The entire alliance will be stuck in the middle route.
01:51The economy can be explained slowly.
01:53However, ethnic and religious sentiments can ignite instantly.
01:57This became Simon's most fatal and unsolvable predicament.
02:02Huang Jingfa, political scientist at Shuangwei University
02:04Also, Shaza, Associate Professor of Political Science at the International Islamic University
02:06In the interview, he pointed out
02:08Simon's political DNA
02:10It was originally a reform based on multi-party consultation.
02:13But the overall political climate today
02:16However, it is increasingly becoming identity-based.
02:18emotional
02:19Tribalization
02:20You talk about systems
02:21The other party talked about faith
02:22You talk about reform
02:23The other party said that Malays are losing their country.
02:25You talk about economic growth
02:27The other party is speaking
02:28Who is protecting Muslim rights?
02:31Once the battlefield is drawn into race and religion
02:33Then Simon would immediately be at a disadvantage.
02:36Because he started from the very first day of the party's founding.
02:38It has already been labeled
02:40liberal
02:41Not enough Malaysia
02:42Not Islamic enough
02:43And the scariest thing is
02:44Politics is often not a matter of reality determining perception.
02:48Rather, cognition determines reality.
02:51Once the label is formed
02:53The facts may no longer matter.
02:55Simon was thus trapped in a near-suffocating predicament.
02:59If he insists on reform
03:01Diverse human rights
03:02He will be attacked
03:03Not taking care of Malays
03:05If he keeps moving to the right
03:07This will also cause the cities that originally supported him to...
03:09Liberal voters are also beginning to lose heart.
03:11Moving to the left will cause you to lose votes.
03:13Moving to the right will also cause you to lose health.
03:15He was like a government tied to a lever.
03:18Every step could lead to a loss of balance.
03:23The past two years
03:25Anwar's government is pushing for economic growth and investment stabilization.
03:28The data has not been without improvement.
03:30Foreign investment has returned, though.
03:31However, Huang Jingfa, a political scholar on Weibo and WeChat, pointed out...
03:34The problem now is
03:36Today's Malaysian government
03:37It's no longer about who does the best in economic development.
03:39Whoever wins is guaranteed to win.
03:40They were competing in...
03:41Who is more Malaysian?
03:42Who is more Islamic?
03:43Who is more like one of us?
03:45Thus Simon was forever dragged into a...
03:47The battlefield he was least skilled at
03:49Simon's biggest challenge today
03:52It is actually a division of ethnic groups
03:54I believe any government that manages to do a good job in the economy
03:57It is merely a necessary condition for continuing to govern.
04:01However, it is not a sufficient condition.
04:03But if you manage the economy well
04:05Your opponent can also pull you into a battlefield where you have no advantage.
04:10This advantageous battlefield is not about comparing economic growth rates.
04:14It's not about comparing inflation rates.
04:16Not comparing the number of occupations
04:19Rather, it's a comparison of who is more devout in religion.
04:22Who is more courageous in terms of ethnic power?
04:25Therefore, under such circumstances
04:26Simon, as a centrist government, was inherently in a position of power.
04:31This is also Simon's most painful spot.
04:33He was labeled from day one.
04:36Simon thus found himself in a suffocating predicament.
04:39If we insist on reforming pluralistic human rights
04:42They will be attacked for not taking care of Malays.
04:44If we keep moving to the right
04:46It will also affect the reformists who originally supported him.
04:48With urban voters
04:49Especially the Chinese began to feel disappointed.
04:51Moving to the left will cause you to lose votes.
04:53Moving to the right will also cause you to lose health.
04:54I don't think BH can be avoided.
04:57We were able to escape.
04:59Insisting on this political party
05:03They don't care about Malays
05:06He Yilan's rights
05:08In the past year
05:10There are also many past
05:11President
05:12There are also many past
05:33Even more cruel is
05:34For Simon
05:35This is almost an unsolvable political vicious cycle.
05:38Shaza believes
05:39Because he not only has difficulty breaking through...
05:41Concerns of conservative Malay society
05:43Even avoiding Malay issues
05:45They would all be attacked for not taking care of Malays.
05:47Thus Simon was forced to remain trapped for a long time.
05:49In the high-pressure battlefield of race and religion
05:52dilemma
05:53So it is
05:54The answer is simply
05:55Baqatar will always encounter
05:58This criticism
05:59They didn't do enough.
06:00Malay rights
06:01Therefore, there is data to read.
06:03Some people say
06:04Did you know?
06:05Therefore, Pakistan
06:06Probably not as much as possible
06:09Malay rights
06:10Because you can't
06:18And what's even more dangerous is
06:19Today Simon faces
06:21It's not just the loss of Malay conservative votes.
06:23Even his most supportive ones
06:25Chinese and urban voters
06:26It also began to appear
06:27Increasingly intense emotional fatigue
06:29But after failing to enter
06:31Simon must confront the most practical problems.
06:33He must survive.
06:35He must stabilize the Malay vote.
06:37Considering the military unification
06:38We must also avoid being labeled as anti-Malay government by the Perikatan Nasional (PN) coalition.
06:41Therefore, the entire unity government
06:43Begin to fall into a long-term state
06:44A state of being exhausted on the defensive
06:46But the problem is
06:47In today's Malaysian politics
06:48Many times, the decisive factor is
06:51It's no longer just reality.
06:52Rather, it's about who can better control people's emotions and perceptions.
07:13Goldman Sachs believes
07:14Malaysian politics today
07:15It's no longer just about one political party.
07:17That can suppress the emotions of the entire society.
07:19And as voters
07:20We can't just expect
07:22Whoever takes office will automatically solve the problem.
07:24Simply put
07:25Today's issue of ethnicity
07:27Why does it feel so serious?
07:29Because of the past
07:30When you are under one-party rule
07:33UMNO presses you on the table
07:34All you need to do is oppose UMNO.
07:36UMNO can't hold back today.
07:38Many heroes rise
07:40Various social contradictions
07:42The competition for first place is out in the open.
07:45There is no political party
07:46In fact, there is such high-pressure power.
07:48It can sway the whole situation.
07:50How are the contradictions between the environment and society today?
07:53We just expect political parties
07:55Because expecting political parties to act is the easiest thing to do.
07:56But any political party standing up on behalf of the Chinese community
08:00They will inevitably become targets of Malay political parties.
08:03Because of the survival of Malay political parties
08:06Based on the resistance to Chinese-majority political parties
08:10Therefore, no single political party can solve this problem.
08:12Shaza believes
08:13What the supervisory body needs now is to hold firm to its position.
08:16And expand those who are still observing.
08:18Young people who haven't decided yet
08:45For some Simon supporters
08:47The more Simon governed, the less he resembled his former self.
08:50He used to be a ball of fire on the street.
08:52Today I sat in Putrajaya
08:54He's becoming more and more like a fire extinguisher.
08:56Many supporters are starting to feel that Simon has changed.
08:59But the CEO of the Modica Polling Center
09:01Sufian, however, believes
09:03That's not because Simon has changed.
09:04Instead, he finally crashed into reality.
09:07Because it is easiest when in the wild
09:09You just need to be angry.
09:10The most difficult after taking office
09:11Because you have to take responsibility
09:13When in opposition, one can loudly proclaim reforms.
09:15Shanmen Maritime Affairs
09:16But once they seize power
09:18This means we must face a budget deficit.
09:20Alliance compromise
09:21bureaucratic machine
09:21And the inertial pull of the entire country
09:24So Simon, who once held high the torch of reform...
09:27Now they are forced to put out fires every day.
09:29The more power one wields, the more embarrassing the situation becomes.
09:31And what's even more cruel is...
09:32If Simon wants to survive
09:34He must keep things stable.
09:35Malaysian tickets must take into account the shaman.
09:37We must avoid being labeled as anti-Malay government by the Perikatan Nasional (PN) coalition.
09:40Therefore, the Anwar government today
09:42Often caught in a state of extreme contradiction
09:44For Malay conservatives
09:46He's never enough for Malaysia.
09:48For Chinese reformists
09:50He is becoming increasingly incapable of reform.
09:52Not pleasing either side
09:54And this may be the most dangerous part for Simon.
09:57That's a racial and religious curse upon this country.
10:00Johor state election
10:02This is in response to Simon's leadership of the unity government since...
10:04The biggest test
10:06YoYo Television Series Exclusive
10:16Thank you for watching
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