Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) seems to be fighting
an uphill task in retaining Kajang state seat with the majority of 6,824 the
party gained in Mar 2013 general election as its candidate Datin Seri Wan
Azizah Ismail continues to walk the rough path.
Whether her husband Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim had
made the right move in forcing the by-election or not, she is now faced with
the challenges of a different environment where the Chinese voters are no longer
with the theme ‘ubah’ or change.
They seem to want an opposition voice in the
PKR-led state government which is now held by the 12 Umno
assemblymen – no Chinese.
The Malays on the other hand, are also not in
the mood of ‘Barisan Nasional (BN) bashing’ as they have experienced the
‘non-performing’ PKR-led state government where even the small business
licences are raised or increased and their places where they put up stalls were
demolished.
The ‘unfriendly environment’ has made Wan Azizah
working twice as hard as she, accompanied by her husband, do their daily
walk-about from morning till late evening after which they speak in ceramahs at
the Kajang stadium to convince voters of the Kajang Move.
Their confidence of gaining a higher majority
seems to be diminishing by the day as they failed to gather voters to flock
their daily meet-the-people sessions, getting only few hundreds instead of the
well-known thousands at every ceramah.
Anwar’s miscalculation on the support from
Chinese voters was due to his ‘overconfidence’ of a similar scenario as last
year’s general election where the Chinese wanted a change in government.
However, the failure to change the federal
government has somewhat changed the Chinese minds a little where in the Kajang
case, they wanted a voice and a strong opposition in the state where it is now
fully Malay-Umno opposition – all 12 seats – and not a single Chinese
opposition.
To them, without an opposing voice, the PKR-led
state government is taking them for granted resulting in the lacsadaisical
attitude in dealing with the Kajang people’s problems.
This has resulted in Wan Azizah raising
injustice to Anwar’s court case, an issue that she and her campaigners think
could overshadow the weaknesses in the state government.
However, campaigners from both sides of the
political divide are actually in a blurr as they could not get the ‘readings’
given the lifestyle in the constituency that made it difficult for them to
‘touch base’ except in open housing areas such as Saujana Impian and few other
housing areas.
“Urban lifestyle where some 40 percent of the
voters live make it difficult for us to reach them – gated community and
security condominiums.
“We cannot get through them to do surveys, even
though the surveys may not give us an accurate reading, but at least we can get
some kind of guide.
“This time we are out of such guide and till
today, we still do not know our reading,” said a seasoned campaigner from BN.
However, one thing both sides are certain is the
Chinese voters are shifting to BN as they want an opposition voice in the state
assembly to highlight their grouses.
And of course, BN candidate Chew Mei Fun is one
person who the Chinese community in Selangor knows that can do that.
“She lost in last year’s general election
because of the tsunami, not because of her performance,” said a coffee shop
owner in Kajang.
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