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Wednesday, 10-Mar-2004 8:32 AM
Crowds don’t translate to
votes
Raja Petra Kamarudin
In the Indera Kayangan state
seat (Perlis State) by-election in which Parti Keadilan Nasional’s
Cikgu Khoo contested that seat, the crowds at the nightly ceramahs
(public rallies/speeches) were phenomenal. In one ceramah that I
attended, I had to park my car about three or four kilometres away
and walk the distance to the ceramah site. I then drove around to
have a look at the Barisan Nasional (BN) markas (operations
centers) and found that most of them were empty. There were hardly
any people other than the handful of party officials.
Where were the BN supporters?
By the looks of it, BN had absolutely no supporters and there was
no way they were going to win the Indera Kayangan by-election.
Judging by the crowds at the
keADILan ceramahs, and the lack of it at the BN ceramahs -- so much
so that some BN ceramahs had to be cancelled due to the sorry crowd
turnout -- Cikgu Khoo had already won the by-election hands down.
In fact, Cikgu Khoo could end his campaigning and go out and celebrate
his apparent win.
However, when the results came
in, Cikgu Khoo was defeated by more than 2,500 votes. How could
this be so? The crowd turnout gave no inkling this would be what
would happen. Pemuda Keadilan was so confident Cikgu Khoo had already
won even before the votes were cast that there was a celebrative
mood in its ranks. One Pemuda leader said we had already won. Okay,
even if we will lose, he said, at the most it will be by a mere
500 votes, which can also be considered a ‘victory’.
But there was no victory celebration
that night in Indera Kayangan. We did not lose, we were massacred.
And we all put out tails between our legs and went home. We did
not even have an appetite for dinner.
And Indera Kayangan was not
the first and only incident where crowds did not translate to votes.
The Democratic Action Party (DAP) ‘giants’, Lim Kit Siang and Karpal
Singh, attracted enormous crowds wherever they went, and still do.
But, in 1999, they were defeated.
In 1986, Mustapha Ali lost
his Dungun seat and Abdul Hadi Awang his Marang seat though these
two can also be considered Islamic Party of Malaysia (PAS) ‘giants’.
And they too attracted, and still do, huge crowds. Marang was so
congested with supporters that the main road from Kuantan to Kota
Bharu was practically closed to all traffic whenever Hadi spoke
in his home base. However, though the crowds were large enough to
delay traffic up to three hours, Hadi still failed to retain his
Marang seat.
The opposition should realise
by now that large crowds do not translate to votes. History, time
and time again, has proven this point. And why is this?
People, mostly Malays mind
you, attend ceramahs to be entertained. Malays like to hear the
maki and caci (verbal abuse) from the penceramah,
and the more the better. Speakers like PAS’ Mat Sabu and keADILan’s
Gobalakrishnan are the favourites.
Gobalakrishnan would stand
up on stage and call Dr Mahathir Mohamad “an Indian just like me”.
“He came from the same kampong
in India that I came from,” Gobalakrishnan would shout to the crowd
roaring with laughter. They just love what Gobalakrishnan has to
say and they cannot get enough of it. They clap and shout and urge
him on. And Gobalakrishnan willingly obliges them.
But, when the votes are counted,
Gobalakrishnan loses.
It does not mean if the crowd
enjoys your ceramah it will vote for you. In fact, how many of those
in the crowd are voting in that area you are contesting? For that
matter, how many in the crowd are even registered voters in the
first place?
Don’t be surprised if many
in the crowd are actually BN supporters. They attend opposition
ceramahs not because they no longer support BN and will now vote
for the opposition. They attend opposition ceramahs to be entertained,
especially when the opposition heavyweights are talking; and entertained
they are. Then they go home and vote for the BN.
The opposition can continue organising ceramahs
to show it is still around. It can continue organising ceramahs
to entertain the crowd. But don’t expect to win the election just
by ceramahs alone.
Furthermore, if those who attend
the ceramahs are the opposition diehard supporters (who will vote
for the opposition nevertheless, whether there are any ceramahs
or not), BN diehards who just come for the entertainment value (and
will vote for the BN nevertheless, whether there are any ceramahs
or not), and people who are not registered voters (who cannot vote
for the opposition even if they believe what they hear at the ceramahs),
then what have we achieved?
It is no use trying to convert
the already converted -- who are already our supporters anyway.
It is no use trying to convert the BN diehards -- who will never
vote opposition. And it is no use trying to covert the unregistered
voters who cannot vote for us even if they wanted to. What we must
do is covert the fence sitters -- those who are not with the BN
but are not yet with us either.
The only problem is, these
fence sitters will never be caught dead at an opposition ceramah
so how do you convert them if they do not come to you? The English
have a saying for this. “If Muhammad will not come to the mountain,
then the mountain must go to Muhammad”.
In short, the opposition must
go to the voters, in particular the fence sitters, and woo them
over.
Take note that a rule-of-thumb
to use (though not always accurate) would be 35% of the voters support
the ruling party, 35% the opposition, while the balance 30% are
fence sitters. In the short 8-day campaign period between Nomination
Day and Polling Day, there is too little time to work on the ruling
party diehards. It is an exercise of futility. It is also no point
working on your own supporters. You have had four or five years
to work on retaining their loyalty. Eight days is only enough time
to work on the 30% fence sitters.
30% is no small figure. Considering
that a seat can be won or lost by a mere single digit percentage,
30% could make a difference between winning, or losing, an entire
state.
So go door-to-door. Go meet
those ‘uncommitted’ voters. Go talk to those voters who have never
attended a ceramah in their life. Do not talk bad about the present
government. That is too negative. These people probably know more
than us anyway about what is wrong with this country and the government
that is running it. Talk about how we can be a BETTER government,
which does not mean you are saying the present government is no
good (it is just that we can do better).
Explain the present government’s
policies on education, the economy, corruption, health, religion,
the judiciary, and so on. Then explain the opposition’s policies
and ask the voter to compare the two. Then ask the voter to give
the opposition a chance to prove itself in implementing its better
policies, for at least five years. Explain that, if the opposition
fails to deliver its promises, the voters can always give the country
back to the present party in power.
Whatever it may be, go meet
them and talk to them, and don’t expect them to come to you, especially
to your ceramahs. And please talk sense when you go meet them. Leave
all your rhetoric at home and do not insult them with ‘ceramah talk’.
Check
your voter registration here
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