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MGG: The PPP biter bit By M.G.G. Pillai 9/1/2002 10:26 pm Wed |
The People's Progressive Party youth leader, Mr T. Murugiah,
raised a storm at the recent party congress to insist on polygamy
as a solution to society's ills. The PPP women's leader thought
it such an excellent idea that she wanted her husband to be a
bigamist. The National Front, of which the PPP is a minor
member, kept quiet amidst the furore. Until the tide turned, and
the stupidity of Mr Murugiah's remarks placed the onus on the
National Front of double-dealing. He has now apologised to women
for his remarks, and could well be suspended from the party.
But his conscience he insists is clear -- which politician's is
not, especially with his non-existent political career withering
before him? -- and espoused polygamy with the noblest and, no
doubt, without consulting his party. After apologising to women,
he says: "I was just protecting their interest as there are many
cases of illegitimate births in the country ... we should not be
a nation which hides behind such issues ... I am deeply concerned
about their plight." He seems also to believe polygamy would end
illegitimate births. That shows him to be naive and a fool to
boot. If all he said is true and he clearly believes in polygamy,
how much weight can one put on his apology to women? He may
believe in any idea, but how did it become the PPP's? His
mistake was to suggest it as a party leader. But then if he had
made it as an individual, he would be dismissed as the fool he
proves to be. His party president, Dato' M. Kayveas, is the
least embarrassed by this ruckus. But with the heat now on him,
he wants to suspend the fellow. Should he not suspend himself
first? After all, he should have approved the speech before it
was delivered. Or did he? If he did, why did he not object?
If he did not, why is he president? What happened is more than
an aberration. If Mr Murugiah defied party orders, he should not
be suspended but sacked. If he did not, or the party central
committee did not scrutinise it, then the PPP is indeed the joke
it is. Like the Gerakan, the PPP claims to be a multiracial party.
But the multiracial Gerakan wants to replace the MCA as the party
of the Chinese, and the PPP the MIC as the party of the Indians.
The Gerakan has its token Malay and Indian leaders as the PPP the
token Malay and Chinese. The Gerakan and MCA represents the two
factions in Chinese politics in a divide reminiscent of turf
battles amongst Chinese secret societies. There are two major
groups in Chinese politics; the MCA (and the PAP in Singapore
and the Malayan Communist Party) is on one, and Gerakan (and the
DAP, the Barisan Socialis in Singapore, the Koumintang) on the
other. The split in the MCA that spawned the Gerakan only
formalised it. There is, in other words, more affinity between
the Gerakan and the DAP that between the Gerakan and the MCA.
There is no such division in Indian politics. It is said,
in jest, that if three Indians argue about politics, they would
form five political parties. In Malaysia, at least six parties,
three with only post box addresses, represent Indians. The PPP
was once a party for the Chinese run by Indians, then a Chinese
party for the Chinese, and now an Indian party for the Indians.
It lost its way when after the death of its star, Mr D.R.
Seenivasagam, his brother, Dato' S.P. Seenivasagam brought it
into the National Front. When he died, a former cabinet minister
expelled from the MCA took it over, and after him came a
succession of would-be politicians, the latest of which is Dato'
Kayveas, who became the first PPP man to enter the government.
The party still does not have an MP or state assemblyman,
and Dato' Kayveas had to be appointed a senator before he became
a deputy minister. He now wants PPP to be given a constituency
in the general elections. And with it, the right to lead the
Indian community. Ever the Walter Mitty in politics, he lives in
his dreams. When he is shaken out of his stupor and reality, he
flays out, as now, as an amok with a knife. That is what in his
view politics is all about. The PPP claims it has 500,000
members, give or take a few hundred thousand, The PPP offices are
well-kept secrets, and it comes to life when Mr Murugiah and
others make stupid statements or when disgruntled party members
take their leaders to court for not getting them the promised
state awards. But is that what politics is all about?
M.G.G. Pillai
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