Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations and Glossary
- 1 The Imperative of Mediated Communalism
- 2 The Electoral System: Origin, Rationale and Critique
- 3 Consociation and the Electoral Process, 1952–55
- 4 The Path-Dependent Rise and Demise of the Alliance, 1959–69
- 5 The National Front's Rise in the Elections of 1974 and 1978
- 6 Mediating Communalism through Party Capitalism: The Elections of 1982, 1985, 1990 and 1995
- 7 Reformasi and New Politics: Constituting an Alternative Coalition in the 1999 General Election
- 8 The Opposition's Breakthrough: The Leap from 2004 to 2008
- 9 Electoral Impasse of Dual-Coalition Politics in 2013
- 10 Transitions of Coalition Politics circa 2016
- 11 Conclusion: The Desiderata of Ethnic Power Sharing
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author
- Plate section
11 - Conclusion: The Desiderata of Ethnic Power Sharing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 May 2017
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations and Glossary
- 1 The Imperative of Mediated Communalism
- 2 The Electoral System: Origin, Rationale and Critique
- 3 Consociation and the Electoral Process, 1952–55
- 4 The Path-Dependent Rise and Demise of the Alliance, 1959–69
- 5 The National Front's Rise in the Elections of 1974 and 1978
- 6 Mediating Communalism through Party Capitalism: The Elections of 1982, 1985, 1990 and 1995
- 7 Reformasi and New Politics: Constituting an Alternative Coalition in the 1999 General Election
- 8 The Opposition's Breakthrough: The Leap from 2004 to 2008
- 9 Electoral Impasse of Dual-Coalition Politics in 2013
- 10 Transitions of Coalition Politics circa 2016
- 11 Conclusion: The Desiderata of Ethnic Power Sharing
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author
- Plate section
Summary
This book has presented readers with narratives on Malaysia's electoral politics spanning some sixty years. It has also attempted to explain why one major ruling coalition of parties has dominated elections since Independence. The book suggests that the ethnic power sharing model of the ruling coalition, the Barisan Nasional (BN) — and its predecessor, the Alliance — has been the main reason for such electoral successes for these six decades. Most importantly, the ruling coalition has been able to deploy a strategy of mediated communalism to achieve its electoral success. As noted in the introduction, there have been three phases in the employment of this dynamic strategy of mediated communalism, which is anchored on the consociational pact of a grand coalition of ethnic groups and centripetal stratagems of moderating extremist politics. The three periods are:
1. Emergent Mediated Communalism: 1950s to 1960s;
2. Corporatized Mediated Communalism: 1970s to late 1990s;
3. Contested Mediated Communalism: Late 1990s to 2013.
The book traces the beginnings of the Malaysian electoral system in Chapter 2, which contextualizes how mediated communalism found its salience through the institutionalization of electoral structures within a plural and ethnically divided society. In Chapter 3 the book explored the idea of the onset of an emergent strategy of mediated communalism from the 1950s to the late 1960s and showed how moderate policies of ethnic accommodation bestowed success to the Alliance in elections. Chapters 4 and 5 postulated the entrenchment of a new kind of mediated communalism via Malay primacy and party capitalism from the 1970s till the late 1990s. I have termed this the corporatized phase because of the extensive use of money politics dovetailing with the involvement of BN parties in business. While this particular phase of corporatized politics is clearly identifiable and represented its initial surfacing, there is little doubt that such a form continues to the present day. As noted in the previous chapter, the UMNO crisis of 2015 was partly the result of the use of massive sums of money in the 2013 general election, sourced through a complex web of local and international business entities established by the prime minister and UMNO president. Despite Malay dominance, corporatized politics was a highly successful strategy for the distribution of spoils to all BN parties, and the accommodation of non-Malay interests by the mid-1990s gave the BN its celebrated landslide electoral victory of 1995.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Power Sharing in a Divided NationMediated Communalism and New Politics in Six Decades of Malaysia's Elections, pp. 267 - 286Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2016