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Will DAP really 'benefit' from EC redelineation exercise?

MP SPEAKS Gerakan president Mah Siew Keong has made one of the most outlandish statements of our time that the DAP ‘benefited’ from the lastest redelineation exercise of the Election Commission (EC).

At the same time, MCA president Liow Tiong Lai is also making a similar case to paint MCA as the victim of the re-delineation exercise and tried very hard to imply that MCA’s supposed losses in the exercise are DAP’s gains.

There are even media opinion pieces in the Chinese media implying that, through the re-delineation exercise, Umno intends to favour DAP at the expense of MCA and Gerakan.

Such statements are malicious falsehoods and nothing could be further from the truth.

The truth is that Umno is in trouble and it is worried about whether it can continue to hold on to power. The sole purpose of the 2016 re-delineation exercise is to help Umno win by default, with or without MCA and Gerakan, as these parties have been dependent on Umno votes to win seats.

Johor state seats/parliamentary seats

The case of Johor clearly explains the situation.

If the redelineation exercise is approved without amendments, and assuming that previous voting trends persist in the 14th general election (GE14), DAP will lose two state seats, i.e. Perling (proposed new name for N46 Pengkalan Rinting) and N55 Pekan Nanas.

In addition, DAP could potentially lose another three seats to BN, i.e. Johor Jaya, Tangkak and Bekok. It is projected that the DAP's majority vote in these 3 seats will be reduced to less than 5%, a razor thin margin that puts these seats in danger.

Note that Bekok, while seemingly not impacted in this re-delineation exercise, was already severely affected by the so-called boundary correction exercise that the EC conducted in April 2016, which has caused 1,100 voters to be shifted out from the Bekok polling district. Based on our estimates, 70 percent of these voters voted against BN in GE13.

DAP contested the state seat of Paloh in GE13 and lost by only 103 votes. In this re-delineation exercise, the Election Commission has proposed to reallocate the entire Felda Kahang Barat polling district, which has 2,464 votes, from the Kahang polling district to the Paloh polling district. Eighty percent of the Felda Kahang Barat voters voted BN in 2013. This is likely to secure BN's victory in Paloh in the next round, thrashing DAP's hope to win in Paloh.

Pakatan Harapan has five parliamentary seats in Johor, four held by DAP (Kulai, Kluang, Gelang Patah and Bakri) and another held by PKR (Batu Pahat). The re-delineation exercise may bring mild positive effects to DAP's electoral chances in Bakri, Kluang and Gelang Patah but will negatively impact Kulai and Batu Pahat. The electoral outcome of these seats would be mixed.

It's crucial to understand why, in places like Gelang Patah and Bakri, it would appear as though the EC is doing DAP a great favour. The reason is to save Umno's marginal seats.

For Gelang Patah, several polling districts that Nur Jazlan (Pulai MP, adjacent seat) did poorly in 2013 are proposed to be transferred to Gelang Patah. For Bakri, a large polling district with 2,000 votes (BN polled only 20 percent in 2013) under the Muar parliamentary seat, is to be transferred to Bakri. Muar is a marginal seat that the opposition has a fair chance to capture in the next general election.

Our allies in Pakatan Harapan are severely impacted by the re-delineation. Bukit Batu is the only PKR state seat in Johor. Its 4,015 or 14 percent healthy margin will be reduced to just 1,000 voters (3.7 percent) after the exercise, making it within reach of BN.

To achieve this, theEC has proposed the unthinkable and illogical move to include polling districts like Taman Teratai and Ulu Choh, which are located almost 50km away from the Bukit Batu town centre and administered by a different local authority (Bukit Batu is under Majlis Perbandaran Kulai, Taman Teratai and Ulu Choh fall under Majlis Perbandaran Johor Bahru Tengah).

Parit Yaani, the state seat held by incumbent Aminolhuda Hassan, the Parti Amanah Negara Johor chief, is also in grave danger. A large polling district with almost 2,000 voters is to be reassigned to neighboring state seat of Parit Raja (a safe seat for BN) and that will cause the 1,200 majority to be reduced to about 400.

DAP and Pakatan Harapan seats in danger

How would DAP 'benefit' from this redelineation exercise when we are at great risk of losing five out of 13 incumbent seats (40 percent voter decrease), unless there is a Malay swing in our favour?

How would DAP 'benefit' from this redelineation exercise when our allies are facing the danger of losing seats in Johor, where we have a chance to form a coalition government?

Most importantly, how would DAP 'benefit' from this redelineation exercise when voters nationwide, including those in Johor, have to put up with greater inconvenience, injustices and outright lies as their sacred votes are manipulated to entrench BN rule in Johor/Malaysia?

It seems very clear that the BN has a set of clear objectives it wants to achieve by redrawing the electoral boundaries in different states.

In Selangor, it is to snatch back the state from the opposition. In Perak and Negri Sembilan, it is to consolidate power, and attempt to achieve two-thirds majority. In Johor, it is to weaken the opposition, keeping us from crossing the 18 seats line (the number needed to deny BN a two-thirds majority).


LIEW CHIN TONG is the MP for Kluang, Johor DAP chairperson and DAP national political education director.

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