Tommy Thomas
Parliament’s term is five years. Article 55(3) of the federal
constitution states: ‘Parliament unless sooner dissolved shall continue
for five years from the date of its first meeting and shall then stand
dissolved.’
Because the current Parliament had its first meeting
on April 28, 2008, it shall automatically ‘stand dissolved’ on April 28,
2013. As it is an instance of automatic dissolution, no action by any
person is required to trigger it.
By virtue of Article 55(4),
the 13th general election (GE13) ‘shall be held within 60 days from the
date of the dissolution of Parliament’. Hence, the very last date on
which GE13 can legally be held, at least for Parliament, is June 28,
2013.
The
Election Commission has already announced its intention to hold federal
and state elections on the same day. Apparently, the first state
assembly that met was in Negri Sembilan on March 26, 2008. The Negri
Sembilan constitution has a similar 60-day provision (see Article 56(4)
of the second part of the state constitution).
This means that if
the BN wishes to have the same polling day for federal and state
elections, the last day would be May 26, 2013 (and not June 28). In
other words, if the general election is not held for the Negri Sembilan
state assembly by May 26, its state government will be remaining in
office illegally.
One of the great privileges that a Malaysian
prime minister enjoys is to decide on the date of the general election
before the expiry of his five-year term. The incumbent’s advantage on
timing elections is highly prized, and invariably exploited by leaders
of most Westminster style parliamentary democracies in the Commonwealth.
Our
five previous prime ministers have timed the polling date in order to
take electoral advantage. Hussein Onn, Dr Mahathir Mohamed and Abdullah
Ahmad Badawi even called for a general election before four years - that
is, by three years 10 months, three years nine months and three years
11 months respectively.
The longest serving government since
Merdeka was the Alliance/BN government which took office in May 1969 and
faced the electorate again in August 1974, five years three months
later. But special circumstances prevailed: after the May 13 riots, the
National Operations Council (NOC) took charge of the nation’s affairs
and Parliament was suspended.
Normalcy only returned in August
1971 when Abdul Razak Hussein was sworn in as the prime minister (after
acting as NOC director) and Parliament resumed sitting. Therefore, the
five years three months between the third and fourth general elections
do not really serve as a precedent.
So
why has Najib Abdul Razak not utilised the privilege attached to his
office by advising the Agong to dissolve Parliament before the expiry of
his term, to be followed by GE13? Only one answer can be inferred: BN
is running scared of defeat.
Logic and common sense would
suggest that if BN had been confident of victory, Najib would have
called for election. But those who have inside information about the
close ties between politics and big business suggest a more sinister
reason for the delay. It gives more opportunity to enter into contracts.
Such close observers of the corridors of power say that it is
no coincidence that not a day passes without a public announcement of a
deal involving the public purse. Transactions kept private and
confidential are even larger in number. From this perspective, their
self-interest in staying in office is not confined to politics, but
extends to commercial matters.
Limits on caretaker government
Ultimately,
it is pointless to speculate. The undeniable fact is that five years
would pass this weekend after the holding of the last election, with no
announcement of a dissolution of Parliament and the fixing of the date
for GE13. When this occurs, the BN government forfeits the moral high
ground to govern our nation.
BN remaining in office from March 9
to June 28, 2013 is constitutional and legal, but its political
legitimacy and moral authority are in question.
Voters can
legitimately say that they voted for a BN government on March 8, 2008 to
govern for five years, and if that government does not choose to secure
another mandate within that period, it becomes a caretaker government.
Although
the expression ‘caretaker government’ is not defined in constitutional
or legal terms, it has been accepted in practical politics. It usually
means a type of government that rules temporarily.
It
is an interim government, not intended to govern permanently. It can
occur in varied and infinite circumstances. Even past BN governments
publicly concede that after Parliament is dissolved and before the
national polls, they are a caretaker government.
I suggest that
Najib should act honourably and announce on March 9, 2013 that, from
that day until the polls are conducted, he will be the head of a
caretaker government. He should set the lead, as a statesman would.
So how should a BN caretaker government act in practical terms?
1. The affairs of the state are still in the hands of the prime minister and his cabinet.
2.
Implementation of executive decisions and the day-to-day administration
of government are, in any event, carried out by the one million strong
civil service, which is supposed to be independent and neutral with
regard to party politics. In that sense, government is run by the
bureaucrats who continue to manage, regardless of which political party
is temporarily in power.
3. Foreign affairs and defence matters
are managed as if there is no change. Thus, the defence forces should be
entrusted to deal with the invasion of Lahad Datu, Sabah. Operational
matters come within their discretion.
What the BN
caretaker government should not do is to take policy decisions of a long
term nature or which would bind the next government.
Likewise,
it should not enter into contracts involving taxpayers’ money and the
public purse. A new government is perfectly entitled to review such
contracts and terminate them if they are not in the public interest.
Finally, a caretaker government certainly cannot give away monies like the BR1M payments from taxpayers’ fund.
It
is a fundamental principle of our parliamentary system that no monies
can be expended by the executive branch (the BN Government) without
prior approval of the legislative branch (Parliament).
Monies
cannot be paid out of the Consolidated Fund without Parliamentary
approval. This is normally done through the Finance Bill, popularly
known as the budget, presented in Parliament annually in October and
passed in December.
Hence, the critical question is: what is the
necessary parliamentary approval for BR1M and other payments doled out
by the Santa Claus of Malaysia? It is clearly distributed for blatant
electoral purposes. The effect is to worsen our ever-growing national
debt.
Only time will tell whether Malaysian voters will punish
Najib for delaying the calling of GE13. Recent British examples such as
the fate of Prime Ministers James Callaghan in 1979 and Gordon Brown in
2010 will not provide Najib any comfort.
TOMMY THOMAS specialises in constitutional law.
BR1M = Bayaran Rasuah Satu Malaysia
ReplyDeleteBantuan yang teramat banyak cuma merisikokannya.
ReplyDeletePengurusan kewangan negara harus bijak, jangan mencapai peringkat muflis.
ReplyDeleteKami menanti pengumuman sah pru akan datang.
ReplyDeleteSerahkan kepada rakyat untuk menentukannya.
ReplyDeleteMenjelang PRU, banyak juga pemberian kewangan melalui pelbagai cara.
ReplyDeletemoga PRU berjalan lancar
ReplyDelete