Najib, who took over office from Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi in 2009 and is seeking a personal mandate in the 13th general election due soon, seems to up against “institutional inertia” in getting backing for his 1 Malaysia ideology and reform policies, Farish A. Noor said in an opinion piece published today in Singapore daily Straits Times.

Najib is facing strong resistance in carrying out his reforms from certain leaders within his party and from the country’s 1.4 million civil servants.
“Yet as the anti-reform forces in the country continue to criticise him for his transformation efforts, it is the opposition that benefits more, for it lends the impression that Mr Najib is not able to hold his fort together,” he said in the article titled “1 Malaysia, many challenges”.
Farish said that if the situation continued unchanged, Najib’s transformation agenda may be derailed and he could end up suffering a similar fate to Abdullah who saw his Islam Hadari (civilisational Islam) project scuppered.
“In such a situation, however, the biggest loser will be Umno and the BN themselves, who cannot afford to lose support at the coming general election.
“They will have to secure at least a marginal increase in seats gained at both the federal and state level,” Farish said.
Najib has been carrying out a raft of reforms to open up Malaysia’s economy in a bid to push the country out of the middle-income trap by 2020 and has also sped up a series of legislative changes since last year.
Two days ago, he announced his plan to repeal the Sedition Act 1948 and replace it with a National Harmony Act, in his latest move to regain the momentum for reforms ahead of elections that must be held soon.
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