八点最热报 | 6州选绿潮比1119大选的势头更加凶猛,马来人政治上占主导地位,那么华人选票就真的没有价值,只有消极的在政治上躺平吗?行动党副主席兼房地部长倪可敏认为,如果华人消极的在政治上躺平是大错特错的心态,因为全国还是有很多非马来人占3成以上的混合选区,而在这些选区里,非马来人都能扮演着关键和左右选举成绩的角色。(主播:庄文杰)
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00:00 Before watching the video, I remind you that there is more content on the Hotline.
00:04 In the past six weeks, the green tide has not been reduced,
00:07 and it seems to be more fierce than the 1,119 general election.
00:11 Most Malaysian voters seem to have firmly turned to the National Alliance.
00:16 So some people firmly believe that Malaysians occupy nearly 70% of the country's population,
00:21 and they are in charge of politics.
00:23 Since they have concentrated votes to support the National Alliance,
00:26 non-Malaysians, including Chinese, have no role to play,
00:30 and they don't need to work hard to change anything through votes.
00:34 Because Malaysians occupy the leading position in politics,
00:37 do Chinese votes really have no value,
00:40 and only be passive in politics?
00:43 If Chinese people are passive in politics,
00:45 what impact will this have on the political situation?
00:48 The vice chairman of the CPC and the Minister of the Interior, Ni Ke-min,
00:51 when he was interviewed by the Eight-Point Freedom of Information,
00:53 he said that Chinese people are passive in politics,
00:56 and they are in a state of "big mistake, special mistake".
00:59 Because there are still many non-Malays in the country,
01:01 and they occupy more than 30% of the mixed election area.
01:04 In these election areas, non-Malays can play a key role in the election results.
01:11 The political scientist Azmi Hassan thinks that
01:13 if Malaysian votes are concentrated to vote for a political party or a camp,
01:18 then the Malays directly lead the whole political system.
01:22 But now he said that
01:23 the Malaysian politics has entered an era of "groups leading the way",
01:28 and it has been divided into the Republican Party, the Uyghur, the Indian, and the Tuvan Party.
01:31 So the remaining 30% to 40% of non-Malay votes
01:35 will be the final election result of the left and right for the voters in many election areas.
01:41 The two university political scholars, Huang Jianfa, also think that
01:43 Chinese voters do not vote, or choose to lie flat in politics,
01:47 will actually directly affect the voter structure of an election area.
01:51 Even if you live in a mixed election area,
01:54 if you don't come out to vote,
01:55 it will make that election area the majority of Malays.
02:00 And if you live in a Chinese election area,
02:03 if you don't come out to vote,
02:04 that election area will become a mixed election area.
02:08 So, whether to vote is actually very important.
02:12 This is a very biased view.
02:17 We all know that in many parliamentary meetings in Malaysia,
02:20 even if the majority of the Malays are in the election area,
02:22 unless you are a Kilantan or a Tinjan,
02:25 90% of the votes are from Malays.
02:28 As long as the Chinese voters have more than 20%,
02:32 they can still be the key voters in the election.
02:37 The Minister of the Environment and the Vice-Chairman of the Communist Party, Nick Nim,
02:39 said in an interview with 8.0 News that
02:41 Chinese voters should never have the mentality of "one vote less, one vote more".
02:46 He said that our country's politics is dominated by Malays,
02:48 and that the Chinese voters are doing nothing,
02:50 but are just lying flat on the political stage.
02:53 He said that there are still many parliamentary election areas in China that are mixed election areas.
02:57 As long as the non-Malay voters have more than 30%,
02:59 they are enough to win the election.
03:02 Nick Nim also took the recent election results of Snowy Bay as an example.
03:05 He said that in some election areas,
03:06 as long as more Chinese voters come out to vote,
03:08 the results will be completely different.
03:11 I'll give you an example.
03:12 This time, Snowy Bay was closed because of Muda.
03:15 Simon lost six seats.
03:18 You have to look at the votes lost.
03:21 In the six seats, one of them lost 30 votes,
03:23 the other 58 votes,
03:25 and the other lost 147 votes.
03:27 Think about it.
03:28 If a few families come out,
03:31 and everyone goes home to vote,
03:33 it's not just about changing the results of the seats,
03:36 but also changing the political situation in Snowy Bay,
03:39 and keeping Simon in the 2/3 position.
03:41 So, if you say that the Chinese are lying flat on the political stage,
03:44 that's a big mistake, a mistake, a thousand mistakes, a million mistakes.
03:47 In places where the Malays are only 60% or 70%,
03:52 then the Pakatan Harapan vote,
03:54 the non-Malay vote, plays a very, very critical role here.
03:58 So, they cannot have the attitude that,
04:01 "Well, I cannot do nothing with only one vote."
04:04 I think it will be detrimental to the Pakatan Harapan federal government.
04:08 Asmi Hassan, a political scholar at KUH, also believes that
04:12 if the Chinese voters think that the Malays are the key to the political situation
04:15 because of the green tide,
04:17 and think that their vote is useless,
04:19 then this will further severely distort the original political ecology.
04:23 Huang Jinfa, a political scholar at KUH, also believes that
04:25 whether the Chinese voters vote or not,
04:27 can actually immediately determine the voter structure of your constituency on the day of voting.
04:32 Let's say that today you live in a mixed constituency
04:35 where the majority of non-Malays are.
04:38 40% of Malays are non-Malays,
04:41 and 60% of Malays are Indians.
04:44 If the Malays vote 75%,
04:47 then the final 30% of the voters will vote.
04:50 If the non-Malays vote 50%,
04:54 then the final 30% of the voters will vote.
04:57 If you add up the 3% and the 3%,
04:59 then it's a 50-50 mix.
05:02 So, whether you vote or not, will definitely have an impact.
05:05 Asmi Hassan also pointed out that
05:07 unlike the past, when the Uyghurs were the majority,
05:10 the current Malays vote is already 3 or 4 points below.
05:13 In the absence of the Malays vote,
05:15 the non-Malays vote becomes the dominant.
05:18 Only at this time,
05:19 will the non-Malays vote have a certain amount of gold.
05:22 Because the Malay vote is split.
05:24 Split between IKEA, Amarna,
05:27 and also Arno, and also PAS, and Persatun.
05:30 So, it's not 100% going the Malay vote, going to PAS, no.
05:38 Asmi Hassan believes that although the green tide is coming,
05:41 and even sweeping the West Malaysia, East Coast, and North region,
05:45 but not all the voters in Malaysia
05:47 are like these states.
05:49 From the view of the parliamentary district in China,
05:51 only a part of the voters in Malaysia
05:54 are 80% or 90% of the voters.
05:55 The rest are the mixed voters
05:58 who are over 30% of the non-Malay voters.
06:00 So, with the East Malaysia election,
06:02 non-Malay voters can still play a key role.
06:06 They can't think that their power is small,
06:09 and lose confidence in the political situation,
06:11 and be defeated in politics.
06:14 The Green Deal.
06:16 The Green Deal.
06:18 [BLANK_AUDIO]