Friday, April 23, 2021

The possibilities of hope and renewal for MDP: the good, the bad and the faithful

 

How it started

As the election of 2018 neared the inevitable climax, the MDP saw a line of their faithful grassroots singing and chanting in happiness for their success. The 2018 election saw a clear majority for Ibu Solih as an MDP candidate in the first round itself. Solih was able to garner more votes as the MDP grassroots saw him as a personification of the party, while for the so called silent majority and religious strongholds he was a clean, good natured, patient and highly experienced politician. Additionally the performance of Solih as PG leader of MDP, demonstrating his righteousness and morality in many challenging instances gave him the moral underpinning and trust which no other MDP presidential candidate could have achieved. Soon after the elections Solih was heralded as the hope for renewal of democracy, rule of law and as the saviour of the nation from the cesspool of blatant corruption of previous Government.

 

After being sworn in, a new cabinet was formed and as Solih came with a united Coalition of other parties, his cabinet was divided according to the agreements with coalition partners. The loyal grassroots of MDP were in a euphoria and never saw the chickens which came to roost in the homes of other parties from the ousted PPM. Soon after the government came to power various political posts were filled by same rotten eggs who had history of corruption from previous regime. As the government began to function compensating for various individuals, companies and private businesses for the loss incurred by them due to previous government, dishonouring contracts became inevitable. The faithful and the good in the MDP started ringing alarm bells. It was given a deaf ear and corruption became rampant at various levels. Some kept on beating their own drums and blowing the whistles, while opposition and media became more vigilant on corruption. For the bad rotten eggs the biggest blow came with the corruption related to COVID-19 Pandemic. The good and faithful began losing hope.

 

From bromance to sour grapes

Many corruption related cases of previous regime was not pursued at the speed expected by the faithful grassroots who now became more frustrated as government spending for COVID became more erratic and questionable. Meanwhile the super majority parliament of MDP and their government led by Solih continued failing in fulfilling the AGENDA19 of MDP. Even the pledges by Solih for his first 100 days have gone unfulfilled until now. While executive branch continues to underperform, the Parliament used their powers to remove incompetent ministers according to their books. The first cabinet minister to resign was gender Minister who was on a portfolio for Adhaalth Party. Several frustrations and turmoils in her ministry continued unresolved leading until the public outrage became inevitable. In case of Minister, accused of ventilator corruption a group of MDP parliamentarians threatened the concerned minister of no confidence, who then resigned before a no confident vote. The infamous run away, Waheed who recently fled the country was expelled from his ministerial post as tourism minister by Solih himself, after being accused of rape and corruption.  The only minister who lost his post so far with a no confidence vote was Maleeh who was science and communications minister filling in for Jumhooree Party.  Though he was removed on allegations of his incapacity to deliver the pledges of the government a thorough investigation was not done for his lack of performance or inefficiency.  He was alleged to have failed in making internet prices cheap, though he may have obstacles beyond his own control as the service providers are private companies adamant on losing their profits.

 

The crux of the matter is whether the turmoil in Solih’s cabinet has resulted in any change. In the first case, the gender ministry still continues with many issues unresolved while the perpetrators of ventilator corruption still remain at large unscathed from any trials. Both the Prosecutor General and Anti-Corruption Commission came to loggerheads with regard to available evidence to proceed with a prosecution for ventilator corruption. As for the case of Ali Waheed, accused of multiple allegations of rape and abuse of power fleeing the country, those responsible are yet to be found while serving justice for his victims seems a long way. In the case of Maleeh who cannot have enough of sour grapes for losing his post and his “Oval Office”, continues to rightly point his finger at failures of the government he served until he lost parliament confidence. The fact remains that nothing changed with the internet prices for which he was blamed. Meanwhile both MDP leaders heading the executive branch and legislature are now in a quarrel over the slow pace of delivering the Agenda19 pledges of the government, both accusing each other for the consequences of these failures which resulted in a huge blow for MDP in local council elections in Capital City.  

Conclusion

Owing to the big loss MDP faced in the recent local council elections in the capital, the good and faithful grassroots of the MDP are publicly commenting and debating on the future of MDP. Various perspectives from pundits are being publicly debated. While the good and faithful of MDP believes in the slow delivery of the Agenda19 by the government, they are unable to choose between the two rifting factions of MDP. While some blame coalition’s ministers as the main factor of government incompetency, and calls for dismantling the coalition, others accuse of lack of accountability from various institutions of the government. Hence, under performance of the executive branch and sluggishness of independent institutions is considered as the root cause of incompetency of the government. As history has shown and proven in all elections after 2008, the public always prefer the opposition over the incumbent regime. With government pledges reaching to the moon and most of it undelivered, MDP faithful are losing hope in wining 2024. The possibilities of renewing their hopes is not simply making drastic changes to the system of governance in my opinion. I believe the only hope for MDP is in being steadfast in their delivery. The executive should recognise that all pledges cannot be fulfilled and hence prioritise on the most critical, especially for recovering from the pandemic as a more resilient nation. The Legislature should perform their job by making the laws critical for a more robust recovery and by increasing the accountability of those accountable to the parliament, especially Anti-Corruption Commission, Prosecutor General and State Owned Enterprises to ensure they serve the interest of the State over those of oligarchs. In addition, instead of dismantling the coalition, we must strengthen the coalition and discard off underperforming political appointees from coalition partners and get better performers from the coalition parties. The only hope for MDP for 2024 is in unity and working with their coalition and becoming steadfast in delivering Agenda19.