Time to urge Pakatan Harapan to commit to Local Council Elections and greater democracy, and the abolition of SOSMA and Detention Without Trial laws like POCA, POTA,...restoring the right to a fair trial for all. Laws that are suppressing our freedoms (opinion, expression, peaceful assembly) should be repealed including Sedition Act,...and also this upcoming 'anti-Fake News law'...
Pakatan Harapan need to commit NOW to ensuring regular employment(security of employment until retirement age) and abolishing all forms of precarious employment including the contractor for labour system and fixed-term employment contracts.
Restore freedom of association - where government powers to delay registration of societies and trade union, control associations functions be removed. Associations should be free to do as what members want - and government only make sure that associations do not commit any criminal acts. Now, the government can even prevent a members decision to increase fees.
WE NEED TO ACT NOW - BECAUSE THE PAKATAN MANIFESTO IS SILENT ON THESE IMPORTANT ISSUES - meaning that things may be the same as what is happening now under UMNO-BN for such issues. YES - we need a change of government...but at the same time, we need those that seek to be the next government to give us clear commitments...
Pakatan Harapan's manifesto - well, I have found it - GE14 manifesto titled Buku Harapan — Membina Negara Memenuhi Harapan (Book of Hope: Building the Nation, Fulfilling Hopes)
Pakatan Harapan need to commit NOW to ensuring regular employment(security of employment until retirement age) and abolishing all forms of precarious employment including the contractor for labour system and fixed-term employment contracts.
Restore freedom of association - where government powers to delay registration of societies and trade union, control associations functions be removed. Associations should be free to do as what members want - and government only make sure that associations do not commit any criminal acts. Now, the government can even prevent a members decision to increase fees.
WE NEED TO ACT NOW - BECAUSE THE PAKATAN MANIFESTO IS SILENT ON THESE IMPORTANT ISSUES - meaning that things may be the same as what is happening now under UMNO-BN for such issues. YES - we need a change of government...but at the same time, we need those that seek to be the next government to give us clear commitments...
Pakatan Harapan's manifesto - well, I have found it - GE14 manifesto titled Buku Harapan — Membina Negara Memenuhi Harapan (Book of Hope: Building the Nation, Fulfilling Hopes)
Somehow, it is rather disappointing - A lot of words, but at the end of the day, not very clear as to what will be done.
NO promise of Local Council Elections...So still people do not chose ...but the Government(Federal/State) continue to appoint 'cronies'..
No assurance to repeal Detention Without Trial laws (POCA, POTA and Dangerous Drugs[Special Preventive Measures Act]....This could have been done within 100 days - and all those currently detained/restricted be released. If the authorities believe that they are
No promise to get rid of laws that repress FREEDOM OF OPINION, EXPRESSION AND PEACEFUL ASSEMBLY.
Anyway, one media report that highlights the main points was found(you can read it below)
Some COMMENTS about the PH Manifesto..
Introducing RM500 annual subsidy per low-income family at registered private clinics
- NONSENSE - registered private clinics?What the government should be doing is providing universal healthcare - that means FREE healthcare. For now, maybe the subsidies should be given to low income families in government hospitals and clinics, and maybe an assurance that there will be 24-hour government clinics/hospitals in every small town. 'PRIVATE' clinics charge a lot - why is the government helping 'private' clinics. What is this 'registered' private clinics - will some get 'registered' and some not.
Saturday March 10, 2018
10:17 AM GMT+8
10:17 AM GMT+8
KUALA
LUMPUR, March 10 — Pakatan Harapan (PH) released its manifesto on
Thursday, well ahead of any announcement on the 14th general elections
(GE14).
The Opposition pact’s pledges however have since been criticised by both ruling coalition Barisan Nasional (BN) and Islamist party PAS, who accused PH of lifting some parts of its manifesto from their own.
In short, PH said it would take less from Malaysians by introducing tax cuts and lowering living costs, but at the same time give them more with greater financial aid and higher spending on facilities and infrastructure. It will also seek to boost the economy and trim leakages.
Here are some quick highlights by Malay Mail from the 203-page GE14 manifesto titled Buku Harapan — Membina Negara Memenuhi Harapan (Book of Hope: Building the Nation, Fulfilling Hopes) by PKR, DAP, Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia, and Parti Amanah Negara:
1. Quick-fire ‘10 promises in 100 days’
PH gave itself a bold timeframe of just over three months to do 10 things if if it takes over Putrajaya:
I. Abolishing the Goods and Services Tax (GST) which was introduced at
six per cent in April 1, 2015 — with a plan to replace it with a
“fairer” Sales and Services Tax and “people-friendly and
entrepreneur-friendly” tax.
ii. Reintroducing petrol subsidy which was scrapped from December 1,
2014, but targeting only eligible groups with motorcycles below 125cc
and vehicles below 1,300 cc.
iii. Introducing Employees Provident Fund savings for housewives — with
2 per cent contribution by working husband, and RM50 monthly by the
government.
iv. Abolishing the debts of Felda settlers.
v. Allowing federal study loan PTPTN’s borrowers to delay repayment
until they earn RM4,000 monthly, and no more blacklisting of defaulters.
vi. Equalising and increasing monthly minimum wages to RM1,500 by the
first term and reviewable every two years, with government to contribute
half of the pay hike. The current minimum wage for the private sector
are RM1,000 in Peninsular Malaysia, and RM920 in East Malaysia.
vii. Introducing RM500 annual subsidy per low-income family at registered private clinics
viii. Special Cabinet committee to review the Malaysia Agreement 1963. with a report within six months.
ix. Launching royal commissions of inquiry to probe 1Malaysia
Development Bhd, Felda, MARA, Tabung Haji, and revamping their
leadership.
x. Launching detailed studies of mega projects awarded to foreign countries.
2. 60 more promises in five years
The previous 10 promises overlap with PH’s 60 pledges that are spread out over five core sections:
i. Easing the people’s burden
ii. Reforming political and administrative institutions
iii. Boosting fair and just economic growth
iv. Restoring Sabah’s and Sarawak’s status based on Malaysia Agreement 1963
v. Building a nation that is inclusive, moderate and excellent at the global stage.
Some of the pledges are made with a longer-term view and expectation of PH being in power for two terms:
Among the more popular pledges were:
i. Abolishing highway tolls gradually, while introducing RM100 public
transport pass in major cities and cutting excise duties on imported
cars below 1,600 cc for first-time buyers.
ii. Providing one million affordable houses in 10 years.
iii. Making Internet connection speeds two times faster at half the price
iv. Keeping the 1Malaysia People’s Aid (BR1M), but with a new special
agency to take over the scheme and introduce a non-partisan cash
transfer system
v. Voting age to be lowered from 21 to 18, and automatic voter registration to be introduced.
vi. Limiting the post of prime minister, chief minister, and mentri
besar to two terms. Enforcing that the prime minister cannot hold the
finance minister portfolio, and to trim the Prime Minister’s Department
from 10 to three ministers. Budget for the department to be trimmed from
RM17 billion to RM8 billion.
vii. Half of government’s development budget in first three years will
be for Malaysia’s five poorest states: Sabah, Sarawak, Kelantan,
Terengganu and Perlis.
viii. Get two national parks recognised as Unesco World Heritage Sites,
and working towards Malaysia making it into top 10 least corrupt
countries in Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index by
2030.
ix. Making national schools the school of choice, and encouraging academic freedom and university autonomy.
x. Abolishing Biro Tata Negara and National Service training
programmes; Bernas’ monopoly on rice; mandatory death sentence; laws
such Sedition Act, National Security Council Act, and the Universities
and University Colleges Act.
3. Attention for the ‘special five’
PH gave special focus to five groups, including those particularly
vulnerable or those who could contribute crucial votes: Felda settlers,
the ethnic Indian community, women, youths, and the elderly.
Among other things:
i. Felda settlers were promised that abuses in the agency would be
stopped with mishandled assets to be recovered, and its management to be
revamped.
ii. The ethnic Indians were given the ambitious promise that the
community’s problem of stateless Indians or Malaysia-born Indians
without citizenship would be settled in 100 days.
iii. Women were told that they will get 90 days of maternity leave; and
law changes that deter teen marriages, sexual harassments, and ensure
gender equality.
iv. Youths were promised a RM500 incentive for each couple marrying for
the first time below the age of 35; and free broadcast of English
Premier League football matches over state broadcaster RTM.
v. The elderly will get laws against age discrimination at the workplace; and RM150 incentive each for everyone aged above 60.
BN, the ruling coalition that is also PH’s main political rival, has yet to unveil its election manifesto.- Malay Mail, 10/3/2018
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