Najib’s
Leadership Deficiencies Undermine Malaysia’s Future
M.
Bakri Musa
Najib’s glaring leadership deficiencies have now
been glaringly exposed. Malaysia deserves better. His performance has not been
up to par even when compared to his lackluster predecessor. If under Abdullah
Badawi Malaysia had the modernity of Manhattan but the mentality of Mogadishu,
under Najib, Malaysia risks degenerating, period.
Najib
is not terribly bright or introspective. Like a little child, he always hunger
for approval. He is also severely “charimastically-challenged.” A leader could
survive or even thrive despite having one or two of these flaws, but to be
cursed with all three is fatal.
All
his adult years Najib has depended entirely on government paychecks. No
surprise then that his worldview is narrowly circumscribed. His solution to every
problem is to distribute government checks, well exemplified by his many “1-Malaysia”
handouts. His recent Majlis Ekonomi Bumiputra was no exception; likewise its
hefty price tag.
Not
being introspective, Najib does not and never will recognize his shortcomings.
Consequently unlike his immediate predecessor, Najib will never resign
voluntarily; he would rather destroy his party and country first. If UMNO does
not recognize this, it too will go down with him; likewise the country.
A
good leader, to paraphrase a hadith, is one who protects his followers from his
hands and tongue. Najib does neither. Functionally, he slipped his hands into
the pockets of Malaysians when he raised the price of petrol. He wants to do it
again with his Goods and Services Tax (GST). Meanwhile his smooth tongue bribes
us with his ever-generous “1Malaysia” gifts, using the rakyat’s money of course.
While
being smart is an obvious asset in a leader, not being one would not
necessarily be a handicap. Reagan, one of the most successful American
presidents, was far from being brainy. He however, knew his limitations and
duly compensated for that; his cabinet was full of intellectual heavyweights
and individuals of proven achievements.
Incidentally
my comparing him to Reagan, no matter how unfavorably, only feeds Najib’s
delusion.
Najib
thinks he is super smart; he frequently parrots the latest buzz words. It is
not just an increase but a quantum leap! It is not just any strategy but a blue
ocean one! Meanwhile the ship of state is headed straight to the bottom. He
does not appreciate his fundamental problem. You cannot scour the ocean on a
leaky sampan with a crew familiar only with the rakit (bamboo raft), and hope to survive.
The
embarrassing caliber of Najib’s cabinet and advisors reflects his blissful ignorance
of his deficiencies. He had over four years to scout for fresh talent, only to
end up with the same mediocre core ministers he inherited from his equally dull
predecessor. I cringe whenever I hear any pronouncement from them. They are all
“half-past six.”
Even
on the rare occasion when Naijb picked a bright star like Idris Jala, the
former chief executive of Shell, the sparkle is gone. It is hard to soar like
an eagle when surrounded by turkeys. Idris is reduced to and consumed with
making elegant Powerpoint presentations to any willing audience.
Tasked
with “transforming” the government (note the bombastic buzz word!), Idris Jala
either severely underestimated the enormity of the task or generously
overestimated his talent in executing it. He forgot the evident reality that
the government of Malaysia is not Shell with respect to size, scope of
activities, availability of talent, or any other matrix. The bureaucratic
inertia of the civil service pales the physical one of a loaded supertanker.
If
Idris had appreciated the enormity of the challenge, or had a wee bit of
humility, he would have focused on only one or two areas, and learned from the
experience. Once successful, he would have minimal difficulty selling his ideas
and initiatives.
If Najib
had been introspective, he would have assigned Idris a specific portfolio and
then let him do his own “transforming.” Idris would then be able to show instead of just merely tell us his managerial capabilities.
Like
a skillful carpenter, a good leader knows when and where to deploy his finest
tools. Implicit in that observation is that a good leader must first recognize
which tools are sharp and which ones are dull, to be discarded. It is precisely
this critical insight that Najib is severely lacking.
Najib’s
second weakness, his hunger for approval, is equally crippling. He tried to
ingratiate himself to extremist Malay nationalists by brandishing his kris dipped
in tomato sauce, but to no avail. During the last election he had his son utter
a few words of Mandarin and gave generous on-the-spot grants to Chinese
schools. Likewise, he visited Rome for an audience with the Pope. At home he
garlanded himself in that outlandish floral arrangement around his neck while
visiting Batu Caves. Voters readily saw through those silly overtures.
Like
a spoilt brat who had grown accustomed to being indulged upon, Najib could not
accept the harsh rebuke that was the last election. He reacted like the
over-pampered kampong kid by sulking; hence his shameful silence during the
many recent crises.
Lacking
self-awareness, Najib has pretensions of great charisma. If contrast is the
essence of art, then his on-stage performance with the South Korean Gangnam
Group, Psy, during the last election campaign was truly, well, artistic. If
that were his only gig, that would be harmless enough. It was however, mildly
funny, even if it was at his expense.
A
charismatic leader could at least attract talent to his cause despite lacking
competence or not being generously-endowed intellectually. Najib does not
attract the best. He confuses endless slogans for substantive efforts, frenetic
activities as decisive actions, and sulking withdrawal as deep contemplation.
Take
his endless sloganeering. First there was glokal
Malay (contraction for global and lokal,
Malay bastardization for local). Lacking traction, he shifted to “One
Malaysia.” Streams of slogans later, it is now “Endless Possibilities!” What’s
next? Najib is the leader caricatured by Shahnon Ahmad’s lead character in his
novella, Unggappan.
We
must change the nation’s sorry trajectory by dispensing with the current
leadership. The excuse that there is no one else capable may be solace to Najib
but an insult to all Malaysians. Allah would not be so unkind and unjust as to
deprive us of our share of leadership talent. To get our rightful due however,
we must first stop indulging our present incompetent leaders, beginning with
Najib. Only then could we diligently search for better ones.
Malaysia
deserves better than to be saddled with Najib Razak.
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