Now let us see , i understand that a country needs political  stability , human capital  and infrastructure  development to stay ahead  , but how do you toe the line between developing a nation (say, Najib's 1 Malaysia concept at-par  with the pursuit of first world status) and  holding on to what the “Perkasa- minded” Malays love about the present  status quo (i.e. Najib being a Malay supremacist  Prime Minister and a  bit of a douche) without obvious inconsistencies in personality?
Deputy Perkins will not  have the darnedest clue of what the  implications be like , his idea of a power grab is sparked by a narrow  Malay nationalist movement , but Najib is smart..He sees the bigger  picture - Danil Daud
Angling to Challenge Najib for the Top Job
Terence Netto’s COMMENT: UMNO  may not do the task of internal reform well, like cutting down on the  practice of money politics, but say what you like, it does do internal  dissension well.
Muhyiddin rapped MCA  across the knuckles for calling for the boycott on grounds that sounded  vaguely like he believed in freedom of the press and then sidestepped  the question of whether he supported or disagreed with Utusan’s ’1Melayu, 1Bumi’ rallying cry.
It was the clearest demonstration in his  now delicate, two-year-old, trapeze act wherein he shows tepid support  for policy initiatives of his party’s president while leaving himself  enough wiggle room to hint he would chart a new course as skipper of the  crew.
It is the manoeuvring of a deputy who is  mulling a challenge for the top position: the controlled wriggling does  not cause too big a ruckus in the party but it sports the unmistakable  hallmarks of incipient mutiny.
One supposes there would be no prizes  for discerning these signs of a revolt’s incubation in the folds of  seemingly minor nuances of policy. After all, UMNO is a six-decade-old  party that has weathered several chapters of internecine conflict.
Contestants long seasoned by the party’s  intramural feuds would be skilled at the game of playing fast and loose  with the pros and cons of still-fluid issues, the better to lever them  to expedient advantage later when opportunity for getting up the greasy  pole avails.
Once overlooked 
Muhyiddin, survivor of the fallout from the Mahathir versus Musa Hitam  internal feud of the mid-1980s and the ructions between Mahathir and  Anwar Ibrahim of the late 1990s, is apparently putting to good use the  experiential wisdom he gained from those episodes.
In both instances, he initially backed  the loser, only to imperceptibly shift course and come out looking none  the worse for the wear. In each case, it was a story of plucking  survival from the jaws of defeat.
There was reason to believe that when Abdullah Ahmad Badawi  became prime minister in 2003, Muhyiddin had the better chance of being  named his deputy but Mahathir’s pressure on Abdullah forced the  latter’s reluctant selection of Najib for the position.
As things turned out, it was Muhyiddin’s  criticism of Abdullah’s protracted timetable for departure from the  UMNO presidency that hastened Abdullah’s exit from the post which comes  with the premiership of the country.
That criticism was a calculated gamble  by Muhyiddin. It paid off and now Muhyiddin is poised to take another  gamble by challenging for the top post that will either result in his  apotheosis or in his evisceration.
Sheer tenacityIt is one of the ironies of his career  that if he makes the move to challenge, he may get the support of the  very man – Mahathir – who was supposed to have stalled him before. If  that support materialises, it would be one of the more vivid  demonstrations of how someone with an outsider’s chance can re-insert  himself into the reckoning given sheer tenacity.
Of course, the larger irony inherent in  Muhyiddin’s projected rise would be that an UMNO bigwig from Johor is  trying to reach the top on a platform that is strident rather than  liberal.
From Onn Jaffar through to Dr Ismail Abdul Rahman  through to Musa Hitam, contestants for top honours in UMNO had  attempted to travel on liberal wings rather than on rabid ones.  Muhyiddin would represent a break in this pattern.–www.malaysiakini.com
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