Watershed assembly for Umno
      THIS general assembly is certain to be Umno’s last before the 13th  general election, and its leaders have taken great pains to ensure  members put on a good show for the whole country. 
The party  bosses, in the run-up to the meetings which started last night, told the  delegates that they were free to speak up on any subject.
And so they should, as Umno assemblies have been noted for the freedom politicians have to speak their minds.
However, the speakers must be aware that whatever they say will reverberate far beyond Merdeka Hall at the 
PWTC.
From  party president 
Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak to Youth chief 
Khairy  Jamaluddin, the advice has come for speakers not to say or do anything  that might offend other communities.
The leaders remember the  Youth-keris incident as well as the fiery speeches of the past few years  which the non-
Malays had found unsettling, if not threatening.
This  cannot happen again if Umno wants 
Putrajaya to remain under 
Barisan  Nasional. National polls are imminent, and party members must remember  that whatever they do will affect Barisan’s 13 other component parties.
Every  misplaced word and misconstrued action will be exploited by their  political foes to the fullest to drive the non-Malay electorate away  from the ruling coalition.
Najib has repeatedly said in the past  few days that his 1Malaysia concept calls for “acceptance” and not just  “tolerance”, and the party leadership has re-emphasised this by putting  up huge billboards depicting multi-racial scenes with wordings like  “Kami anak Malaysia” (We are the children of Malaysia) all over the  PWTC.
This is one of Umno’s biggest efforts to reach out to the other communities.
The  more than 100 speakers at the Youth, Wanita, 
Puteri and main party’s  assemblies must also reflect this spirit of accepting all 
Malaysians so  that the calls that their leaders make will not be seen as mere slogans.
The  speakers should also pick up on the call by Najib for unpopular elected  representatives to “voluntarily” bow out instead of having to be pushed  out.
Umno has been, for too long, associated with warlords who  refuse to give up their seats or positions that they see as theirs for  life, but this will not do in today’s modern, connected world.
Voters  today want to see changes and abhor politicians who overstay their  welcome. Umno warlords must realise this and by voluntarily stepping  down, play their part in reinventing the party, and at the same time  gain the gratitude of younger members.
Malaysians of every social  and political stripe will be watching this assembly and listening  intently to every word each speaker makes.
Umno and Barisan Nasional will be measured, judged, punished or rewarded based on what happens in the next four days.
All  
political parties like to claim that their annual gatherings are  important, but few can deny that this Umno assembly is a watershed that  could change Malaysia’s political landscape forever.
Battle to win the warlords over
Comment by BARADAN KUPPUSAMY
The pressing issue for Umno is to hammer home the theme that the  party’s warlords, division chiefs and apparatchiks are unimportant for  the crucial battle ahead.UMNO is mobilising its grassroots  to stage its annual general meeting at PWTC in Kuala Lumpur this week in  a great show of choreographed pomp and colour and with members pledging  party unity ahead of the most crucial battle of all, the 13th general  election.
The party is set to put on the biggest show ever and  the media coverage will be overwhelming; a stark contrast to its rival  PKR, which just concluded its annual general meeting in Pulai Springs  hotel, Johor, and whose assembly attracted less attention.
While  for PKR, the debate in a nutshell centred on enemies from within, the  Umno debates are expected to centre on winning candidates – a theme  Prime Minister and Umno president Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak has been  broaching for some months now.
For the Umno leadership, the  pressing issue is to get the party grassroots behind this theme, that  Umno warlords, division chiefs and party apparatchiks are unimportant  for the crucial battle ahead.
What is important would be winning  candidates who will fight in the constituencies that Umno will contest  and in other constituencies where the party’s allies will do battle.
The  challenge for the Umno leadership is to convince the power brokers in  the party and the division chiefs that the next election is a battle for  Umno’s survival and that only a certain type of candidate will be  allowed to carry the Barisan Nasional flag.
Najib has to convince  the power brokers to voluntarily relinquish the decision to choose the  candidates to the party’s top leadership.
Once that is accomplished, this would ensure that the warlords and division chiefs work to ensure the party wins.
They  must not, out of anger at not being chosen, simply abandon the election  machinery in their areas, go for a holiday at the most crucial moment  or even indulge in acts of sabotage.
They must not, as party members, stand as independents and split the votes.
Everything  hangs in the balance for the next general election: the number of seats  that Barisan Nasional can expect to win, the percentage of votes it  can garner, the extent of transformation to society that has taken place  and whether voters are convinced.
Najib has been preaching about winning candidates as he makes his rounds around the country.
Deputy prime minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin has also been spreading the importance of winning candidates.
Above all, they want consensus.
An agreement from the party warlords that their candidate choices for the general election will be accepted and endorsed.
A division chairman or his deputy are not automatically the best candidates in their constituencies.
The  best candidates could be a humble teacher or a district officer or a  doctor or just any ordinary member in the party hierarchy who has a  certain degree of easy confidence and restraint and has no derogatory  label at the local level.
This, then, is what Najib will set out to do – to establish the fact that party comes first above all else.
The warlords will be asked to make sacrifices and not pull the party leviathan in different directions at the grassroots level.
They  will be asked to promise that they will strictly put party interest  above self and support wholeheartedly the candidates that the leadership  has chosen for the big battle.
Pakatan Rakyat is not an easy  enemy to defeat. It might be wounded, it might have “enemies within” and  it might have three different agendas.
But they have a unifying  figure in Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, no matter how beaten down, and a  unifying vision of occupying Putrajaya.
They are not easily defeatable.
Besides, Umno has to carry the MCA, MIC, Gerakan and PPP into battle with it, at least in the peninsula.
These parties are in various stages of reinventing themselves for a new generation of voters.
Except  for the MCA, which is in a showdown with the DAP, the rest have to  accept their defeated images and exist as feeders of votes to big  brother Umno in return for representation in parliament.
It’s a new reality that they will have to accept.
Najib  will spell out the realities of the altered political landscape at the  Umno general assembly that he is not just Umno president but also the  Prime Minister for all Malaysians no matter what their race, ethnic  group or social status are.
Although badly mauled by defections, PKR has pledged to reinvent itself and fight Umno.
The DAP, on the other hand, is a strong, sleeping giant, sure of Chinese voter support.
PAS,  meanwhile, is struggling for Malay votes beyond its one-million card  carrying members, having lost the political initiative to Umno.
Its  many liberal policies were designed to endear it to non-Malays but it  has woken up late to the fact that it needs the Malay voters too and is  fast catching up, ratcheting up a hardline stance.
If Najib can  convince his party warlords to ease off and not battle him over his  choice of candidates and to put party above self, then he would have won  half the battle.
The other half is to convince voters that he  has been working day and night since becoming Prime Minister in February  2009 while the “Prime Minister-in-waiting” Anwar has been giving  speeches from India to Egypt and countries in between.
Najib can win a new mandate from voters but he has to get his party warlords behind him.