MCA EGM: Will Ong be ousted?

Sep 17, 09 10:58am

Barely a year after he took office, MCA president Ong Tee Keat will be facing another "election" when the party convenes an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) on Oct 10.

Ong has taken a huge risk by accepting all five motions proposed by supporters of his sacked deputy Dr Chua Soi Lek, who, among others, are seeking a no confidence vote against Ong and to reinstate the latter.

The party president is seizing the bull by the horns, in choosing to leave it to the 2,377 delegates that represent 900,000 members to decide on his leadership following Chua's expulsion for a sex video scandal.

"It's another party presidential election. That's how I look at it," a party insider told Bernama.

The EGM may yield several scenarios, firstly one side winning handsomely, the second of a no confidence vote in Ong and thirdly, and the most watched, the party president winning on a simple majority while Chua makes a return to the party that expelled him on Aug 26 for a video sex scandal that happened two years ago.

The same party insider said anything less than the 60 percent he secured in the party election last October would be viewed as Ong losing his support in the party and may cause him to vacate the post.

If the delegates pass the motion of no confidence against Ong and reinstate Chua, it would also likely prompt Ong to come to the same decision.

"Although according to the party constitution, a two thirds majority is needed to remove the president, knowing Ong's style, he would prefer to throw in the towel if the motion is rejected with only a simple majority," the insider said.

"If that happens, under Article 40 of the constitution, the deputy president automatically becomes the president without having to seek a fresh mandate unlike previously," he added.

Before the constitution was amended in 1986, the deputy president can only be acting president and has to contest for the top post to become president.

Fresh party polls

Another party veteran voiced the possibility of a fresh party election if scenario three happened because the entire presidential council, which sacked Chua, would resign.

While Chua's side deny he is out to topple Ong, the president's supporters believe there is a "hidden element" in the motions to be debated at the EGM, which is to pave the way for his reinstatement and ascend to the party presidency.

"As the delegates will vote secretly for each separate motion, this could act as a safety net for Chua. Unless the delegates vote in block and say no to all five motions, it would spell big trouble for Ong," the veteran said.

The remaining three motions are to annul Chua's sacking, to revoke the appointment of any other deputy president and for no disciplinary action to be taken against delegates who had supported Chua to call for an EGM.

Some party leaders are more worried about a possible deadlock if scenario three happens.

"It would prolong the crisis as we will be back to square one. It is just like marriage, if the two cannot reconcile, you cannot force it to happen," said a leader who did not want to be identified.

Ong and Chua are believed to each have at least 30 percent hardcore backing and need to win over the remaining 40 per cent of neutral or fence sitters.

Crucial are the states of Selangor, Johor and Perak which account for just over 50 percent of the delegates with Selangor having 431, Johor 418 and Perak 347.

The rest are Federal Territory which has 178 delegates followed by Pahang (176), Kedah (173), Penang (149), Sabah (148), Negeri Sembilan (122), Melaka (90), Kelantan (76), Terengganu (43) and Perlis (27).

- Bernama