It’s time for Koh to let go
Analysis By BARADAN KUPPUSAMY
Calls for Gerakan president Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon  to step down from leading the Barisan Nasional charge in Penang is  gaining momentum, putting the coalition at a political crossroad.THE  
Hungry Ghost festival is in full swing in Penang but Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu  Koon, the former chief minister and current Gerakan president, is  seeing more political ghosts than he could imagine. 
Image via WikipediaHe feels a puppet master is pulling the strings to force him out. He feels there's an agenda against him.
He  blames the Opposition of wanting to dethrone him. If he listens hard  enough or has the gall to admit it, the loudest calls are from his  Barisan Nasional partners, from his Gerakan party and from the  Penangites.
The calls are coming in stringent and unwavering, so  much so that Dr Koh called a press conference in Kuala Lumpur on Friday  to refute the charges.
He gave investment figures that “skyrocketed” under his watch as chief minister from 1990 to 2008.
He  gave facts and figures of the projects undertaken during his tenure,  the constructions that were done and the wave of investments.
But  the fact remains that under his 18-year stewardship of Penang, the  island's economy headed south and a new generation of Penangites could  not find any use for a man who bent over backwards to please big brother  Umno.
What counts is that Penangites rejected him so thoroughly like Sabahans did to 
Datuk Harris Salleh and his Berjaya Cabinet in 1985 and brought in the rule of 
Tan Sri Joseph Pairin Kitingan.
No matter how he wants to justify it or mitigate it, the fact remains that the voters of Penang have rejected him in totality.
After  such a massive and thorough defeat, it is a wonder that only now,  nearly four years on, that we hear rumblings for Dr Koh to step down as  Gerakan president and as a federal minister.
The rumblings are  coming from within Barisan Nasional and not from the Opposition, which  is happy if Dr Koh stays so that it can continue to lampoon him for all  the failures in Penang from uncollected rubbish to closure of foreign  factories, which were household names, moving to China and the dramatic  drop in foreign direct investment.
The verdict of 2008 shows Dr  Koh, 62, has outlived his usefulness, so his critics charge. He is no  longer relevant and has become a liability and a burden to Barisan  Nasional.
Dr Koh is a man from the past, best suited for the  world of academia. In fact, he was in academia as a deputy dean of  education in Universiti Sains Malaysia but was persuaded to leave that  cosy and comfortable job for the topsy-turvy world of politics.
Dr Koh was a big name in academia with a string of degrees and awards to his name.
And  the Chinese value a man of learning like him. He was an ideal man for  the times, his education, his intellectual rigour and his origins made  him best suited to take over from Gerakan 
founder Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu as administrator of Penang.
Dr  Koh was born in Penang in 1949 and attended Phor Tay Primary School and  
Chung Ling High School. He went on to graduate from Princeton  University in 1970 with a degree in physics, and obtained his PhD from  the University of Chicago in 1977 in economics and sociology of  education.
He was a Fulbright scholar at Stanford University and  made the transition to politics, first winning in the 1982 general  election as a Gerakan Youth leader.
Eventually he climbed the  ladder to become deputy president of Gerakan all in 15 years and under  the tutelage of the plain-speaking 
Tun Dr Lim Keng Yaik.
After  18 years at the helm, years that some critics say he has nothing to  show for he and his entire Gerakan team of Cabinet ministers were wiped  out in the 2008 tsunami.
A new man is at the helm as the chief minister in DAP 
secretary-general Lim Guan Eng.
First  Dr Koh is not doing what he should do fighting Pakatan Rakyat point for  point in Penang and at the same time revive his own party's fortunes.
Neither is he combative nor has the leadership acumen to lead the state Barisan in its time of crisis.
The  most telling thing said of Dr Koh came from his former boss Dr Lim who,  in a recent interview, said Dr Koh had the intellectual capacity and  integrity but was unable to match it with political decisions or to  provide the crucial political leadership.
Dr Lim, who headed Gerakan for 27 years, believes that Gerakan has lost Penang for good.
Barisan Nasional has carried Dr Koh for some three decades and it is time to let him go.
What next for ‘softly-softly’ Koh?
COMMENT By JOCELINE TAN
Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon is trying to move his political base from  Penang to Kuala Lumpur but the renewed pressure about his political  future shows that he is still a liability for Gerakan in Penang.GERAKAN  members in Penang say Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon has sold the Tanjong  Bungah house in Penang where he had lived for much of his 18 years as  chief minister. He seldom goes back to Penang these days and seems set  to make Kuala Lumpur his home.
The talk in his party is that he  is preparing to make Kuala Lumpur his next political base too and that  he is eyeing a parliamentary seat in the next general election. Some  people call it running away; others say he is merely moving on. Anyway,  Penang is no longer a tenable option for the Gerakan president. His  party has been wiped out in the state that used to be synonymous with  Gerakan and he is still being blamed for the catastrophe.
At the  height of their political standing, party members were fond of saying  that Penang is Gerakan and Gerakan is Penang. And now, without Penang,  the party is floundering and Dr Koh’s shortcomings have become the DAP’s  strength. He has not had an easy time since the 2008 general election.  But the last one week has seen him come under renewed pressure to atone  for the loss of Penang to Pakatan Rakyat.
Scathing remarks about  him by Tan Sri Tan Kok Pin, a developer tycoon and Penang Chamber of  Commerce president, resulted in calls for Dr Koh to step aside in  Gerakan and give Barisan Nasional a chance to make a comeback. They  claimed he is not helping his party or the coalition in Penang in  accepting a Cabinet post via the Dewan Negara.
Several figures in  his party have defended him and he held a press conference in Kuala  Lumpur yesterday to refute some of the allegations. The circle around  him imagine there is a conspiracy to bring him down and they use terms  like “orchestrated” and “coordinated attacks”.
But, by and large,  his party, especially in Penang, has been strangely tongue-tied about  the criticism. The Penang Gerakan folks are aware of what people in the  state think of the party and the former chief minister. They are  disturbed that public sentiment has yet to shift in their favour three  years after the political tsunami.
“I get a lot of that from  members on the ground but I always ask them: I know you guys want a  change in leadership, but tell me, change to who? They have no answer to  that and neither do I,” said Gerakan Youth chief Lim Si Pin.
Party  members, as Lim admitted, are resigned to accepting the situation till  the next general election which will decide the fate of the party.
Dr  Koh has shown little sign that he is about to exit the political stage  now or in the near future. During the recent party’s state conventions,  he asked members to give him two terms as president so that he can put  things back on course.
Some were stunned because they felt that  he should be thinking about a workable exit plan instead of trying to  push for an extended term in office. Some had even wanted him to address  the transition issue at the coming National Delegates Confer-ence but  it looks like that is the last thing on his mind.
The trouble is  that very few top leaders in Gerakan are in a position to ask Dr Koh to  go because many of them had also lost in the election and are unwilling  to make way.
There was empathy for Dr Koh immediately after March  8. He won respect for overseeing the peaceful transition of power to  the new regime and was praised as a gentleman politician.
He  could have gone with his head held high at that point. His sin was being  unable to stand up to Umno but he had little personal baggage - he was  seen as a relatively clean leader and he led a moderate private life.
But  the goodwill quickly evaporated when he accepted a Cabinet post via the  Senate. The public perception was that he had not taken responsibility  for his party’s losses. He conceded the moral high ground by accepting  the ministership and when MIC president G. Palanivel was appointed a  minister recently, some blamed Dr Koh for setting the precedent.
The  fact that he is making a fresh start elsewhere also irks those who are  left trying to clear the mess in Penang. They feel that he is washing  his hands of a problem that had and still has much to do with him.
Penang  is where the party base is most extensive, yet he has relegated the  party’s recovery in the state to Penang chairman Datuk Dr Teng Hock Nan  who has been unable to inspire the troops.
“He should consider  not running in the next general election. He would bring the whole party  down with him if he does. He is a smart guy. He should be able to see  that,” said a Penang Gerakan figure.
Even former party president Tun Dr Lim Keng Yaik has not been spared – he is being blamed for grooming Dr Koh.
He  has privately told people in that blustery way of his: “Don’t think I  don’t feel bad about what has happened to the party. I am very  frustrated but there is nothing I can do.”
Chinese history is  full of lessons in politics and Dr Koh should know that his intellectual  and “softly-softly” style was suitable in peace-time politics. But it  is a war zone out there these days and Gerakan needs a wartime leader –  someone who can take the hits and hit out at the same time.
In  private conversations, party members readily admit that he is not  balancing his priorities between the party and his ministry. They feel  that he should spend more time on party matters.
Instead, he  seems more concerned about his ministry duties, to be seen with the  Prime Minister and appearing in the media with him.
Dr Koh has  been put on the defensive by renewed pressure for him to go. While it is  true that the calls are coming from people without any real 
locus standi, the point is: There are not enough calls from his own party expressing confidence in his leadership.
It  will be 30 years in politics for Dr Koh next year. That is a long time  and that may be why people are wondering whether he still deserves to be  up there.