Has patronage lost its punch in Malaysia?
The personalistic linkages that generally define Malaysian politics come into sharp relief when candidates confront the imperative of winning office. Malaysia’s 14th general election (GE14), as other previous iterations, saw politicians emphasize their ‘personal touch’ and offer a barrage of targete...
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-43802020-02-13T09:18:14Z Has patronage lost its punch in Malaysia? DETTMAN, Sebastian Carl WEISS, Meredith L. The personalistic linkages that generally define Malaysian politics come into sharp relief when candidates confront the imperative of winning office. Malaysia’s 14th general election (GE14), as other previous iterations, saw politicians emphasize their ‘personal touch’ and offer a barrage of targeted promises. Yet these relationships are not confined to elections and reflect deep connections between voters and politicians – not only for politicians in the long-dominant Barisan Nasional coalition, but also for the newly victorious Pakatan Harapan parties. The authors of this article draw on original survey data to show the embeddedness of these relationships beyond elections. In GE14, the Pakatan coalition could bank on their experience in power, as well as present a broad, economics-oriented campaign that was able to reassure voters that they would not lose out on the personal attention and material benefits they had come to expect from their politicians. As such, personalistic politics will, in the view of the authors, probably survive the transition in government. 2018-11-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3123 info:doi/10.1080/00358533.2018.1545936 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4380/viewcontent/Has_Patronage_Lost_Its_Punch_in_Malaysia_av.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Malaysia’s GE14 party–voter linkages clientelism patronage elections electoral transitions Asian Studies Political Science |
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Malaysia’s GE14 party–voter linkages clientelism patronage elections electoral transitions Asian Studies Political Science DETTMAN, Sebastian Carl WEISS, Meredith L. Has patronage lost its punch in Malaysia? |
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The personalistic linkages that generally define Malaysian politics come into sharp relief when candidates confront the imperative of winning office. Malaysia’s 14th general election (GE14), as other previous iterations, saw politicians emphasize their ‘personal touch’ and offer a barrage of targeted promises. Yet these relationships are not confined to elections and reflect deep connections between voters and politicians – not only for politicians in the long-dominant Barisan Nasional coalition, but also for the newly victorious Pakatan Harapan parties. The authors of this article draw on original survey data to show the embeddedness of these relationships beyond elections. In GE14, the Pakatan coalition could bank on their experience in power, as well as present a broad, economics-oriented campaign that was able to reassure voters that they would not lose out on the personal attention and material benefits they had come to expect from their politicians. As such, personalistic politics will, in the view of the authors, probably survive the transition in government. |
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DETTMAN, Sebastian Carl WEISS, Meredith L. |
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DETTMAN, Sebastian Carl WEISS, Meredith L. |
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DETTMAN, Sebastian Carl |
title |
Has patronage lost its punch in Malaysia? |
title_short |
Has patronage lost its punch in Malaysia? |
title_full |
Has patronage lost its punch in Malaysia? |
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Has patronage lost its punch in Malaysia? |
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Has patronage lost its punch in Malaysia? |
title_sort |
has patronage lost its punch in malaysia? |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2018 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3123 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4380/viewcontent/Has_Patronage_Lost_Its_Punch_in_Malaysia_av.pdf |
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