Embittered Authoritarianism: Contemporary Malaysia in Comparative Perspective

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Embittered Authoritarianism: Contemporary Malaysia in Comparative Perspective Dan Slater Associate Professor Department of Political Science University of Chicago slater@uchicago.edu @SlaterPolitics Presentation at Stanford University Center for Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law (CDDRL) and Southeast Asia Program (SEAP) February 9, 2015

Democracy through Weakness vs. Strength Weakness Strength Institutional Weakness Institutional Strength Rulers Deeply Divided Rulers Relatively Unified Last Resort Proactive Strategy Threat of Violence Expectation of Stability Conceding Defeat Conceding Democracy Reforms Unavoidable Reforms Acceptable Legitimacy Surrendered Legitimacy Redefined Sudden Collapse (ruptura) Gradual Reform (reforma) Coalitional Upheaval Coalitional Continuity

Spectrum of Variation in Regime Outcomes Democratic (or Concession ) Cases Japan South Korea Taiwan Indonesia Thailand Burma Authoritarian (or Candidate ) Cases China Vietnam Cambodia Malaysia Singapore Hong Kong

Malaysia: A Regime Refresher 1957: Independence from UK under UMNO and Alliance rule 1969: Ethnic riots usher in authoritarian Barisan Nasional (BN) regime 1981: UMNO s Mahathir Mohamad becomes Prime Minister 1987: UMNO briefly splits, largely over Mahathir s autocratic style 1998: Amid financial crisis, Anwar Ibrahim sacked, beaten, imprisoned 1998-9: Pro-Anwar reformasi protest movement met with repression 2003: Mahathir resigns, replaced by Mr. Nice Guy Abdullah Badawi 2004: Anwar released in wake of BN s biggest landslide ever 2008: Pakatan Rakyat (PR) denies BN its 2/3 majority for first time 2009: Najib Razak replaces Badawi after this electoral tsunami 2013: PR wins majority of popular vote, but BN retains ~60% of seats 2015: Anwar on verge of reimprisonment under Sodomy II

Leading Interpretations of Malaysia s Regime.and Their Limits Democratic reforms have been.: 1) implemented by PMs Badawi and Najib; 2) impeded by Mahathir s UMNO allies; 3) impossible under BN rule But these perspectives typically fail to distinguish.: 1) authoritarianism as a style of rule vs. a system of rule; 2) democratic reforms from other types of reforms; 3) reformist rhetoric from reformist reality; 4) conceding democracy from conceding defeat

Reinterpreting Malaysia s Regime 1) UMNO/BN have long had ample strength to concede democracy without conceding defeat, at least until 2013 (i.e. democratic reforms not impossible); 2) Reformist rhetoric and intermittent repressive restraint amount to a transition in style from bad-cop to good-cop authoritarianism, not in system from authoritarianism to democracy (i.e. democratic reforms not implemented); 3) The most fundamental field-leveling democratic reforms, such as an independent election commission and a truly free press, are not even on the table (i.e. reforms not impeded)

Concepts I: Electoral Authoritarianism and Hybrid Regimes [E]lectoral authoritarianism transcends issues of democratic quality. It does not concern the desirable attributes of high-quality democracy, but the indispensable attributes of minimal democracy. When democratic deficits cancel the democratic essence of electoral regimes, we should call the animal by its name: autocracy. Clinging to the notion of democracy (even if qualified by disqualifying adjectives) would weaken our sense of authoritarian realities, rather than sharpening our grasp of democratic deficits. [E]lectoral autocracies.can fruitfully be described as hybrid regimes. Yet, they are hybrid authoritarian regimes, rather than unclassifiable mixed regimes that inhabit a no man s land between democracy and authoritarianism. Andreas Schedler, The Politics of Uncertainty (Oxford 2013)

Concepts II: Working Typology of Authoritarian Reforms Type Economic Governance Democratic Superficial I. (e.g. crony privatization) II. (e.g. selective anticorruption) III. (e.g. intraparty elections) Depth Substantive IV. (e.g. welfare expansion) V. (e.g. judicial review, police reform) VI. (e.g. leveled playing field) * Type VI reforms à electoral democratization

From Concepts to Causation When do Authoritarian Regimes Pursue Democracy through Strength? (1) Strengths (2) Signals (3) Strategies

Causal Factor #1: Antecedent Strengths à Antecedent state strength = main source of stability confidence (i.e. socially shared expectation that political stability can be preserved under democratic conditions) à Antecedent party strength = main source of victory confidence (i.e. ruling party s expectation of winning democratic elections) * Since 2008, Malaysians stability confidence has been increasing while the BN s victory confidence has been plummeting (i.e. decline of protection pact [Slater, 2010]) * This helps explain why BN leaders have been willing to experiment with reforms of Emergency laws, but not electoral laws

Causal Factor #2: Bittersweet Signals à Even historically strong authoritarian regimes should not be expected to pursue democracy through strength when domination seems attainable or collapse seems imminent à They must receive clear and strong signals that they are powerful enough to thrive under democracy, but not to dominate under dictatorship except by using devastating force. This is the bittersweet spot where a democracy-through-strength strategy is likeliest to unfold. à Four Types of Signals: 1. Electoral (shift toward parity w/opposition: clearest) 2. Contentious (cross-class, nationalist protest: strongest) 3. Economic (exhaustion of pure developmental legitimacy) 4. Geopolitical (softening of vital superpower support)

Weak but Clear Electoral Signals: Singapore 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 PAP Vote % PAP Seat % 30 20 10 0 1968 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1991 1997 2001 2006 2011

Strong but Mixed Electoral Signals: Malaysia 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 UMNO Vote % UMNO Seat % BN Vote % BN Seat % 20 10 0 1974 1978 1982 1986 1990 1995 1999 2004 2008 2013

Mixed Signals in Malaysia s Bittersweet Spot 1996: BN apex: post-landslide collapse of opposition coalition 1997: Initial bittersweet signal: but economic only, at least at first 1998: Predicted intraparty struggle over reform: but Anwar ousted 1998-99: Reformasi: contentious signals endogenous to crackdown 1999: UMNO loses electoral ground to PAS: Mahathir referendum? 1999-2003: Economy seems to recover under Mahathir s iron grip 2003: Transition to Nice Guy Badawi: autocratic problem solved? 2004: Badawi s landslide: Second apex? Referendum on reform? 2007: Bersih and PR gain strong footing under good cop rule 2008: BN loses 2/3: Too little reform? Too much? Badawi to blame? 2008-09: Anwar aims to topple BN through backbencher defections 2013: BN loses majority: decline undeniable, but causes debatable

Causal Factor #3: Legitimation Strategies à Democracy through strength is never a structural imperative but a product of strategic calculation and elite struggle in the bittersweet spot. à Concessions require the victory of a coalition interpreting bittersweet signals as the end of an era over those who perceive that authoritarian domination remains attainable. à New and public legitimation strategies are the causal mechanism through which strengths and signals are translated into actual concession outcomes.

Conclusion: Prospects for Regime Change through Strategic Shifts? On the Positive Side: Decisive democratic reforms still offer the most plausible revitalized legitimacy formula to attract urban, young, and non- Malay voters whom the BN has otherwise lost; Democratic reforms typically seem unthinkable until they happen On the Negative Side: Reformist voices are currently muted or absent within UMNO; Malapportionment strengthens rural/provincial sides of UMNO; UMNO s victory confidence remains stronger than BN s overall; Old-time religion of development and racialism still available; Old tricks to divide and weaken opposition (i.e. trials, defections)

Embittered Authoritarianism: Contemporary Malaysia in Comparative Perspective Dan Slater Associate Professor Department of Political Science University of Chicago slater@uchicago.edu @SlaterPolitics Presentation at Stanford University Center for Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law (CDDRL) and Southeast Asia Program (SEAP) February 9, 2015

Antecedent Strengths and Regime Outcomes in Developmental Asia Northeast Asia Southeast Asia 1. Japan (50s) 1. Singapore 2. Taiwan (80s) 3. Hong Kong 4. South Korea (80s) 2. Malaysia 5. China 3. Indonesia (90s) Antecedent 4. Thailand (80s) Strengths 5. Vietnam 6. Cambodia 7. Burma Boundary between Higher- and Medium- Confidence Cases Italicized: Democratic/Concession Case Non-Italicized: Authoritarian/Candidate Case * Spectrum of authoritarian strength à Spectrum of democratic success

Developmental Asia as a Historical Setting (1) Imperialism and the Japan-Led Imperative of National Catch-Up Japan becomes leader, inventor of developmental state (1858- ) Japanese colonialism and example spreads its model regionally (2) Anglo-American Power and Pressures for Liberalization UK introduces conservative legal/parliamentary systems Cold War gives USA leverage to spread its model (incl. Japan) (3) Belated Rise of China as Developmental Leader and Model Developmental socialism associated with non-electoral systems Despite geopolitical power, weak Chinese influence over regimes Key Point: Developmental Asia is politically, not geographically defined and determined. For instance the Philippines, North Korea, Laos and Mongolia are not included.

A First Cut: Tracing Signals to Concession Outcomes Electoral Contentious Economic Geopolitical Taiwan S. Korea X X X X X X Indonesia X X Singapore X Malaysia X China X Initial Finding: The strategy of democracy through strength seems minimally to require either an electoral signal (clearest) or contentious signal (strongest) plus one additional signal of any of the four types.

Wider Book Project Democracy through Strength: Asia s Development and Democratization (with Joseph Wong) The Setting: Developmental Asia : beyond Northeast vs. Southeast The Puzzle: Lots of development, less democratization The Question: How can we best explain developmental Asia s uneven historical trajectory away from authoritarian rule? The Argument: In developmental Asia, the primary mode of democratization has been democracy through strength.

Prospects and Conclusion Question: How far *might* UMNO go? Argument: Rising stability confidence since 2004 makes a more decisive repeal of outdated security laws a reasonable prospect. Plummeting victory confidence means any leveling of the playing field vis-à-vis opposition is currently off the table. Question: How far *can* UMNO go? Argument: It is not too late for UMNO to concede democracy without conceding defeat. Decisive democratic reforms offer the most plausible revitalized legitimacy formula to attract urban, young, and non-malay voters whom the BN has otherwise lost. But only if rhetoric is complemented by substance, and authoritarian controls are explicitly disavowed.

à BN s relative decline is far clearer than UMNO s à East Malaysia remains an anti-reformist fixed deposit for BN à Chinese DAP surpasses Malay-led PKR in opposition à Opposition leader remains jailable at low political cost à Electoral signals stronger than economic, contentious, geopolitical.means the Pursuit of Multiple Strategies à Prioritize economic performance in pursuit of a new apex à Toy with and trumpet reforms of types I-V to avoid type VI à Outsource old-time religion to NGOs like Perkasa, Pekida à Divide opposition by hook and by crook, seek big defections