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[1] The long-awaited moment has finally arrived. In a bold and imaginative move, Rafizi Ramli — ever the political maverick — has broken with PKR and entered the fray under the banner of Parti Bersama Malaysia. A long dormant party has suddenly been reenergised as the new standard bearer for reformasi, democratic renewal and political change.

[2] The contrast with Pakatan Harapan could hardly have been starker. While Anwar Ibrahim and other PH leaders gathered at their national convention recycling the same tired talking points that few Malaysians seem to believe anymore, Rafizi was reigniting a sense of hope  across the political landscape.

[3] Many Malaysians — particularly non-Malays increasingly disillusioned with both PKR and DAP — now appear to be flocking to Rafizi’s banner. The hall was packed for his announcement, and, within hours, donation appeals were circulating widely across chat groups. There’s real excitement and a growing sense that the spirit of reformasi — stifled and suffocated under Anwar’s leadership — may finally be stirring once again. And to those who long taunted critics with the dismissive question, “If not Anwar, then who?”, Malaysians may now finally have an answer.

[4] Like many of my friends and colleagues, I find this latest development genuinely exciting. It recalibrates the political landscape and offers voters something Malaysian politics has lacked for years: the possibility of a genuine alternative. For too long, the country has been trapped in a stagnant political cycle dominated by tired personalities, recycled narratives and coalitions held together more by fear and expediency than conviction or vision. Politics has become little more than a contest between competing elites offering variations of the same tired formula while ordinary Malaysians grow increasingly cynical and disengaged. Rafizi’s move disrupts that stale equilibrium and may be precisely the shock needed to force a long overdue political renewal.

[5] I want Rafizi to succeed. Years ago, when he had stepped away from politics, I went with my friend Dr KJ John to urge him to return. Even at that stage, many of us sensed that reformasi was losing direction and slowly degenerating into little more than another vehicle for political survival and elite accommodation.

[6] But much has happened since those days. I am far more cynical and far less trusting now. Before we rush to anoint Rafizi as the new political messiah, we ought to ask what he actually stands for beyond the increasingly hollow rhetoric of reformasi. Malaysians have repeatedly invested their hopes in politicians who promised justice, unity and reform only to govern through the same sectarian calculations and cynical compromises once power was secured. After every election, we arrive at the same bitter realisation: the faces change, the slogans evolve, but the underlying political order remains untouched. Malaysia cannot afford another imposter.

[7] Before I give Rafizi my support, I want to hear clearly what his vision for Malaysia actually is — especially regarding the long-neglected and increasingly marginalised non-Malay-Muslim community. Of course, he must remain sensitive to the concerns of Malay-Muslim voters; no serious politician can ignore them. But a reformist leader of a multiracial party must also articulate a fairer and more inclusive national agenda — one that addresses Malay-Muslim concerns without once again pushing everyone else to the margins. After all, that was one of the main reasons many non-Malays turned away from Anwar Ibrahim.

[8] I also want to hear how Rafizi intends to address the longstanding grievances of Sabah and Sarawak. Successive governments have marginalised the Borneo states while paying only lip service to MA63. Their demands for fairness, dignity and genuine partnership within the federation can no longer remain unanswered.

[9] So I intend to attend Rafizi’s rallies and hear him out carefully. I genuinely hope he succeeds because Malaysia desperately needs a new political beginning. But he will still have to convince me that he is sincere about building a Malaysia where all citizens genuinely feel they belong before he earns my support – for whatever little it may be worth.

[Dennis Ignatius |Kuala Lumpur | Monday, 18th May 2026]