Kangkung? Watch it fry in cyberspace
Carolyn Hong,
First, it was kangkung (Chinese water spinach), then came sotong
(squid). And together, these two cheap food items made for an
unfortunate two weeks for Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak.
It
began when Najib lashed out at critics two weeks ago for blaming the
government when food prices go up but not praising it when prices come
down. He made the argument that the government could not control market
forces, and used kangkung to illustrate his point.
It was an
unfortunate choice that immediately stirred a backlash on social media.
Kangkung is seen as a cheap vegetable that grows in unappetising places
like drains.
Najib's message was soon lost as netizens invented a
huge range of jokes - from McKangkung burgers to kangkung-fuelled cars -
to mock him for apparently asking them to downgrade their lifestyle.
Last
week, sotong came into the picture as he sought again to explain market
forces. Speaking at his monthly address to the finance ministry, Najib
reiterated that the government could not control the price of every food
item.
"When it is the monsoon season, prices of fish go up and
even vegetables," he said. "I had used the kangkung as an example of the
supply-demand principle. My favourite foods are kangkung and sotong."
This
addition of sotong to the dish proved irresistible to netizens as
"sotong" is colloquially used to refer to a person who is confused or
weak, triggering a second round of jokes.
But jokes aside, the
kangkung- sotong saga illustrates just how much social media has changed
the political dynamics between the people and the country's leaders.
Reverence, or at least some level of deference, is now no longer the
default setting.
The social media has created an entirely new
landscape that is making it increasingly imperative for politicians to
up their game.
"The social media has rapidly reduced the aura
surrounding politicians and leaders," said analyst Ibrahim Suffian who
runs the pollster Merdeka Centre. "It was once easy to create and
maintain a political image but that's now no longer the case."
He
noted that social media has eliminated the barriers for people to join
the debate to point out inconsistencies, flaws and doublespeak. And as
the kangkung episode showed, they can do it very quickly and
effectively.
One rib-tickling joke spawned another, and soon, the
saga took on a life of its own. In the pre-Internet past, a similar
kangkung campaign would have taken such a long time to gain momentum
that public interest would have fizzled out but the social media works
at lightning pace.
This has changed the game significantly for
politicians. Ibrahim noted that it has heightened the need for
"authentic leadership" that goes deeper than a carefully crafted image
and well-written speeches.
"If it's all about projecting an image, your guard will slip at some point," he said.
The kangkung saga was a sharp reminder of this.
It
had all the elements to capture the imagination as the cost of living
is an issue close to people's hearts. Many spot a stark disconnect
between what the government expects the people to do and what it is
itself doing, thanks again to the social media.
While he talked
ostensibly about kangkung, Najib's underlying message was that
Malaysians will have to grin and bear fluctuating prices as the
government has to reduce the annual subsidies of 40 billion ringgit
(US$11.9 billion).
But while this message is not without merit, it
did not go down well because the social media also provided a context
that made it seem insincere. The Internet media was buzzing with stories
of alleged ostentatious spending by his Cabinet ministers even as the
government called for cutbacks.
Agriculture and Agro-Based
Industries Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob had hosted a wedding for his
daughter at the former Istana (royal palace), while Home Minister Ahmad
Zahid Hamidi reportedly had a birthday bash in a luxury hotel in Kuala
Lumpur. The prime minister himself came under fire after it was revealed
that the government spent 180 million ringgit ($53.8 million) a year to
operate two private jets.
Further, a well-read blog "Syed Outside
the Box" listed a whole range of items, from cars to baby formula, that
are expensive due to import controls. The blogger wrote that it was not
kangkung that people were complaining about. Rather, they were angry at
the high prices of items that are subject to government control.
The Internet campaign was remarkable in the way it gave the kangkung saga a life that it would not have enjoyed in earlier days.
This
is something that many Malaysian politicians have yet to truly
understand, on both sides. Even the tech-savvy Penang Chief Minister Lim
Guan Eng, who heads the opposition Democratic Action Party, stumbled
badly earlier this month when he came under fire for buying a Mercedes-
Benz to replace a two-month-old Toyota Camry as his official vehicle.
He
defended the decision as being value for money. Yet, that was not the
real issue; it was about perceived insensitivity to the difficulties
faced by many ordinary Malaysians who cannot make ends meet, let alone
change their car after just two months
.
The social media has
changed the game so much that politicians run the risk of ridicule and
mockery if they say one thing and do another, or craft different
messages for difference audiences.
Or as Merdeka's Ibrahim puts
it, there is a growing imperative for politicians to forget about being
politicians, and become real leaders instead.
"The kangkung saga
was a manifestation of the growing erosion of reverence towards
politicians," he said. "And it highlights the heightening demand for
authentic leaders."
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