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Protesters gather during the ‘Turun Anwar’ rally at Dataran Merdeka in Kuala Lumpur July 26, 2025. — Picture by Firdaus Latif/Malay Mail
Taliban-like PAS and racist PN kept at bay by multi-racial Malaysians
KUALA LUMPUR, July 27, 2025: Based on the low Turun Anwar (Step down Anwar) rally turnout here yesterday, there is still hope for multi-racial Malaysians to prevent the rise of a Taliban-like PAS Government after the next general election (GE) which is due in 2027.
Not only did the non-Malays stayed away from the rally, many of the rally participants were PAS and Bersatu members who were given “RM200 salary” each for their participation.
It sure looks like multi-racial Malaysian are very aware of the threat to multi-racial Malaysia posed by PAS and Perikatan Nasional (PN) led by the racist and unpatriotic Muhyiddin “I Am Malay First” Yassin.
Multi-racial Malaysians or non-religious extremists in the Peninsula seem to be aware that they have no choice in GE16 but to stick with Pakatan Harapan (PH), comprising DAP, PKR and Amanah, to religious bigots in check.
No News Is Bad News reproduces below a string of WhatsApp chats on the issues:
READ THERE'S A LOT OF TRUTH IN WHAT HE SAYS
We can and should criticise Anwar if he does the wrong things, but we must be mindful of our choices, when it comes to PM selection.
The majority of voters in the country are Malays, with the lower voting age the Malay voters far outnumber the nons.
Many if not most Malay voters have attended tafiz schools where many of them have been indoctrinated to hate the other races.
Many are from PAS backed Tafiz schools and they'll be voting too.
The older Malays will vote mainly 3 ways, PAS, Bersatu and PKR.
PKR has a weak grassroot base, it will not suffice a victory, and that is why Anwar has to take some extreme measures.
If we withdraw our vote from him and PH, and if you take a careful look at the numbers PAS will win.
PAS will immeduately go for the formation of an Islamic state, and if that is done, or rather if we allow them that privelege, we must realise that once this is an Islamic state there is no turning back.
Your vote won't count PAS has made it clear they only want Islanic MPs and state assemblymen.
The laws will be Islamic and minors can be converted so your children are not safe.
Shariah law which is powerful today will become the law of the land.
Schools will turn Islamic and everything will be islamised.
Do you really want that?
*Malaysia at the Crossroads — Enough of the Games*_by Amarjeet Singh @ AJ_
I don’t agree with changing the Prime Minister now.
Why?
Because among a sea of clowns, he may not be perfect — but he’s still the better fool we’ve got.
He’s the only one trying to settle decades of debts, plug financial black holes, and fix the rot others conveniently ignored.
Yet, we judge him for a judiciary still tangled in political puppetry.
We curse him for crooks walking free — but forget who kept the system dirty all these years.
This isn’t a one-man game — it’s a decades-old cartel of politics, power, and greed.
Yes, maybe he waited too long for this job.
Yes, maybe some of his ideas sound tired and running out of it now.
*But where exactly do we think we are as a nation?*
We’re at our lowest — drowning in racial tensions, political hypocrisy, and economic chaos.
And somehow, we expect magic?
Instead, we hear the same old power-hungry has-beens shouting from the shadows — not for the people but to protect their own skin and fatten their cronies.
*What exactly are we hoping for?*
A saviour from the same rotten pool?
*Things are slow.*
*We’re angry.*
But let’s be real — now isn’t the time for another circus act.
*It’s time for tough calls, bitter medicine, and accountability.*
Not another round of recycled crooks in new suits.
*Malaysia stands at a breaking point.*
We either brace ourselves for the real fight to fix this country — or we let the same devils dress up as angels and fool us again.
Your choice.
*But this time, don’t say you weren’t warned.*
By Amarjeet Singh @ AJ
XXX: As a minority, we can try our best to prevent this.
But it’s my personal take that PAS will eventually rule the country. The last general election already showed the trend. PAS and its allies will gain more inroads in the coming GE.
PH’s only hope is Sabah and Sarawak but eventually these will not be enough. If not the coming GE, it will be the next.
Brace ourselves. At most another 10-15 years, PAS and its allies will take over.
XXX: Yesterday Turun Anwar salary rm200
Ronnie Liu Tian Khiew:
I was in the middle of Dataran Merdeka when Mahathir started his speech.
He has lost his oomph as a speaker. Small voice and lack substance.
My estimate? Below 20k maybe.
Largely a rally of members from Pas and Bersatu.
Absence of Chinese and Indian faces.
Gerakan too weak to provide a presence.
A total failure. But the organiser shamelessly declared... 500k!
The Organiser must be damn mad with the figure announced by the kl police.
What? Only 15k to 28k?!
God bless Malaysia.
XXX: Looking at the photos and video, I think maximum 20,000 or so. No big deal.
XXX: Can’t even filled half of Bukit Jalil football stadium.
Low turnout at Turun Anwar rally ironic success for unity govt, says analyst
USM’s Ahmad Fauzi Abdul Hamid says the government can take credit for allowing the rally to proceed as proof of democracy in Malaysia.
About 18,000 people took part in Saturday’s Turun Anwar rally in Kuala Lumpur, according to police, although the organisers, PAS Youth, claimed a total of more than 200,000 participants.
PETALING JAYA: An analyst says the low turnout at Saturday’s Turun Anwar rally can ironically be considered a “success” for the unity government, which can take credit for allowing the event to proceed as proof of democracy in Malaysia.
“The government shouldn’t be unduly worried with the 18,000 to 20,000 turnout, which falls far short of the original expectations of a 300,000 to 500,000 turnout,” Universiti Sains Malaysia’s Ahmad Fauzi Abdul Hamid told FMT.
About 18,000 people took part in the rally, according to police estimates, although the organisers, PAS Youth, claimed that more than over 200,000 participants were present.
In comparison, the anti-ICERD rally in December 2018, organised by a coalition of Umno, PAS and Malay-Muslim NGOs, saw more than 30,000 participants gather at Dataran Merdeka.
James Chin of the University of Tasmania was more unequivocal in calling the rally a failure for the organisers, “even if one generously estimates the average attendance from public reports as being somewhere between 25,000 and 30,000”.
“I think a major reason why it was a failure was because the major NGOs did not turn up in numbers. It was basically a PN rally,” he said.
The day before the rally, six NGOS said opposition leader Hamzah Zainudin should not have used their names to justify the protest.
Bersih, C4 Center, Ideas, Projek Sama, Pusat Komas, and Transparency International Malaysia said their meeting with Hamzah on July 1 had nothing to do with any political rally, and that they only sought to present their proposals on institutional reform and not to endorse any political campaign.
Hamzah had claimed at a press conference earlier that the NGOs had approached him expressing unhappiness with the government.
Fauzi also took aim at the opposition’s lack of alternatives for Anwar despite calling for his ouster.
“If Anwar were to step down, who’s in line to succeed him? Even Bersatu has differences about whether it should be Muhyiddin Yassin or Hamzah Zainudin, while PAS is touting Abdul Hadi Awang or Samsuri Mokhtar.
“As long as PN cannot keep its own house in order, convincing the rakyat will take a lot of effort, PH’s weakness notwithstanding,” he said.
Don’t underestimate non-Malay unhappiness, unity govt warned
Fauzi also said the unity government should not underestimate what the rally represents for the upcoming general election.
Noting the presence of non-Malays at the rally, he said this could signal possible Perikatan Nasional victories if non-Malays abstain from voting in marginal seats.
“It would have been nicer (for the opposition) if we saw more balanced racial representation at the rally, with a higher turnout from the ethnic minorities.
“But some were there, and pro-unity government sources shouldn’t hide this fact. Once in a while, there were shouts in Tamil and Mandarin.
“Despite their relatively low numbers, PH and BN shouldn’t underestimate the damage the disappointed non-Malay vote can do to them in the general election,” he said.









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