Nehru Sathia Moorthy
Muar MP Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman recently completed the gruelling Ironman Malaysia Championship in Langkawi in 12 hours, 22 minutes and 18 seconds – and as a result, secured RM1m in contributions for the people of Muar, his constituency.
The 32-year-old former Youth and Sports Minister’s participation was tied to a pledge made by a local fashion company, which had promised to donate RM1m million to Muar residents if he finished the triathlon in under 13 hours.
It was an impressive physical feat, as it involved a 3.8km swim, 180km cycling segment and 42.2km run.
Syed Saddiq himself said he was motivated by his people. “I came here with one goal – to secure RM1m for Muar… Even though I vomited several times, I was determined to finish because the people of Muar were always on my mind.”
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The narrative sounds inspiring on the surface – a young MP pushing his physical and mental limits to help his constituents.
But there’s an uncomfortable ethical question lurking beneath the surface. Why was it necessary for him to complete an Ironman challenge in order for the company to contribute RM1m to Muar?
If the company truly wanted to help the people of Muar, it could have done so directly, without needing the MP to act as a symbolic middleman or perform a physical stunt as a precondition.
Supporters might argue that this arrangement benefits everyone – Syed Saddiq gets a public relations boost, the company promotes its brand, and the people of Muar receive RM1m for welfare programmes like food banks, laptops and festive clothing.
But viewed from another angle, the entire arrangement risks normalising the use of money as an indirect tool to influence voters.
When a company’s contribution to the public is linked to the unrelated and irrelevant performance of an elected official, the distinction between charitable giving and political endorsement becomes dangerously blurred.
It’s one thing for an elected representative, representing his constituents to express gratitude to a company that has contributed to his constituency – it’s another for the elected representative to make it appear as if the company’s contribution was earned directly through his personal effort or virtue.
When an MP publicly ties his athletic achievement to material benefit for his constituents, the message can easily morph into: I brought you money. That sits uncomfortably close to the political culture of duit kopi (coffee money) and duit minyak (petrol money) handouts – small kindnesses that blur into acts of electoral influence.
Troubling precedent
This episode sets a worrying precedent.
If Syed Saddiq can bring RM1m to his constituents by completing a sporting event, what’s stopping another politician from promising RM10m by losing 5kg of body weight or RM100m by shaving off a moustache?
At what point do we draw the line and say enough, money cannot be used to shape voter perceptions or loyalty?
If politicians and private entities are allowed to collaborate in this circuitous manner to indirectly influence voters, we might as well drop the pretence. Instead of using charity challenges as proxies for political gain, why not simply hand out cash directly to constituents – at least that would be the more honest.
Hidden transaction
And let’s be honest: these acts of ‘charity’ by profit-making entities are rarely selfless.
When the company’s contribution becomes national news, when every media outlet knows about the donation, and when the MP himself publicly thanks the company, it’s not unreasonable to ask what the company expects in return.
If a private entity is seeking government goodwill, policy favour or potential access to contracts, let’s be transparent about it. Don’t claim that nothing is expected in return. Because if truly nothing was expected, the contribution would have been made quietly, without the “left hand knowing what the right hand gave”.
If you wish for everybody to know what you gave, the business part of your giving is at least equal to the charitable part. If that is the case, it is only fair for people to engage with the entity concerned in a business-like manner and ask it what it expects from what it gave, in a transparent manner.
Otherwise, what begins as a charitable gesture may one day evolve into a quid pro quo – where a few million ringgit for the people becomes the justification for awarding government contracts worth hundreds of millions to the same ‘generous’ company later on.
That is why Syed Saddiq’s Ironman triumph, though inspiring on a human level, raises questions far heavier than the race itself.
Are we comfortable with a political culture where public welfare becomes a marketing opportunity, and where politicians turn charity into personal branding?
Because once we start mixing money, politics and moral spectacle – it’s only a matter of time before we lose sight of who’s truly benefiting.
Nehru Sathia Moorthy is a writer who follows the Aliran website.
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We don’t know how Ms … is linked to the whole episode. Surely a super PR expert, having engaged the world’s best professional Consultants will know how to refute Nehru. We honor his wisdom.
People in the limelight should have 10 times more integrity than expected of normal folks in exposing their linen in public.
This will be most challenging for Sidiq who had mushroomed from nowhere. Perhaps try a better stunt.
I will keep my fingers crossed and not be naive about good intentions leading people by the nose.
I do not agree with Nehru’s opinion. If the government does not give any or sufficient funds to the Muar constituency, Syed Saddiq is given no choice but to raise funds to the best of his ability.
I personally think that Syed Saddiq should be lauded for his tremendous and noble efforts to raise funds for the people of Muar.
Syed Saddiq is not even an MP in the ruling coalition, so there is no question of a private entity seeking government goodwill, policy favour or potential access to contracts.
SYABAS SYED SADDIQ!
KEEP IT UP!