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Sunday, March 9, 2008

Jeff Ooi ! He Won the Parliment Seat in Penang !

This Message have nothing to do with Politics Issue, Just a purely CONGRATUlATIONs


Jeff ooi, The First Malaysian Blogger to join Politics. He gather the Income for the Election via online, Accept Paypal, Cheque or Cash too.

This the Result He won.



Therefore, i will be waiting to see him doing " live " blogging while inside the Parliaments. Anyway, let me guess, who will be the " Next " Blogger to become Politician.
Anyway, BN almost won FULL at SABAH. The Rest of the State, im not interested as im from Sabah.

Here are the Main Result, You May Check who won, and who lose.

Ah, The Winner for Opposition Side, is

P172 - KOTA KINABALU
HIEW KING CHIEW
DAP
9,464
And

N57 - SRI TANJONG
WONG SZE PHIN @ JIMMY
DAP
5,359
Meaning PKR won nothing at all in SABAH.

2 comments:

Sean E said...

If you want to have a better future for our children in Malaysia, do you part by signing the on-line petition at http://www.petitiononline.com/RCER2008/petition.html

This is one of the way (non-violence) to bring our message to the Government. Don’t just sit there, stand up and be counted!

Why do we need to reform the Election Commission?

1) Gerrymandering. The discrepancy between number of voters in voting areas is too great. The smallest parliamentary seat (Federal Territory, Putrajaya) has only 6,608 voters while the parliamentary seat for Kapar in Selangor has 112,224 voters. What this means is that one vote in the Putrajaya parliamentary constituency is equivalent to 17 votes in the Kapar constituency.

2) Phantom voters. A common tactic is to ‘buy’ the identity card of the voters. Party members from the ruling parties will then vote on the voters’ behalf. Random checking of a person’s identity must be conducted using those finger print checking device (like the bank use). Any voting done on another person’s identity must be made a serious offence under the election law.

3) Postal votes. The rules on postal voting must be reviewed, tightened and amended. The current rule favours the ruling party as the armed forces personnel and policemen who vote by ‘postal voting’ would obviously not jeopardize their career or promotion prospect by voting for the opposition. Voting under postal voting is not secret as it is under the watchful eyes of the senior officers.

Merqury said...

Thats your opinion.. For me, Jeff Ooi is a successful blogger and everyone need some guidance (international - John Chow) in Malaysia - Jeff Ooi..

 

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