KUALA LUMPUR, July 20 - The Barisan Nasional (BN) Youth today presented a
report to the prime minister over its survey that found three in five
Malaysian youths were undecided with their vote.
BN Youth chief
Khairy Jamaluddin and his BN Youth Lab team submitted the report which
also contained policy proposals and results of the survey to Datuk Seri
Najib Razak at the Prime Minister’s Office this afternoon.
“We’ll
be presenting it to the public via a town hall meeting with the prime
minister very soon,” Khairy told The Malaysian Insider after submitting
the report to the prime minister
He later said the town hall
meeting will be at 3pm on August 20, with those interested having to
register through the BN Youth Lab’s Facebook account.
Khairy said
the BN chairman was “happy with the analysis and many of the
suggestions”.
The series of surveys were conducted nationwide
between March and June by the BN Youth Lab programme through telephone
calls, social networking sites Twitter and Facebook, and polls to detect
relevant issues and problems affecting the Malaysian youth. It said a
majority were not political party supporters, with 62 per cent undecided
on their vote.
The major concerns voiced by the interviewees
were employment, education, rising cost of living and public
transportation. Most of these concerns pushed Malaysians to hand four
states and 82 federal seats to the Pakatan Rakyat (PR) in Election 2008.
Both
coalitions are now racing to sign up the 4.4 million unregistered
voters in the country, comprising mainly youths. The DAP is the leading
political party registering new voters ahead of the 13th general
election, and has helped PR register two voters to BN’s one for the
first half of 2010.
According to the BN Youth Lab, its survey
also discovered that 30 per cent of the 1,000 youths surveyed are
worried with the country’s current situation while 50 per cent are
unhappy with the rising crime rate in Malaysia.
It reported that
around 65 per cent of respondents felt the country was on the right
track against the 30 per cent concerned over its future.
The
survey said more were most concerned about employment/career (66 per
cent), beating out children’s education and future (20 per cent), and
cost of living (12 per cent).
Apart from the crime rate, the
respondents were also dissatisfied about public transport (22 per cent),
housing (10 per cent) and education (13 per cent).
The top most
aspirations for those surveyed were economic progress (33 per cent) and
freedom of expression (24 per cent), as opposed to transparency (19 per
cent), religious tolerance (14 per cent) and race-related policies (7
per cent).
(Source: The Malaysian Insider)