Identity Politics Risks Malaysia’s Future Stability
The shift in rhetoric from “negara, bangsa dan agama” to “agama, bangsa dan negara” reflects more than a rearrangement of words. It signals a deeper struggle over national priorities and the direction Malaysia may be heading. When religion is placed before nation, governance risks becoming shaped by identity rather than policy, emotion rather than economics, and symbolism rather than substance. In a diverse and developing country like Malaysia, such a shift carries significant political, social, and economic implications. History offers cautionary lessons. Europe’s experience shows how governance dominated by religious authority can fracture societies. The devastation of the Thirty Years' War demonstrated how competing religious claims intertwined with political power led to widespread instability, economic destruction, and prolonged conflict. Similarly, the upheaval surrounding the French Revolution reflected public resistance against institutions that fused religious author...