LETTER TO THE EDITOR
REDUCE WASTE AND CONSIDER THE ENVIRONMENT DURING
AND AFTER ELECTION CAMPAIGNS
Now that the 2018 General Elections are over, I
believe voters on both sides of the political divide can agree on one issue –
that too much waste has been generated by both political coalitions during the
campaign period. The sheer amount of waste generated and public funds and
political donations expended in producing campaign materials and carrying out
campaigns has an environmental and social impact.
I am of the opinion that the existing campaign
spending cap of RM200,000 for each Parliamentary seat and RM100,000 for each
State seat under the Election Offences Act 1954 is sufficient and should not be
raised. We have seen for ourselves that an increasingly informed electorate is
not swayed by handouts or the number of flags or banners, but has progressively
relied more and more on social media, the internet and other independent
sources of news to keep itself abreast of political news and developments. The
funding of, and spending for, election campaigns are therefore not as necessary
as we are led to believe it to be. A draft Political Donations and Expenditure
Bill to curtail corruption and money politics was presented to the
Attorney-General in 2017 but was not tabled in Parliament before the 14th
General Elections. There is now a pressing need to table and review this Bill
in the interests of transparency and integrity.
Apart from the link between political donations,
undue influence and corruption, as an environmentally-minded citizen, I am of
the opinion that enforcing the election campaign spending cap, monitoring
donations and having clear guidelines on election spending and campaigning will
pressure political parties and their campaign teams to be more careful about
how funds are used, and this may in turn result in less indiscriminate
production and display of election campaign paraphernalia.
During the recent campaign period, the sheer
volume and density of election posters and flags in some areas pose a hazard to
road-users and citizens. Traffic lights and signs are obscured and pedestrians
have to look out for falling makeshift billboards and flagpoles. Restrictions
on the number of physical campaign materials that each candidate is allowed to
display in each area will force campaign teams to be more discerning and
mindful as to what and how many materials to produce and where to affix
them.
It is not enough that political parties remove
all campaign materials within 14 days after polling day. To demonstrate their
commitment to the environment and prudent use of resources, political parties
should endeavour to avoid generating excessive waste in the first place. We
currently have non-governmental organisations collecting used and discarded
party banners for repurposing and ‘upcycling’ into tote bags, sleeping mats for
the homeless and the like. While this is creative and commendable, it should
not be the responsibility of NGOs to find ways to delay the journey of campaign
materials to the landfill. It should be the responsibility of parties,
candidates and their campaign teams to find ways to reduce the amount of waste
going to landfills and the corresponding expenses of collecting and transporting
the waste.
Guidelines can be drawn up to put pressure on candidates
and their campaign teams to:
1.
Reduce the amount of new campaign materials
produced;
2.
Avoid using campaign materials that are toxic,
polluting or non-recyclable;
3.
Produce more durable campaign materials (especially
party flags, caps and t-shirts) that can be used over and over again;
4.
Produce campaign materials that can be more
easily composted, recycled or repurposed;
5.
Avoid nailing campaign materials to trees or
affixing campaign materials in environmentally-sensitive areas, such as near
nature reserves and bird habitats;
6.
Avoid producing, buying or using materials that
pose a threat to wildlife, such as styrofoam, balloons, and firecrackers, and leaving
exposed wires and trailing strings after affixing campaign materials, as these
could harm pedestrians and animals;
7.
Ensure that assemblies and ceramahs are held far
from known bird and wildlife habitats such as urban parks and recreational
forests, and reduce noise and light pollution during such events;
8.
Avoid giving out flyers and handouts during
election campaigns and assemblies; and
9.
Provide campaign teams and agents with food and
water that is not served in single-use disposable packaging.
The practice of providing food, gifts, goodie
bags and promotional materials during campaigns should be eradicated completely
as these not only create waste and litter but constitute money politics.
Although the General Elections typically take
place only once every five years, it is absurd to justify wasteful and
destructive practices on the basis that the elections do not occur very
frequently. Election campaigns can and should be carried out with as little
harm on the environment and community as possible. For political parties and
candidates, remember that your work is a better testimony of your worth and
better predictor of your election success than any billboard, poster or handout
could ever be.
WONG EE LYNN
COORDINATOR,
GREEN LIVING SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP,
MALAYSIAN NATURE SOCIETY