HEADLINES

MIC is of clear and critical importance – M. Vivekananthan

MIC is at a 79-year crossroads. After a seismic AGM and a fractured Barisan Nasional bond, the party has empowered its leadership to pursue new alliances—including with PN or PH—signaling a bold and calculated move that will reshape Malaysian politics

11:44 AM MYT

 

IF anyone believes the Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC)-Malaysia’s oldest and most influential Indian political party since 1946, has lost its relevance, they’re not paying attention.

Because the moment whispers emerged about MIC’s possible exit from Barisan Nasional (BN), the political arena erupted. Legacy, loyalty, and future alliances,all thrown into fierce debate.

At the 79th Annual General Meeting in 2025, MIC didn’t just convene. It roared. All 1,808 delegates came not to observe, but to ignite change.

Their message? Loud and unmistakable: MIC is not fading-it’s recalibrating.

Three strategic motions were tabled, signaling a bold reassessment of MIC’s foundational role within BN. The ground beneath Malaysian politics is shifting, and MIC is positioning itself at the epicenter.

New alliances, whether with Perikatan Nasional (PN) or Pakatan Harapan (PH)-are no longer distant possibilities. They’re live options.

The spirit of ‘semangat Perikatan’, once the glue of BN is fractured. UMNO’s failure to uphold the promise of unity through thick and thin has broken that bond.

Deputy President Datuk Seri M. Saravanan laid the cards down with precision and power.

After a charged debate, delegates handed full trust to the President and the Central Working Committee (CWC) to steer the party through this historic crossroads.

If MIC walks away from BN after 79 years, it won’t be a retreat-it’ll be a calculated leap into a new, commanding coalition.

And here’s the mark of true political maturity. Even as MIC prepares for a seismic shift, it remains committed to supporting Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s administration until the end of its term.

For now, MIC hasn’t chosen between PN or PH. But it has made one thing clear-it will only partner with those who respect its principles and ideology.

President Vigneswaran’s stance reflects a party in deep strategic reflection.

MIC isn’t reacting, it’s recalibrating. It’s not driven by emotion, it’s guided by vision.

The fate of this alliance now rests with the President and the CWC. Their next move will define MIC’s future and reshape Malaysia’s political landscape.

This isn’t just a reshuffle. It’s a reckoning. A realignment. A rewriting of MIC’s next chapter.

The fuse is lit. The decision ahead isn’t just historic-it’s explosive. – November 19, 2025

M. Vivekananthan is the Aide to Deputy President MIC and MP Tapah

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