A Masterclass Perhaps in Mythology, Not Constitutional Law

When Mythology Masks Misrepresentation

GK Ganesan’s article “Is the Basic Structure Doctrine the Last Lock on Pandora’s Box?” dresses up weak constitutional theory in florid metaphor and rhetorical distraction. His resort to Greek mythology, literary allusions, and emotive imagery masks the fundamental vacuity and intellectual opportunism that defines his argument. This is not legal scholarship; it is myth-making in service of a judicial ideology that threatens to undermine democratic accountability, parliamentary sovereignty, and constitutional clarity in Malaysia.

I. Intellectual Sleight of Hand: The Myth of the Doctrine’s Necessity

Ganesan argues that the Basic Structure Doctrine (BSD) is the “last lock” against constitutional collapse. But he fails to confront the real issue: who decides what the “basic structure” is, and on what basis? BSD is not found in the constitutional text. It was not part of the Reid Commission’s vision, nor was it ever adopted by the Malaysian people. It is a judicial invention, imported through the backdoor by a self-reinforcing clique of judges who increasingly act as philosopher-kings rather than legal interpreters.

Ganesan’s analogy of Parliament turning into a tyrant without BSD is both lazy and manipulative. Malaysia is a constitutional monarchy governed by express constitutional procedures — not the fictional apocalypse of a majoritarian state run amok. His worst-case hypotheticals (e.g., blue-eyed babies being removed from parents) are unworthy of serious debate and insulting to the maturity of Malaysian constitutionalism.

II. Historical Distortion: Misrepresenting Indian Precedent

Ganesan leans heavily on Kesavananda Bharati, but omits the chaos it caused in India. The judgment was a 7-6 split with no majority on reasoning — a jurisprudential mess that India’s own judges have struggled to clarify for decades. Moreover, India’s Anjum Kadari (2024) judgment explicitly rebukes the misuse of BSD to strike down legislation and reiterates that only express constitutional violations — not vague structural ideals — warrant invalidation.

Contrary to Ganesan’s misleading summary, Chief Justice Chandrachud’s majority judgment reaffirms that statutes cannot be invalidated based on abstract values like “secularism” or “democracy” unless a specific constitutional provision is violated. This position rejects the kind of expansive, speculative, and judicially unchecked BSD now being pushed in Malaysia.

III. Misusing Foreign Models: The False Global Consensus

The article recites examples from Germany, Kenya, Bangladesh, and Canada — but none of these jurisdictions reflect Malaysia’s context. Germany’s “eternity clause” is textually entrenched in its Constitution. Kenya explicitly provides for public referenda in constitutional change. Canada’s “unwritten principles” are advisory, not grounds for invalidating legislation.

Malaysia’s Constitution has no eternity clause, no provision for referenda, and no judicial supremacy clause. Ganesan’s attempt to universalise BSD ignores the unique political and constitutional trajectory of Malaysia, including the central role of the Malay Rulers, Article 3 (Islam), and Article 153 (special position of Malays) — all of which are seldom, if ever, defended by the BSD camp.

IV. Judicial Egoism and Selective Morality

Ganesan lionises the judges who invented BSD but ignores the enormous damage their decisions have caused. In Semenyih Jaya, Indira Gandhi, Dhinesh Tanaphll, Ketheeswaran, and Zaidi Kanapiah, the Federal Court has overridden Parliament, reinterpreted constitutional texts with no textual foundation, and created legal uncertainty that has led to forum shopping, opportunistic litigation, and contradictory rulings.

Worse still, the BSD has been weaponised by activist judges and their sympathisers in the Bar to override policy decisions, frustrate legislative reforms, and stall democratic processes — all under the guise of “constitutional guardianship.” Ganesan praises these actions, but fails to address the elephant in the room: who guards the guardians?

V. Deflecting Criticism with Strawmen

Ganesan’s treatment of critics like Tun Hamid Mohamed and Tan Sri Apandi Ali is intellectually dishonest. He caricatures their objections without answering the core concern: that BSD allows unelected judges to rewrite constitutional limits and substitute their ideological preferences for the will of the people.

His reply to concerns about “judicial overreach” is to call it “rule of law.” But rule of law is not rule by judges. Ganesan blurs the distinction between judicial independence (a procedural safeguard) and judicial supremacy (a structural usurpation). He deliberately avoids this because the BSD movement thrives on ambiguity — asserting limitless judicial power with zero institutional accountability.

VI. Ignoring Judicial Factionalism and Institutional Consequences

Ganesan says nothing about the bitter divisions in the Federal Court that have arisen post-Semenyih Jaya. He ignores the rhetorical excesses, dismissive tone, and institutional hostility seen in judgments by Tengku Maimun, Nallini Pathmanathan, Harmindar Singh and others. The judiciary is no longer a deliberative court but a battlefield of ideological factions — a state of affairs directly fuelled by BSD jurisprudence.

Ganesan also ignores how the BSD bloc often refuses to defend Articles 3 and 153 — foundational provisions that define Malaysia’s identity. Instead, their activism is channelled toward western-inspired notions of liberalism, often cloaked in the language of “modernity” or “fundamental rights.” This selective guardianship betrays BSD’s alleged neutrality and exposes its ideological slant.

VII. Manufactured Heroism and Bar Sympathies

The article’s final flourish attempts to frame the BSD judges as heroic figures standing against political corruption and interference. This is both false and self-serving. The same judiciary has shown selective silence in politically convenient cases, often issuing inconsistent rulings and relying on post-hoc rationalisation to justify activist overreach.

Ganesan’s open sympathy for the current pro-BSD Bar establishment further undermines his claim to impartiality. The BSD movement has become a judicial echo chamber, with a revolving door between select advocates, judges, and institutional actors. It is no longer about safeguarding the Constitution — it is about preserving an IDEOLOGICAL CARTEL

Conclusion: The Real Pandora’s Box is Judicial Hubris

Far from being the “last lock,” the Basic Structure Doctrine has become the backdoor through which ideology, factionalism, and unchecked judicial power now rule. Ganesan’s article is an elaborate but hollow defence of this constitutional distortion.

If Malaysia’s judiciary is to reclaim legitimacy, it must restore the primacy of text, intent, and institutional restraint. The BSD must be confined, clarified, or discarded — not expanded into a quasi-constitutional religion.

GK Ganesan has opened a rhetorical Pandora’s box — and what lies inside is not hope, but hubris.

*The writer is an advocate and solicitor, and actively involved in legal and constitutional discourse in Malaysia

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