HomePoliticsMalaysian election presages deeper political crisis

Malaysian election presages deeper political crisis

Malaysia’s general election held on November 19 and the subsequent swearing-in of Anwar Ibrahim as the new prime minister last Thursday mark a further fracturing of the country’s political establishment and presage new political upheavals.

None of the three major electoral coalitions—Anwar’s Pakatan Harapan (PH), Perikatan Nasional (PN) and Barisan Nasional (BN)—obtained a parliamentary majority, leading to days of crass political horse-trading and closed-door discussions in ruling circles.

Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim shows his ballot during the election at a polling station in Seberang Perai, Penang state, Malaysia, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2022. [AP Photo/Vincent Thian]

Anwar was finally installed by royal decree based on coalition agreements with BN and Gabungan Parti Sarawak—a party based in Borneo.

The extent of the political crisis is underscored by the fate of the right-wing United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), which, as the dominant party in BN alliance, had governed from 1957 to 2018 through a combination of electoral gerrymander, police state measures, control over the media and state apparatus, and the promotion of ethnic Malay chauvinism.

UMNO’s loss of power in the 2018 general election marked a political watershed and ushered in four years of turmoil. Anwar’s PH won the election in a cynical electoral pact with former prime minister Mahathir Mohammad who broke from UMNO accusing it of corruption, failing to sufficiently support ethnic Malays, and pandering to China.

The alliance was inherently unstable. Amid the 1998-99 Asian financial crisis, Mahathir as prime minister had broken with Anwar, then deputy prime minister and financial minister, over economic policy—Anwar pressed for the adoption of the IMF’s severe pro-market restructuring, which Mahathir rejected as it would devastate UMNO’s ethnic Malay business cronies. Mahathir expelled Anwar and his supporters, then had him arrested, beaten up and jailed on trumped up charges after Anwar initiated anti-government rallies.

Under the 2018 electoral pact, Mahathir was made prime minister even though his Bersatu party held a relatively small number of seats; he was meant to hand over the leadership to Anwar within two years—an agreement that was never going to be kept. Political intrigues came to a head in 2020 when the pact between PH and Bersatu fell apart—with Bersatu and several PH factions, including the Islamist Parti Islam se-Malaysia (PAS), joining with UMNO and its allies to form another unstable government with Bersatu’s Muhyiddin Yassin as prime minister.

The Bersatu-led regime imploded in 2021 amid soaring COVID-19 cases and a deep crisis of the health system, replaced by an equally unstable UMNO-led coalition with its leader Ismail Sabri Yaakob as prime minister. His calculation that UMNO would gain from an early snap election backfired badly—the party that ruled Malaysia for six decades with its BN allies was reduced to a rump of just 30 seats in the 222-seat parliament.

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