Wednesday , July 15 2026

Malaysia PM’s coalition routed by key partner in Johor state poll

15-07-2026

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s coalition suffered a crushing defeat to a key partner in a regional poll on Saturday, raising questions over the strength of the blocs’ alliance at the federal level amid talk of an early general ‌election.

While the result in Malaysia’s southern Johor state will not directly impact Anwar’s majority in parliament, it could deepen strains between Anwar’s Pakatan Harapan grouping and the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition, rivals that joined forces to form a government after a hung general election in 2022.

While Pakatan and BN insist their federal partnership can withstand differences at the state level, Anwar said in May ⁠he would consider calling a snap poll if internal divisions continued to widen.

BN, the incumbent in Johor, secured a commanding victory on Saturday, winning 48 of 56 state assembly seats, according to the Election Commission’s official tally on Sunday. Pakatan won the remaining eight, down from 12 previously.

“Hopefully, this win will trigger a blue wave across other states,” BN Chairman Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said at a briefing late Saturday, referring to the coalition’s banner color.

The Johor outcome will likely embolden BN, led by the once-dominant United Malays National Organization (UMNO), and fuel concerns that Anwar’s coalition is losing ground among ethnic Chinese voters and reform-minded ‌supporters ⁠who helped propel him to power.

Frustration has mounted among progressive allies over the slow pace of promised reforms, while coalition partners have frequently clashed over the handling of sensitive racial and religious issues in the multi-ethnic, Muslim-majority country.

The predominantly Chinese Democratic Action Party, the largest party in the ruling ​alliance, has said it ​would review its role in ⁠the government pact, a move that came after Pakatan was similarly defeated in the Sabah state elections last year.

The Johor vote came just weeks before an election in Negeri Sembilan state on August 1 that will serve as another test ⁠of federal stability. Pakatan is expected to contest all 36 seats, having won 17 seats in the last state poll.

Opposition bloc Perikatan Nasional, which includes former Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin’s Bersatu group and ⁠the Islamist party Pas, was wiped out in Johor, losing all 33 seats it contested, including the three it previously held.

The fledgling Bersama party, led by Anwar’s protege-turned-rival Rafizi Ramli and supported by a wave of defectors from Pakatan, was similarly trounced.

Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim is under growing pressure from a wave of defections to a new party set up by a former protege, analysts and lawmakers said, ahead of an election that ‌could take place as early as this year.

Anwar came to power in November 2022 after more than two decades as an opposition leader campaigning against corruption.

While his premiership has restored political stability in Malaysia, it has been marked by renewed scrutiny of his pledge to tackle graft, concerns over the slow progress of institutional reforms, and mounting tensions and defections within the ruling alliance.

Rafizi Ramli, ​a former economic minister once seen as Anwar’s potential successor, announced earlier this month he would quit the premier’s People’s Justice Party (PKR), vacate his ​parliamentary seat and take over the little-known Malaysia United Party, or Bersama.

The party has received more than 18,000 membership ⁠applications, about a third of them from former PKR members, it said while the PKR defectors have mostly been rank-and-file members or local party officers, the law prevents members of parliament from changing party while in office. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

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