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Malaysian parliament to vote on new PM amid crisis

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Malaysia's parliament will vote Monday on the country's next prime minister in a bid to end a political crisis, but if no candidate has enough support there will be a snap election, Mahathir Mohamad said.

It was the latest twist in a drama triggered when Mahathir quit as premier and the government collapsed following a failed attempt to form a new ruling coalition without his designated successor, Anwar Ibrahim.

Anwar and Mahathir are now locked in a power struggle, reviving a rivalry that has loomed over politics in the Southeast Asian nation for two decades.

The pair had reconciled and joined forces before polls in 2018 to oust a corruption-plagued government that had ruled the country for six decades.

The king appoints the prime minister and had interviewed the country's MPs to work out who they backed, but Mahathir, who was appointed interim leader following his resignation, said no candidate with enough support emerged.

A candidate must have the backing of at least 112 MPs to become premier.

The king "says that the right forum will be parliament," said Mahathir on Thursday, following a morning meeting with the monarch.

He added the legislature would sit on Monday to determine who has sufficient backing to become premier.

"However if the (parliament) fails to find a person with a majority, then we will have to go for a snap election," Mahathir said.

But the "Pact of Hope" alliance -- the former ruling coalition, which is now backing Anwar to become premier -- criticised the move.

After an emergency meeting, the alliance said that the call for a special parliament session to vote on the next premier was a "challenge to the rights and powers" of the king.

Mahathir -- at 94, the world's oldest leader -- initially appeared to have strong support to remain as premier and had announced he wanted to form a government of national unity, and was willing to return as leader.

However his idea of a unity government was rejected by leaders across the political spectrum, with some expressing concerns that it would hand him too much power.

- Stormy history -

He changed tack Thursday with a surprise announcement that his Bersatu party might nominate as a candidate his ally Muhyiddin Yassin, who was interior minister until the government collapsed.

"If everybody chooses him, I'm okay," said Mahathir.

Bersatu member Redzuan Yusof said the party would "100 percent" back Muhyiddin as prime minister, news portal Malaysiakini reported.

The drama began at the weekend when some MPs from the then ruling coalition, which stormed to a historic victory in 2018, sought to join opposition groups and form a new government.

The move appeared aimed at pushing Anwar and his allies out of government, and stopping him becoming premier. Mahathir had pledged to eventually hand power to his old foe, although many were sceptical he really intended to.

Mahathir and Anwar's stormy history has shaped Malaysian politics ever since Mahathir -- during a first stint in office in the 1990s -- sacked Anwar as his deputy, and he was jailed on dubious sodomy charges.

They buried the hatchet to oust scandal-tainted leader Najib Razak, who was accused of plundering state investment fund 1MDB.

Billions of dollars were looted from the fund and spent on everything from a super-yacht to pricey artwork.

Malaysia’s parliament will vote Monday on the country’s next prime minister in a bid to end a political crisis, but if no candidate has enough support there will be a snap election, Mahathir Mohamad said.

It was the latest twist in a drama triggered when Mahathir quit as premier and the government collapsed following a failed attempt to form a new ruling coalition without his designated successor, Anwar Ibrahim.

Anwar and Mahathir are now locked in a power struggle, reviving a rivalry that has loomed over politics in the Southeast Asian nation for two decades.

The pair had reconciled and joined forces before polls in 2018 to oust a corruption-plagued government that had ruled the country for six decades.

The king appoints the prime minister and had interviewed the country’s MPs to work out who they backed, but Mahathir, who was appointed interim leader following his resignation, said no candidate with enough support emerged.

A candidate must have the backing of at least 112 MPs to become premier.

The king “says that the right forum will be parliament,” said Mahathir on Thursday, following a morning meeting with the monarch.

He added the legislature would sit on Monday to determine who has sufficient backing to become premier.

“However if the (parliament) fails to find a person with a majority, then we will have to go for a snap election,” Mahathir said.

But the “Pact of Hope” alliance — the former ruling coalition, which is now backing Anwar to become premier — criticised the move.

After an emergency meeting, the alliance said that the call for a special parliament session to vote on the next premier was a “challenge to the rights and powers” of the king.

Mahathir — at 94, the world’s oldest leader — initially appeared to have strong support to remain as premier and had announced he wanted to form a government of national unity, and was willing to return as leader.

However his idea of a unity government was rejected by leaders across the political spectrum, with some expressing concerns that it would hand him too much power.

– Stormy history –

He changed tack Thursday with a surprise announcement that his Bersatu party might nominate as a candidate his ally Muhyiddin Yassin, who was interior minister until the government collapsed.

“If everybody chooses him, I’m okay,” said Mahathir.

Bersatu member Redzuan Yusof said the party would “100 percent” back Muhyiddin as prime minister, news portal Malaysiakini reported.

The drama began at the weekend when some MPs from the then ruling coalition, which stormed to a historic victory in 2018, sought to join opposition groups and form a new government.

The move appeared aimed at pushing Anwar and his allies out of government, and stopping him becoming premier. Mahathir had pledged to eventually hand power to his old foe, although many were sceptical he really intended to.

Mahathir and Anwar’s stormy history has shaped Malaysian politics ever since Mahathir — during a first stint in office in the 1990s — sacked Anwar as his deputy, and he was jailed on dubious sodomy charges.

They buried the hatchet to oust scandal-tainted leader Najib Razak, who was accused of plundering state investment fund 1MDB.

Billions of dollars were looted from the fund and spent on everything from a super-yacht to pricey artwork.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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