Senin, 12 Oktober 2020

Malaysia's Anwar expected to arrive at palace to show proof to King he has majority support from MPs - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR - Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) president Anwar Ibrahim arrived at the national palace on Tuesday morning (Oct 13) for an audience with the King to discuss his claim of having majority support in Parliament to form a new government.

Local media reported that Datuk Seri Anwar arrived at around 10.30am in a black Jaguar car. He did not respond to queries from the reporters who had gathered in front of the palace gates since morning.  

In a Facebook post ahead of his meeting, Mr Anwar wrote: "Hope everything goes smoothly today."

The opposition leader had claimed on Sept 23 that he had the backing of a "formidable" group of federal lawmakers to become the next prime minister.

He had also claimed that the seven-month-old government of Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin had "fallen".

Mr Anwar's audience with Sultan Abdullah Ri'ayatuddin last month was delayed by three weeks, after the 61-year-old ruler was hospitalised for 12 days with food poisoning and sports injuries.

The constitutional monarch will play a major role on what will happen next in Malaysian politics.

Sultan Abdullah, if he is convinced that Mr Anwar has the numbers, could ask Tan Sri Muhyiddin to step down, as allowed under the Constitution.

Alternatively, the monarch could consult Mr Muhyiddin, 73, as the sitting prime minister, on whether he would like to call a fresh general election.

The King could also request that the Speaker of Parliament bring forward the next parliamentary sitting, currently set for Nov 2, to hold a vote of confidence earlier.

PKR communications director Fahmi Fadzil said he was yet to receive any instructions on whether a press conference would be held later in the day.

"I will provide all official information as soon as possible, when or if I receive instructions on the matter. I apologise for this, as it is a rather unique and sensitive situation," he told The Star.

At the end of February, when the government of then Premier Mahathir Mohamad collapsed, Sultan Abdullah met each of the 222 MPs in turn to ask them who they would support as the eighth prime minister of Malaysia.

Mr Muhyiddin had the highest number of MPs backing him then and so was appointed prime minister on March 1.

Mr Anwar, 73, has declined to give the exact number of MPs supporting his bid to form a new government, saying he must show the list to Sultan Abdullah first.

Mr Anwar will need at least 112 MPs in the 222-seat Parliament to claim control of the House.

Before last month's claim by Mr Anwar of a switch in support to his side, Mr Muhyiddin had the support of 113 MPs.

Pakatan Harapan, the three-party coalition led by Mr Anwar, has a total of 91 MPs. In this bid for power, Mr Anwar is not seeking support from a bloc of 15 opposition MPs, amid tensions between both sides.

This group consists of Tun Dr Mahathir's new Pejuang party (five MPs), Sabah chieftain Shafie Apdal (nine MPs) and young politician Syed Syed Abdul Rahman (one seat).

Mr Anwar would thus need to draw support from MPs in Mr Muhyiddin's loose Perikatan Nasional alliance that includes Umno, Mr Muhyiddin's own Bersatu party, the Gabungan Parti Sarawak coalition and other small parties in Sabah.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMifGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnN0cmFpdHN0aW1lcy5jb20vYXNpYS9zZS1hc2lhL21hbGF5c2lhcy1hbndhci1leHBlY3RlZC10by1hcnJpdmUtYXQtcGFsYWNlLXRvLXNob3ctcHJvb2YtdG8ta2luZy1oZS1oYXMtbWFqb3JpdHnSAQA?oc=5

2020-10-13 02:11:55Z
52781110822127

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar