OPPOSITION HAS 'FAIR CHANCE' TO WIN POLLS
DS Anwar
Ibrahim in Bangkok onThursday 22 September 2022 said he believes his
three-party alliance has a “fair chance” of winning a general election that
could be called as early as November.
Anwar
leads the Pakatan Harapan, which earlier teamed up with an ethnic Malay party
led by former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad for a historic win in 2018
elections. Anger over corruption led to the shocking defeat of the UMNO, which
had ruled Malaysia since its independence from Britain in 1957.
Anwar was
in prison at the time on sodomy charges he said were politically motivated. He
was pardoned after the polls, and was due to take over as prime minister from
Mahathir. But the reformist government collapsed after less than two years due
to defections, and UMNO returned to power.
Anwar, 75,
said in a news conference in Bangkok, Thailand, that his coalition still has
strong support, while there is infighting within current Prime Minister Ismail
Sabri Yaakob’s governing coalition and corruption within the government.
“I remain
optimistic," he said. "I think we should have a fair chance” without
Mahathir on the basis of the Hope Alliance’s own strength, Anwar said.
He said
there is a small possibility that the election will be called in November, but
it may also be held by February or March to avoid the yearend monsoon season
that often brings heavy rain and floods.
A general
election is not due until September next year, but Ismail has come under
pressure from within UMNO to dissolve Parliament for early polls. Ismail has
advanced the introduction of the 2023 budget by three weeks to Oct. 7, sparking
speculation that Parliament may be dissolved after generous budgetary
allocations are made to win support in the polls. An election must be called
within 60 days after Parliament is dissolved.
Although
Ismail is from UMNO, he is dependent on support from allied Malay parties.
UMNO, which has said it will not work with its current allies in the upcoming
polls, is aiming to win big so it will not be beholden to any other parties.
Calls for
early polls from UMNO intensified after ex-Prime Minister Najib Razak began a
12-year jail term last month after losing his final appeal in a graft case
linked to the massive looting of the 1MDB state fund.
Anwar said
Najib, with some other UMNO ministers, last year signed an pledge to support
Anwar's bid to become prime minister but wanted Anwar to promise that he would
not be convicted. Anwar said his leadership bid failed because he refused to
interfere with Najib's court cases.
He said
Najib's imprisonment was a “clear-cut case” and should be a lesson to all
political leaders not to squander public funds.
No comments:
Post a Comment