<p>Malaysia's general election in October 1990 was of special significance. This was the first time since independence that a credible multi-ethnic coalition had emerged to challenge the ruling coalition that had been in power for thirty-three years. The election campaign turned into a "no-holds-bar
Coalitions in Collision: Malaysia's 13th General Elections
✍ Scribed by Lee Hock Guan (editor); Mohamed Nawab Mohamed Osman (editor); Johan Saravanamuttu (editor)
- Publisher
- ISEAS Publishing
- Year
- 2015
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 323
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
After the watershed 2008 election when the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition lost its customary two-thirds control of parliamentary seats, there was the not unreasonable expectation that BN would slip even further in the much-anticipated Thirteenth General Election of 2013, which is the subject of this book. In the event, the BN lost the popular vote to the Pakatan Rakyat (PR) but still retained the reins of government. In this book, prominent Malaysian specialists and experts will provide the reader with fresh insights into the evolving character of electoral politics by delving into its failing model of “consociationalism”, the extent of malapportionment in the electoral system and its effects on outcomes, how “new politics” continue to meet the resistance of old modes of political behaviour, the path-dependence analysis of twin-coalition politics, the significance of the FELDA vote bank, the issues animating electoral politics in Sabah, Sarawak, Terengganu and Johor, why the PR continues to command urban support, the role of the biased mainstream media, and details of the campaign strategies of both coalitions. In this new study of Malaysia’s electoral politics, it is evident that the ruling coalition has lost its first-mover advantage and is only able to hold on to power due to the first-past-the-post (FPTP) single member plurality electoral system. This sort of system has given rise, in the parlance of electoral studies, to “manufactured majorities”, that is, electoral outcomes that confer a majority of seats (simple or large) to a single party or a coalition of parties without commanding a majority of the popular vote. Malaysia’s FPTP system, imbued as it is with a generous proportion of “rural weightage”, continues to favour the BN, oftentimes generating large manufactured parliamentary majorities. While some may argue that electoral politics have reached an impasse, after two general elections, Malaysia’s twin-coalition system seems to have gained some traction and, thanks to its federalism, with the PR having considerable control of state governments in the Malay heartland and of the more urbanized states of Selangor and Penang.
✦ Table of Contents
Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements
About the Contributors
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. New Politics or Old Politics in New Clothing?
Chapter 3. Power Sharing Politics and the Electoral Impasse in GE13
Chapter 4. Mal-apportionment and the Electoral Authoritarian Regime in Malaysia
Chapter 5. The Political Economy of FELDA Seats: UMNO’s Malay Rural Fortress in GE13
Chapter 6. Fragmented but Captured: Malay Voters and the FELDA Factor in GE13
Chapter 7. Watchdogs or Lapdogs? Monitoring Malaysia’s Media Coverage of GE13
Chapter 8. The ‘Pek Moh’ Factor and the Sarawak Parliamentary Seats
Chapter 9. The Appeal and Future of the ‘Borneo Agenda’ in Sabah
Chapter 10. The Case of Titiwangsa: Changing Features of Election Campaigns?
Chapter 11. Terengganu and Kelantan Elections: The Separation and Convergence of Blurred Identities
Chapter 12. A Jewel in the Barisan Nasional Crown: An Electoral Analysis of Four Parliamentary Seats in Johor
Chapter 13. Whither Malaysia: Re-thinking the Future of Malaysian Politics
Index
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