Millennium Post

Malaysia’s Mahathir: House will pick new PM

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia's interim

leader Mahathir Mohamad on Thursday said Parliament will pick a new prime minister next week following the col

lapse of the ruling alliance and that snap elections will be called if the vote ends in an impasse.

Mahathir, who met the king earlier on Thursday, said the monarch couldn't find a candidate with a clear majority to

lead the nation after consulting all 222

lawmakers over the last two days. As such, he said the king decided to have the lower house of Parliament vote on a new leader on March 2.

“If the lower house fails to find a person with the majority, then we will have to go for a snap election,” he told a news conference.

A failed bid by Mahathir's supporters to form a new government without his designated successor, Anwar Ibrahim, and Mahathir's shock resignatio­n on Monday broke apart the ruling alliance less than two years after it defeated a corruption-tainted coalition that had

led the country for 61 years.

Both Mahathir and Anwar are vying for the premiershi­p, renewing a political feud that stretches back more than two decades.

“The king is obviously being very cautious. He decided not to give Anwar or Mahathir to form a government and

let the MPS decide,” said James Chin, head of the Asia Institute at Australia's University of Tasmania. “This means horse trading will carry on all weekend until Monday morning.”

Anwar was Mahathir's deputy in the 1990s during Mahathir's first stint as prime minister, but he was sacked following a power struggle and later jailed on sodomy and corruption charges that he said were trumped up.

Anwar led a reform movement that helped build a fledgling opposition but was jailed a second time for sodomy in 2014 in a move he said was aimed at killing his political career. Mahathir, who retired in 2003 after 22 years in power, made a comeback in 2016, spurred by anger over a massive graft scandal involving a state investment fund.

Mahathir and Anwar reconciled and forged an alliance that won the 2018 election that ushered in the first change of government since independen­ce from Britain in 1957.

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