Millennium Post

Malaysia's new PM delays PARL AND NO-CONFIDENCE VOTE

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia's new leader has postponed the next session of Parliament by more than two months, effectivel­y delaying plans by Mahathir Mohamad's former ruling alliance to seek a no-confidence vote against him.

Lower house speaker Mohamad Ariff Mohamad Yusof said in a statement Wednesday that

lawmakers will reconvene on May 18 instead of March 9 as originally scheduled.

He said the decision was based on Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin's order, but no reason was given for the postponeme­nt.

Muhyiddin, 72, was sworn in Sunday as Malaysia's eighth prime minister after his surprise weekend appointmen­t by the king capped a week of political turmoil.

Muhyiddin led his Bersatu party out of the governing Alliance of Hope, depriving it of a majority and causing its col

lapse less than two years after its historic victory in 2018 ousted a corruption-tainted coalition that had ruled for 61 years.

Bersatu joined hands with the same coalition that it ousted, along with several smaller parties, to form a Malay-majority government.

Mahathir, 94, resigned to protest Bersatu's plan to work with the former government.

Mahathir tried to make a comeback, but it was too late, as the king appointed Muhyiddin, whom he deemed had the support of a majority of lawmakers.

But Mahathir said he had majority backing to serve as prime minister for a third time.

He has called for an urgent vote in Parliament to test Muhyiddin's claim of majority support, warning that any delay could see his supporters being inducted to support the government of the day.

There was no immediate response from Mahathir's camp on the delayed resumption of Parliament.

Many Malaysians are angered by what they see as a betrayal of their vote for a change in 2018 elections, with small protest rallies held over the weekend to reject the traitors.

Muhyiddin, a nationalis­tic politician who once famously quipped he was Malay first and Malaysian second, appealed for support in an address to the nation Monday.

He denied he was a traitor and promised to form a corrupt-free Cabinet despite bringing back to power the United Malays National Organisati­on.

Several UMNO leaders, including ex-prime Minister Najib Razak, are on trial on corruption charges.

Muhyiddin's government also includes a hard-line Islamic party, sparking fears of greater Islamisati­on and more pro-malay policies.

Ethnic Malays account for 60 per cent of Malaysia's 32 million people, with large Chinese and Indian minorities.

Muhyiddin and Mahathir were former members of UMNO when they formed Bersatu in 2016 amid anger over a massive corruption scandal involving the 1MDB state investment fund.

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