Gulf News

Malaysia introduces new electoral maps

Protesters denounce the new maps as gerrymande­ring along racial lines to favour Najeeb’s coalition

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Malaysia’s Parliament yesterday approved redrawn electoral boundaries despite protests that the ruling coalition was cheating to ensure victory in the upcoming general election.

Embattled Prime Minister Najeeb Razzak introduced the new electoral maps, which were approved with 129 lawmakers voting for them and 80 against.

Dozens of activists earlier protested outside Parliament, denouncing the new maps as gerrymande­ring that would widen inequality among constituen­cies and was based along racial lines to favour Najib’s ruling coalition.

Activists say the changes mean that ruling party candidates will need fewer votes than opposition lawmakers to win elections.

Activists and opposition leaders marched from a nearby park but were blocked from entering Parliament by riot police.

“This is the biggest cheating to ever happen,” said activist Maria Chin Abdullah, slamming the government for pushing through the changes despite ongoing legal challenges.

Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who now heads the opposition alliance, called Najib a “monster” and a “rogue.” ‘’These coming elections will most certainly not be clean,” he told the rally.

Najib told Parliament that the changes were proposed independen­tly by the Election Commission based on geographic­al changes and denied there was political interferen­ce.

Support for Najib’s National Front coalition has dwindled in the last two elections. In 2013, it lost the popular vote for the first time to the opposition. Najib has been dogged by a multibilli­on-dollar financial scandal and is under pressure to improve his coalition’s performanc­e.

Sixth time

Bridget Welsh, a political science professor at John Cabot University in Rome, said the new plan could affect at least a third of the 222 parliament­ary seats and six of the 13 state assemblies. It could potentiall­y help Najib’s coalition, which now holds 132 parliament­ary seats, win back a two-thirds majority in Parliament, said Welsh, a Southeast Asia expert.

“The government has adopted new practices of packing and cracking, stuffing seats and breaking up areas with support for the opposition,” she said.

It is the sixth time electoral boundaries have been altered since independen­ce from Britain in 1957, but the first that doesn’t involve the creation of new seats despite a sharp increase in voters since the last changes in 2003.

Elections due by August but widely expected in the next few weeks will pit Najib against the opposition coalition led by Mahathir, who served for 21 years as prime minister before stepping down in 2003.

Mahathir made a high-profile comeback to politics two years ago in an effort to oust Najib.

 ?? AP ?? ■ Najeeb Razzak
AP ■ Najeeb Razzak

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