Los Angeles Times

Malaysia’s longtime ruling coalition ousted in vote

- By Simon Roughneen Roughneen is a special correspond­ent.

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Malaysia’s opposition and its 92-year-old autocrat-turned-reformer prevailed in Wednesday’s election, upsetting the coalition that has ruled the country for the last six decades.

Pakatan Harapan, or Alliance of Hope, won 113 seats in Parliament — one more than needed to form a government and dislodge Prime Minister Najib Razak, who has been in office since 2009 and whose Barisan Nasional, or National Front, has held power since the country gained independen­ce from Britain in 1957.

By 10 p.m. Wednesday, thousands of opposition supporters had poured into the streets of the capital, Kuala Lumpur, and other cities in anticipati­on of a formal announceme­nt of victory.

“We have in fact achieved a substantia­l majority,” Mahathir Mohamad, the former prime minister who became a frontman for the opposition, said at a news conference at 2:30 a.m. Thursday. “I hope tomorrow we will have a swearing-in of the prime minister.”

That would be Mahathir — 15 years after his retirement. During his 22 years in office, he oversaw Malaysia’s economic modernizat­ion but used draconian laws to lock up opponents and critics. Out of office, he became a behind-the-scenes kingmaker within the ruling coalition.

But he turned against the National Front in 2015 after newspaper reports alleged that Najib stole $700 million in public money. Najib, who was never charged with a crime, said that the money was a Saudi donation and that he had returned most of it.

In opposition protests against Najib in 2016, Mahathir appeared in front of thousands of his former enemies to join their cause.

With the main opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim, jailed on charges of sodomy with a former employee, Mahathir was recruited to lead the opposition’s election campaign.

Anwar is scheduled to be released from prison on June 8. Sometime after that, Mahathir is expected to offer a pardon, help him win a seat in Parliament and hand over power.

The two men have a complicate­d history. Anwar served as Mahathir’s deputy prime minister in the 1990s before rebelling and leading the protests that accompanie­d the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. Mahathir had Anwar jailed for six years.

Chinese Malaysians, a relatively well-off minority making up about a quarter of the population, and others who opposed Mahathir’s often authoritar­ian rule were taken aback at first by the return of the 92-year-old to lead the opposition.

But making Mahathir the frontman was, in part, a calculated move to draw Muslim Malays, who make up 60% of the population, away from his former allies.

Though the majority of Malaysians live in cities, rural areas also played a big role in the election, because smaller, less-populated constituen­cies could elect the same number of lawmakers as urban areas.

The opposition had alleged that this system was designed to favor the National Front, which had narrowly prevailed in the 2013 election despite losing the popular vote by 4%.

The unusual midweek vote, which made it difficult for Malaysians working in cities to travel to their hometowns to vote, was also expected to reduce the turnout from a 2013 high of 85% and make it more difficult for the opposition to win.

But voting went smoothly despite long lines and soaring temperatur­es. K.T. Lim, a 56-year-old businessma­n, said he arrived at the polling station in Kuala Lumpur at 7:45 a.m. and waited three hours.

“Corruption, corruption,” he said, explaining his vote for the opposition.

 ?? Simon Roughneen For The Times ?? MAHATHIR MOHAMAD, center, is expected to become premier again 15 years after his retirement.
Simon Roughneen For The Times MAHATHIR MOHAMAD, center, is expected to become premier again 15 years after his retirement.

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