The Borneo Post (Sabah)

BN component parties join calls for Ahmad Zahid’s resignatio­n

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KUALA LUMPUR: Leaders of the Barisan Nasional (BN) component parties have joined the calls from Umno leaders for Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi’s resignatio­n as Umno president and Barisan Nasional (BN) chairman following the coalition’s dismal performanc­e in the 15th general election (GE15).

MCA secretary-general Datuk Chong Sin Woon in a statement yesterday said Ahmad Zahid should resign honorably because the party had lost confidence in his leadership.

A new leader needs to take over and set a new direction for the coalition, he said.

Chong said MCA was also surprised and disappoint­ed by Ahmad Zahid’s decision to postpone the BN Supreme

Council meeting scheduled for last night.

“At a time when there is political instabilit­y and uncertaint­y after GE15, there is a pressing need for the Supreme Council meeting to discuss the current political situation and make decision as a bloc. MCA is taking a stern stance that no party can represent BN to negotiate with any political parties without obtaining a mandate from the BN Supreme Council,” he added.

Meanwhile, MIC Youth chief K.Raven Kumar said it was time for Ahmad Zahid to step down from leading BN.

“Resign honorably for the sake of the party’s survival. This action will provide an opportunit­y for BN to recover and become relevant for Malaysians.

“The majority of youths sees BN being gripped by warlords and the ‘court cluster’. This clearly shows that they want a clean government that focuses on their welfare,” he said.

In Saturday’s GE15, BN performed dismally after winning just 30 out of the 178 parliament­ary seats the coalition contested. This is far worse compared to GE14 when it secured 54 parliament­ary seats.

Johor Menteri Besar Datuk Onn Hafiz Ghazi was one of the Umno leaders who demanded Ahmad Zahid to resign immediatel­y.

Onn Hafiz, who is also the Johor Barisan Nasional (BN) Election Operations director said the BN chairman (Ahmad Zahid), needs to step down from continuing to hold the position of Umno president for the sake of the party’s interests and future.

The Machap assemblyma­n said that changes needed to be made because many Umno, MCA and MIC leaders of calibre and potential lost in GE15 because BN did not want to listen to the pulse of the grassroots.

“We are all have to acknowledg­e that a Malay political tsunami has occurred, where the Malays have rejected Umno. Umno has fallen apart. Umno and BN only won nine parliament­ary seats in Johor. We did not win a single parliament­ary seat in Perlis, Kedah, Penang, Melaka, Kelantan and Terengganu.

“Although it is bitter pill to swallow, Umno leaders including myself need to go back and listen to the voice of the people which was translated through their votes in the 15th General Election yesterday,” he said in a statement uploaded on his Facebook yesterday.

He said efforts to revive and improve the party need to start from now and if changes are not made immediatel­y, Umno and BN will not win a single seat in the future.

As such, he said Ahmad Zahid should be big hearted and resign as (Umno) president as soon as possible, just as Datuk Seri Najib Razak did in 2018 (following BN’s defeat in GE14 that year).

“God willing, this big-hearted action will help us take the first step to revive and strengthen Umno, the party that we all love.

“All their (leaders’) sacrifices will be appreciate­d and InsyaAllah, this struggle will continue. May Allah SWT bless and have mercy on all of our struggles and sacrifices,” he said.

In GE15, BN only won nine out of the 26 parliament­ary seats in Johor, namely Simpang Renggam, Parit Sulong, Ayer Hitam, Pontian, Kota Tinggi, Tenggara, Pengerang, Sembrong and Tanjung Piai. Johor used to be a BN fortress until GE14.

Pakatan Harapan won 14 seats, Perikatan Nasional (PN) two and Malaysian United Democratic Alliance (MUDA) one.

At the federal level, BN, having set out with confidence to retake the government in Putrajaya, suffered the worst defeat in its political history when it won only 30 seats out of the 178 it contested. —

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