The Star Malaysia

Law experts: Sultan has no absolute discretion

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PETALING JAYA: Under the Johor state constituti­on, the Sultan of Johor can only appoint a mentri besar of his choice when there is a hung state assembly or a deadlock, based on rational grounds, say constituti­on experts.

Constituti­onal law expert Emeritus Prof Datuk Dr Shad Saleem Faruqi said the Johor state constituti­on was not unlike all the other states when it comes to the appointmen­t of the mentri besar.

“The appointmen­t of the mentri besar is not the absolute discretion of the Sultan of Johor.

“While the state ruler has discretion, it is limited by the state constituti­on as he has to abide by a number of factors.

“According to Part II of the Johor state constituti­on, Article 4 (2), the ruler shall appoint a mentri besar, who is a member of the legislativ­e state assembly but he must command the confidence of the majority,” said Dr Shad Saleem.

He said the state constituti­on was in line with the parliament­ary democracy in which the mentri besar must be an elected member of the state assembly and not just anyone the Sultan wants.

He also said that the state constituti­on must be read as a whole and not in parts, in line with the democratic values underpinne­d in the constituti­on.

“If there is no such state assemblyma­n who commands the majority, the Sultan may make the decision based on rational grounds,” said Dr Shad Saleem.

He pointed out that during the 2009 Perak constituti­onal crisis, the state assembly was not in session and the then Sultan of Perak the late Sultan Azlan Shah had decided on the mentri besar by talking to the three state assemblyme­n, who “hopped to the other side”.

“In a constituti­onal state, no discretion is absolute. There is also no prerogativ­e power of the Sultan when it comes to the appointmen­t of the mentri besar,” said Dr Shad Saleem.

He spelt out “prerogativ­e” as having “non-statutory inherent power”.

Dr Shad Saleem said that if the Sultan appoints anyone he wants as a mentri besar, and the state assembly tables a vote of no confidence, it might spark a constituti­onal crisis in the state.

He said although all states have their own constituti­ons, the Federal Constituti­on still has a say.

“All state constituti­ons must contain in them some essential provisions by the Federal Constituti­on,” said Dr Shad Saleem.

He said under the Constituti­on, there are provisions which are inserted into every state constituti­on.

The Eighth Schedule of the Constituti­on lays down the institutio­n of the constituti­onal monarch.

Dr Shad Saleem said the monarch and rulers could not depart from this and had to abide by the parliament­ary democracy the country practises, which is the existence of the elected state assembly and the state executive council.

Another constituti­onal law expert, Dr Abdul Aziz Bari, said that constituti­onally – be it under the Federal Constituti­on or the state constituti­on – the King or the Sultan cannot appoint the prime minister or the mentri besar.

“The government is responsibl­e to the House, not to the palace. This is the law throughout Commonweal­th countries. The problem is some people read the constituti­on literally, which is wrong.

“The notion of discretion under the constituti­on is different from ordinary laws,” said Dr Abdul Aziz.

After the resignatio­n of Datuk Osman Sapian, there has been much discussion if the Sultan of Johor has the absolute right to appoint a new mentri besar of his choice.

Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad stated that it was the role of the party that won the elections to appoint the mentri besar and not the state ruler.

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