A TWO-THIRDS majority for the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition seems more likely now that Pakatan Harapan has firmly rejected any electoral cooperation with PAS, said political observer Ibrahim Suffian.
The director of polling outfit Merdeka Centre said without a pact between PH and PAS to ensure straight fights, it would be easier for BN to regain the two-thirds hold in Parliament that it first lost in the 2008 general election.
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“If PH and PAS do not have a pact, it’s not impossible for BN to seize a two-thirds majority again, given that it only needs another 15 federal seats from what it has now,” he told The Malaysian Insight.
To regain a two-thirds control, BN needs 148 seats in the Dewan Rakyat. It now has 133 seats, following the 2013 general election, while the opposition has 89.
The opposition, which included PAS at the time under the Pakatan Rakyat banner, had won 52% the popular vote in 2013, with BN winning 47%.
Ibrahim was asked about the PH presidential council’s decision on Monday to reject cooperation with PAS, following a divisive debate within PKR on whether to hold talks with the Islamist party to ensure straight fights, especially in Selangor.
Besides PKR, other parties in the opposition pact are Bersatu, DAP and Amanah.
Ibrahim said the Sungai Besar and Kuala Kangsar by-elections last year were indicative of the results of three-cornered fights in the coming polls.
BN candidates had won both federal seats as the votes were split. PAS and Amanah had fielded candidates.
There are different views, however, as to how well PH can survive three-cornered fights.
PKR vice-president Rafizi Ramli, who runs survey outfit Invoke, said he believed the party was strong enough to withstand three-cornered fights based on simulations.
A survey by Institut Darul Ehsan, involving 4,486 respondents, did not touch on the number of parliamentary seats that the opposition could gain, but found that if PH and PAS were to join forces, such a pact could control seven states and one federal territory in Peninsular Malaysia. – August 31, 2017.
Comments
Posted 8 years ago by Ali Along · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Lee Lee · Reply
There will be massive deflection of PAS’ traditional electoral supporters when the PAS-Umno electoral co-operation, whether covert or overt, eventually becomes household public knowledge as polling day nears. Similarly, there will also be massive cross-over of Umno’s traditional electoral supporters due to the unprecedentedly unfavourable conditions plaguing Umno. The combined migration of Malay votes to the opposition (which does not include PAS) is expected to sink Umno/BN.
Having PAS as a partner in Harapan is the ideal, but it seems to be a bridge too far, now that polling day may be just around the corner. Harapan must quickly come up with an effective strategy and start enlightening PAS supporters of the latest political realities.
The current internal squabbling within PKR must stop, and it must join Harapan whole heartedly and march as one united force, now that the alliance has already made its final decision to exclude PAS.
Posted 8 years ago by Kim quek · Reply
In 2013, Azmin won Gombak with 54,827 votes or 52.0%
His opponent Raman Ismail of the BN got 50,093 votes or 47.53%
An independent candidate Said Nazar Abu Baker got a mere 474 votes 0.45%
Turnout in 2013 was 107,140 electors or 86.90% of registered voters in Gombak
In 2008, Azmin Ali won with 40,334 votes or 54.65%
His one-on-one opponent Said Anuar Said Ahmad of the BN got 33,467 votes or the remaining 45.35%
Azmin got 2.65 fewer percentage points of votes in 2013 than in 2008.
Turnout in 2008 was 75,619 voters or 76.26% of registered voters.
Going back further to 2004, the BN's Raman Ismail got 39,870 votes 59.93%
His one-on-one opponent Mohd Hatta Md. Ramli of PAS got 26,663 votes or 40.07%
Turnout in 2004 was 67,358 voters or 73.04 of registered voters.
We can expect the number of registered voters in Gombak to have increased somewhat by GE14 and assuming that in a two-cornered fight between PKR and BN, PKR gets 60,000 votes and BN gets 51,000 votes, so Azmin of PKR retains the seat.
However, in a three-cornered fight in Gombak between PKR, BN and PAS, PAS gets say 27,000 votes and BN gets 51,000 votes, that would leave PKR with 33,000 votes (60,000 - 27,000 votes), so BN wins with the largest minority of votes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gombak_(federal_constituency)
A similar situation actually hapepned in the Kota Damansara state seat in 2013.
In 2008, Dr. Mohd Nasir Hashim of Parti Sosialis Malaysia running under a PKR ticket got 11,846 votes or 52.38%
His one-on-one opponent Zein Isma Ismail of the BN got 10,771 votes or 47.62%
So Dr. Nasir won Kota Damansara
In 2013, in a six-cornered fight, Halimaton Saadiah Bohan of the BN got 16,387 votes or 42.27%
Still contesting under the PKR ticket, Dr. Nasir got 14,860 votes or 38.33%
PAS entered the fray with Ridzuan Ismail who got 7,312 votes of 18.86%
Independent candidate Halmi Omar got 116 votes or 0.30%
Independent candidate Edros Abdullah got 57 votes or 0.15%
Independent candidate Suppiah Anandan got 39 votes or 0.10%
BN won Kota Damansara with the largest minority of 42.27%
Going back to 2004 when BN stood head-on-head with PAS,
Mohd Mokhtar Ahmad Dahlan of the BN got 12,926 votes or 72.81%
Mohamad Ariff Md Yusof of PAS got 4,827 votes or 27.19%
BN won of course.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kota_Damansara_(state_constituency)
When PAS was part of Pakatan, PAS loyalists would vote for the PKR or DAP candidate where no PAS candidate stood but now that PAS loyalists are split between PAS and PAN, PAS' former vote could be about halved in a contest involving PAS and PAN (a.k.a. Amanah), such as happened in the Sungai Besar and Kuala Kangsar byelections in which BN retained the two seats with a slim majority of votes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sungai_Besar_(federal_constituency)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuala_Kangsar_(federal_constituency)
GE 14 will be more interesting, with PAS' exit from Pakatan, then the split in PAS into PAS and PAN, with PAN joining Pakatan, then with the formation of Pribumi by ex-UMNO people, then Pribumi joining Pakatan.
Now PAS can split the Pakatan vote, PAN will split the PAS vote as it did in the above two byelections and Pribumi can split the UMNO vote.
So what happens if BN wins the largest minority of seats in parliament. Can it rule as a minority government or will it have to find a party with enough seats to form a coalition government with a simple majority of seats?
Posted 8 years ago by IT Scheiss · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Malaysian First · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by IT Scheiss · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Malaysian First · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Bigjoe Lam · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Lee Lee · Reply