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Saturday 2 April 2016

Politics of Malaysia


(You've been a part of it your whole life without even knowing it.)
Christy Petriccione in Ideas on Jan 25, 2016


Christy Petriccione

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MALAYSIA is a Southeast Asian country occupying the Malaysian Peninsula and part of the island of Borneo. It's known for its beaches, rainforests and mix of Malay, Chinese, Indian and European influences. The sprawling capital, Kuala Lumpur, is home to colonial buildings, busy shopping districts such as Bukit Bintang and skyscrapers including the iconic, 451m-tall Petronas Twin Towers.

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ConstitutionMalaysia is a parliamentary democracy with a federal constitutional  monarch, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, as head of state. This monarch is chosen for a five-year term from among their own number by the nine hereditary rulers of Peninsular Malaysia. ... The federal parliament consists of two houses. 
Legislature: Parliament of Malaysia
Status: National monarchy

MALAYSIA
Politics of Malaysia takes place in the framework of a federal representative democratic constitutional monarchy, in which the Yang di-Pertuan Agong is head of state and the Prime Minister of Malaysia is the head of government. Executive power is exercised by the federal government and the 13 state governments. Federal legislative power is vested in the federal parliament and the 13 state assemblies. The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature, though the executive maintains a certain level of influence in the appointment of judges to the courts.
The Constitution of Malaysia is codified and the system of government is based on the Westminster system. The hierarchy of authority in Malaysia, in accordance to the Federal Constitution, stipulates the three branches (administrative components) of the Malaysian government as consisting of the Executive, Judiciary and Legislative branch. Whereas, the Parliament consists of the Dewan Negara (Upper House / House of Senate) and Dewan Rakyat (Lower House / House of Representatives).
Malaysia has had a multi-party system since the first direct election of the Federal Legislative Council of the Malaya in 1955 on a first-past-the-post basis. The ruling party since then had always been the Alliance Party (Malay: Parti Perikatan) coalition and from 1973 onwards, its successor, the Barisan Nasional (National Front) coalition.
The Barisan Nasional coalition currently consists of the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA), Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC) and 10 other component parties. The opposition are made up of the newly formed pact, the Coalition of Hope (Pakatan Harapan), the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), the Socialist Party of Malaysia (PSM) and other smaller parties.
Although Malaysian politics has been relatively stable, critics allege that "the government, ruling party and administration are intertwined with few countervailing forces." However, since the  8 March 2008 General Election, the media's coverage on the country's politics has noticeably increased...read more>

Useful links

The Most Popular Sites on Malaysian Politics
Ranker: Famous Politicians From Malaysia
wsj.com: Malaysia's 1MDB Scandal
MalaysiaKini: News and Views That Matter
FreeMalaysiaToday

The politics of Malaysia is based on a federal constitutional monarchy, in which the King is head of state and the Prime Minister is the head of government. Executive power is exercised by the federal government and the 13 state governments. Federal legislative power is vested in the federal parliament and the 13 state assemblies. The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature, though the executive maintains a certain level of influence in the appointment of judges to the courts.
The Government of Malaysia.
Malaysia has a demo­cratic and federal system of government. A central par­liament and 13 state legislative assemblies share politi­cal power. The central parliament consists of two houses, the Dewan Negara (upper house) and the Dewan Rakyat (lower house). The Dewan Undangan Negeri (state legislative assemblies) have only one house. Members of parliament and the assemblies are elected by popular vote. The political party which wins the greatest number of seats in an election becomes the party of government.
Malaysia is also a constitutional monarchy. The head of the central government is the yang di-pertuan agong (king). Nine of the states have a sultan as their head, and each of the four other states has a yang di-pertua negeri (governor), appointed by the king.
Constitutional monarchy
Constitution. The constitution of Malaysia is a writ­ten document. It provides the framework for governing the country. It is the basis for making laws and sharing power between federal and state governments. It also controls the roles and functions of administrations and the jurisdiction of courts of law. It gives the federal gov­ernment wide powers to control defence, foreign rela­tions, education, health, finance, trade and industry, and internal affairs. State governments have their own power especially in agriculture and land administration, as well as social welfare and religious affairs. When Malaysia was formed in 1967, it was agreed that Sabah and Sara­wak should have greater powers than the other states.
The constitution guarantees fundamental liberties for Malaysian citizens. These guarantees include: the right of life; freedom of speech, assembly and association; freedom from arbitrary arrest; total prohibition of slavery; equality; freedom of movement; freedom of religion; freedom of education; and the right to own property. The king may, on the advice of the prime minister declare a national emergency. At such a time, citizens have to give up many of their rights in the interest of the country's security. Two-thirds of the members of both houses of the federal parliament and the rulers of the states must agree to any important changes in the constitution. In 1993, the Dewan Rakyat passed an amendment that removed the sultan's constitutional right to personal immunity from prosecution.
Monarchy. The Yang di-Pertuan Agong, or king, is Malaysia's head of state. He acts on the advice of parlia­ment and the cabinet. The king appoints the prime min­ister and has the power to agree or refuse to dissolve parliament, even against the advice of the prime minis­ter. As supreme commander of the armed forces, the king has the power of mercy in cases of court martial. He also appoints the judges of the supreme court on the advice of the prime minister.
The Yang di-Pertuan Agong is an elected ruler. Mem­bers of the Conference of Rulers from the nine states elect one of their number to be the supreme ruler for a period of five years. They choose the king on the basis of seniority and rotation.
The Conference of Rulers consists of the nine rulers of the states and the four governors. The conference has the power to appoint judges, the election commission, and the public service commission. It also influences any changes in state boundaries, the laws concerning Is­lamic religion made by the federal parliament, and any proposal to change the constitution.
National government
Parliament. The federal parliament makes and changes laws. It consists of the king (when he addresses parliament at the beginning of its meeting each year), and the two houses of parliament, the Dewan Rakyat, and the Dewan Negara.
The Dewan Rakyat is the lower house of the parlia­ment. It has a total of 222 elected members. General elections take place every five years. Malaysia has an f election commission, appointed by the king, which divides the country into constituencies (voting areas). The  people of each constituency elect one representative to; the Dewan Rakyat. All citizens of Malaysia who are over the age of 21 years can vote or stand for election. Voting is not compulsory.
To stand for election as a member of the Dewan Rakyat, a person must be a citizen and resident in the country. He or she must not be insane, bankrupt, or a convicted criminal who has been sentenced to more than a year's imprisonment.
Members of parliament IMP'S) receive a salary for their services. All MP"s belong to political parties. Mem­bers of parliament may resign their seats at any time, in which case there must be a new election for the seat within 60 days. The person who presides over the meet­ing of parliament is called the Yang di-Pertua Dewan Rakyat (speaker). The MPs elect a speaker from one of their number. Two deputy speakers take the chair in the absence of the speaker.
Dewan Negara is the upper house of the Malaysian parliament. It has 70 members, 26 of them elected by state legislative assemblies. The king appoints the other 44 members on the basis of their experience, or to rep­resent the professional, commercial, and minority groups.
Members of the Dewan Negara usually serve for a pe­riod of three years. To be a member of the Dewan Ne­gara a person must be at least 30 years old. The mem­bers of the Dewan Negara elect a Yang di-Pertuan Dewan Negara (president).
The Dewan Negara has less power to make laws than the Dewan Rakyat. It meets immediately after the Dewan Rakyat and reviews any bill passed by that body. The Dewan Negara may initiate some legislation and may delay laws for one year. In practice, the Dewan Negara usually agrees with the government, since many of its members are appointed on the recommendation of the prime minister.
Central government. The prime minister and the cabinet are in charge of the central government of Malaysia. The Yang di-Pertuan Agong appoints the prime minister, who represents the most popular political party at a general election. On the advice of the prime minister, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong also appoints mem­bers of either the Dewan Rakyat or the Dewan Negara to be ministers in the cabinet.
The cabinet makes long-term plans for the develop­ment and defence of Malaysia. Whenever necessary, the cabinet makes laws, through parliament, to carry out government policies. Cabinet ministers supervise the work of government departments and give orders to civil servants.
The Yang di-Pertuan Agong, having taken the advice of the prime minister, may also appoint deputy minis­ters. The deputies assist the ministers in their responsi­bilities.
Each minister is in charge of a government ministry, which contains several government departments. The minister is the chief executive, linking a group of civil servants to the cabinet. There are many departments, large and small, which make up the Malaysian bureauc­racy.
The federal civil service employs more than 80,000 people in the various departments. The high-level ad­ministrators, who carry out executive jobs, train at the National Institute of Administration. The Public Service Department controls the civil service. A chief secretary heads the entire administrative bureaucracy.
Local government
State government. State governments (except for Sabah and Sarawak) have few powers. Their most im­portant functions include control of land administration, control of local government, provision of housing, wel­fare services and water supplies, and the administration of the Islamic religion. Sabah and Sarawak also have control of immigration.
State rulers. All states of Malaysia, except for Melaka, Penang, Sabah, and Sarawak have rulers as their official heads of state. Most rulers have the title of sultan, but the ruler of Perlis is called the raja and the ruler of Negeri Sembilan is called Yang di-Pertuan Besar.
Most of the rulers are hereditary heads of states.
Their eldest son succeeds to the throne when they die. But in Negeri Sembilan, the ruler is elected from among all the sons of the royal family. In Perak, three royal fami­lies take it in turns to succeed to the throne.
Rulers are the heads of the Islamic religion in their own states. They also have the same powers in their states as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong has in Malaysia.
Melaka, Penang, Sabah, and Sarawak have heads of states who are not hereditary. The Yang di-Pertuan Agong appoints them to four-year terms on the advice of the chief minister of the state concerned. The heads of state have much the same position as the rulers in the other nine states, but have no religious function and lack the traditional authority of the ruler.
Legislative assemblies. State legislative assemblies closely resemble the Dewan Rakyat in their organization. There is no senate or upper house at state level. The as­semblies hold debates and pass laws on matters that come within the powers of the states. The people of each state elect representatives to the legislative assem­blies for five-year terms. The members of the legislative assemblies receive salaries, and most belong to political parties.
Each state has a set number of members in its legisla­tive assembly, Johor has 56, Kedah 36, Kelantan 45, Melaka 28, Negeri Sembilan 36, Pahang 42, Penang 40, Perak 59, Perlis 15, Sabah 60, Sarawak 71, Selangor 55, and Terengganu 31.
Executive councils are the cabinets of the state gov­ernments. They are usually called the majlis kerajaan. In the states of Sabah and Sarawak they are known as cabi­nets. The head of the executive council in each of the nine states that have rulers is the menteribesar. In the four other states, the chief minister is called ketua menteri. The minister’s function is largely similar to that of the prime minister in the federal government.
The state executive councils differ slightly from the cabinets in that they have three nonelected official mem­bers. These are the state secretary, the state legal ad­viser, and the state financial officer. These officials have the right to attend the meetings of the council but they cannot vote on any decision. Their function is mainly to advise the council on matters in which they are compe­tent.
State administrators. Most states have several ad­ministrative districts. The exceptions are Perlis, which is too small, and Sabah and Sarawak, which are large and also have subdistricts. A district officer and several as­sistant officers administer each district. They implement the decisions of local authorities and coordinate the ac­tivities of local, state, and federal government depart­ments. In addition, each state has its own civil service headed by the state secretary. There are about 20,000 state civil servants.
Local government. Local government is largely the responsibility of individual states. The federal govern­ment has certain powers through the National Council for Local Government. This body coordinates the work of local councils, municipalities, and city councils. It calls meetings of the local authorities. It also makes de­cisions which are binding on both the federal and the state governments. The federal government has direct control of the government of the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur and Labuan Island.
Kuala Lumpur city has a city council with the mayor as the chief executive, assisted by the director general of Kuala Lumpur city.
There are four other local authorities with the status of cities in Malaysia: Ipoh, George Town, Penang, and the twin cities of Kuching North and Kuching South in Sarawak. Each of the cities-is under the control of a mayor, who administers them through the city councils.
History
Malaya was divided into states, similar to the present states, before 1800. Local chiefs held considerable power in most of the central and southern states. The Si­amese (Thai) often overran the northern states.
British influence in Malaya began in 1786, when the British East India Company leased the island of Penang from the sultan of Kedah. British authorities continued to expand their activities in Malaya and in neighbouring areas throughout the 1800's. By the late 1930's, there were three types of territories in Malaya under varying degrees of British rule. The Straits Settlements, which consisted of Melaka, Penang, and Singapore, were gov- erned directly by British officials (see Straits Settle­ments). The Federated Malay States—Negeri Sembilan, Pahang, Perak, and Selangor—were partly ruled by Brit­ish officials. But they left some powers in the hands of the rulers. The rulers of the five unfederated Malay states—Johor, Kedah, Kelantan, Perlis, and Terengganu- retained even wider powers. Both Sabah and Sarawak were British protectorates..
After World War II ended in 1945, Singapore was separated from Malaya, and Sabah and Sarawak became British colonies. In 1948, British and Malayan leaders agreed to form the Federation of Malaya, a union of all the Malayan states. The agreement paved the way for Malaya's independence by setting up a legislative coun­cil and an executive council, which later developed into a national parliament and cabinet. Malaya gained full in­dependence in 1957. In 1959, Singapore won independence in home affairs, but its defence and foreign policy remained under British control.
In 1963, Malaya, Sabah, Sarawak, and Singapore joined together to form the new state of Malaysia.
Tunku Abdul Rahman, who had previously been the prime minister of the Federation of Malaya, became the first prime minister of Malaysia.
During the first years of its life, the government of Malaysia had to face many strains. President Sukarno of Indonesia objected to the fact that Sabah and Sarawak had joined Malaysia, and he began a policy that he called "confrontation." Indonesia organized a series of armed invasions into Malaysian territory, especially Sa­rawak. The attacks forced the Malaysian government to increase defence spending, rather than improve other government services.
In addition, the new state of Malaysia was strained by a series of disputes between the federal government and the Singapore government. The disputes were partly about political ideas and partly about the sharing of federal and state revenues. Eventually, both govern­ments decided that it was impossible for them to agree, and in 1965, Singapore left Malaysia and became inde­pendent. The government amended the constitution of Malaysia to include only Malaya, Sabah, and Sarawak.

King of Malaysia (Yang di-Pertuan Agong)
The Federation of Malaysia is a federal constitutional monarchy. Officially the head of state is the Highest Governor or Yang di-Pertuan Agong (the king). The Malaysian kings are chosen for a 5 year term from the 9 sultans of the states of the Malaysian peninsula. The present King is Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah, successor of Mizan Zainal Abidin. On the 14th of October 2011 it was decided during a special meeting of the Conference of Rulers that the 83 year old Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah would become the next and 14th King of Malaysia. It will be the first time a Sultan is crowned King two times, as Sultan Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah was already King of Malaysia between 1970 and 1975.
The former King of Malaysia; Mizan Zainal Abidin was the 17th sultan of the Terengganu province, and with just 36 years of age he was the youngest sultan ever. Mizan Zainal Abidin is the 13th Malaysian king, and the second youngest king in the country's history. He was chosen as king at the age of 44. As almost all sultans in Malaysia, Mizan Zainal Abidin received his education abroad, and before becoming sultan he occupied several high positions at home and abroad.
All Kings of Malaysia
1957 - 1960: Abdul Rahman from Negeri Sembilan
1960 - 1960: Hishamuddin Alam Shah from Selangor
1960 - 1965: Syed Harun Putra from Perlis
1965 - 1970: Ismail Nasirrudin Shah from Terengganu
1970 - 1975: Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah from Kedah
1975 - 1979: Yahya Putra from Kelantan
1979 - 1984: Ahmad Shah al-Mustain Billah from Pahang
1984 - 1989: Mahmud Iskandar from Johor
1989 - 1994: Azlan Muhibbudin Shah from Perak
1994 - 1999: Ja'afar from Negeri Sembilan
1999 - 2001: Salehuddin Abdul Aziz Shah from Selangor
2001 - 2006: Syed Sirajuddin from Perlis
2006 - 2011: Mizan Zainal Abidin from Terengganu
2011 - 2016: Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah from Kedah

Government and Prime Minister of Malaysia
The government has the Executive power. It is conducted by the premier (from 2009 and on: Najib Tun Razak, and before that, for 6 years Abdullah Ahmad Badawi). The Congress exists of two Houses: the senate (Dewan Negara) and the House of Commons (dewan Rakyat). The Malaysian constitution states that the premier has to be elected from the House of Commons, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong (king) eventually picks the new prime minister.
The Government is composed of members from both Houses of the Congress, and accounts to them. Early 2004, the government moved to the newly build Putrajaya. All 69 members of the senate have a 6 year term of office; 36 are elected by the 13 state meetings, and 42 are appointed by the king. The representatives of the House are chosen from districts with a member by ways of general voting. The 193 members of the House of Representatives are elected for a maximum term of office of 5 years. The legislature is divided between the federal law departments and those of the state.
The Prime Minister of Malaysia
The Prime Ministerof Malaysia is the indirectly elected head of government of Malaysia. He is officially appointed by the King (Yang DiPertuan Agong), who in His Majesty’s judgement is likely to command the confidence of the majority of the members of that House of Representatives, the elected lower house of Parliament. He heads the Cabinet, whose members are also appointed by the King on the prime minister’s advice. The Prime Minister and his Cabinet shall be collectively responsible to Parliament.
List of The Prime Ministers of Malaysia
1957-1970 Tunku Abdul Rahman
1970-1976: Tun Abdul Razak
1976-1981: Tun Hussein Onn
1981-2003: Tun Dr Mahathir  Mohamad
2003-2009: Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi
2009-201x: Najib Tun Razak

Related articles include:
Tun Abdul Ghafar Baba Abdul Rahman,
Tuanku Abdul Rahman,
Tunku Abdul Rahman Yakub,
Datuk Patinggi Abdul Razak bin Hussein
Tun Abu Bakar Azlan Shah
Burhanuddin al-Hemy
Raja Chulan bin Sultan Abdullah
 Fatimah Hashim
Hussein bin Onn,
Tun Ismail bin Abdul Rahman
MacDonald, Malcolm
Tun Mahathir bin Mohammad
Tan Sri Seri Musa Hitam
Datuk Mustapha bin Datu Harun
Onn bin Ja'afar, Dato
Royal families
Tun Veerasamy Thirugnan Sambanthan
Swettenham, Sir Frank
Tan Chee Khoon
Tan Cheng Lock
Dato Sir Clough Thuraisingam

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