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  • ✇Malay Mail - All
  • BN unfazed by emergence of new parties ahead of Johor, N. Sembilan polls, says its sec-gen
    TANJUNG MALIM, June 16 — The formation of new political parties in the country will not affect Barisan Nasional's (BN) prospects in the upcoming Johor and Negeri Sembilan state elections, said BN secretary-general Datuk Seri Dr Zambry Abd Kadir.He said the coalition was well-prepared for the two state polls and remained fully focused on efforts in the areas where it will field candidates.He said that while anyone is free to establish a new political party in a de
     

BN unfazed by emergence of new parties ahead of Johor, N. Sembilan polls, says its sec-gen

16 June 2026 at 08:56

Malay Mail

TANJUNG MALIM, June 16 — The formation of new political parties in the country will not affect Barisan Nasional's (BN) prospects in the upcoming Johor and Negeri Sembilan state elections, said BN secretary-general Datuk Seri Dr Zambry Abd Kadir.

He said the coalition was well-prepared for the two state polls and remained fully focused on efforts in the areas where it will field candidates.

He said that while anyone is free to establish a new political party in a democracy, BN will continue to adhere to its strategies and preparations.

“Johor Umno and BN have prepared extensively, and I believe the formation of a new party will have no impact on BN, based on the efforts and preparations that have already been set in motion,” he said.

He said this when asked whether the emergence of Parti Wawasan Negara and Parti Bersama Malaysia (Bersama) would pose a challenge to BN in the Johor and Negeri Sembilan state elections.

Earlier, Zambry launched the pilot programme for the National Service Training Programme (PLKN) 3.0 at public universities before attending the launch of the book Nahas Gerik: UPSI Berduka at Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris (UPSI) here today.

The Johor state poll is slated for July 11, while voters in Negeri Sembilan will cast their ballots on August 1. — Bernama 

  • ✇Malay Mail - All
  • The Manchurian electorate in Johor and Negeri Sembilan, how big? Praba Ganesan
    JUNE 11 — Fascinating does not entirely encapsulate the insane stratagems underway in Johor and Negeri Sembilan’s elections. Granted they are extensions of national anxieties accelerated by these assembly polls.The Election Commission (EC) meets tomorrow, June 12, to decide polling day, most likely around the World Cup final on July 20.An overarching theme to the elections is identity politics and its grip on our national politics. The July vote counts will put t
     

The Manchurian electorate in Johor and Negeri Sembilan, how big?

11 June 2026 at 01:41

Malay Mail

JUNE 11 — Fascinating does not entirely encapsulate the insane stratagems underway in Johor and Negeri Sembilan’s elections. 

Granted they are extensions of national anxieties accelerated by these assembly polls.

The Election Commission (EC) meets tomorrow, June 12, to decide polling day, most likely around the World Cup final on July 20.

An overarching theme to the elections is identity politics and its grip on our national politics. 

The July vote counts will put to bed the notion, or not, that race gets an outsized say still in 2026 Malaysia. 

A litmus test of how far the country has come, and whether the spirit of 2022 reemerges.

It’s loud out there. The key developments involve the Perikatan Nasional's (PN) existential crisis, Barisan Nasional’s (BN) return to basics via induced amnesia and Pakatan Harapan’s hold to its tradition driven by DAP.  

Dancing around all this is Anwar Ibrahim, waiting without cutting ties with anyone.    

The grand unity plan

The Islamist PAS turned the heat up to maximum this week by announcing an end to co-operation with Bersatu. 

Yet, this decision does not mean its exit from PN. Read between the lines, PAS feels it took the relationship as far as possible and it’s time Muhyiddin Yassin’s troops vacated the PN residences. 

Funnily, Bersatu feels the same way. A classic separation with paperweights cum partner cum offspring Gerakan and Malaysian Indian People’s Party (MIPP) hoping beyond hope they do not get sent to orphanages.

PAS wants the new girlfriend Reset Malaysia to move in.

And also, extends invites to every Malay-first organisation. It rounded up Parti Pejuang Tanah Air (Pejuang), Parti Bumiputera Perkasa Malaysia (Putra), Parti Berjasa Malaysia (Berjasa) and Parti Perikatan India Muslim Nasional (Iman). Ibrahim Ali gets a lifeboat from his old PAS pals.

PAS reactivated Annuar Musa, former Umno secretary-general and now central committee member, to resuscitate Muafakat Nasional immediately. 

Ask Umno to submit to the greater good, the ultimate unity vehicle. Annuar says it does not matter what it is called as long as all Malay leaders come together, right now. I'd call it Trantor. 

Muafakat gets the firm support from Umno Youth Chief Akmal Saleh but not party president Zahid Hamidi.

Zahid is not amiss to sense PAS wants to overwhelm Umno’s current Rumah Bangsa with its even bigger ambition.

The author argues that the Johor and Negeri Sembilan elections are being driven by a contest over identity politics, with parties trying to outdo each other as more important issues are sidelined. — Picture by Firdaus Latif
The author argues that the Johor and Negeri Sembilan elections are being driven by a contest over identity politics, with parties trying to outdo each other as more important issues are sidelined. — Picture by Firdaus Latif

PAS wants it all. Because lightweights Gerakan and MIPP are asked to stay despite them allowed zero input to the PAS manoeuvres. 

They are so light, they have to stay, less risk floating away to Neptune, or even as far as Trantor.

Do not misunderstand, the “others” parties are welcome but the goal is to be the unapologetic grand Malay-first coalition. Umno is welcome but this train is departing from the platform, either way.

This is PAS’ riposte to Bersatu, it builds a better supergroup than PN in 2022. Except despite the inroads in that general election for both PAS and Bersatu in the Semenanjung back then, the former did not win any parliamentary seats in Johor or Negeri Sembilan. 

PAS style does not click as much in the south but ambition they believe can take them across the finishing line.

PAS has a single strategy, that Malaysians have got even more polarised, especially the lower age-groups and they will heed the clarion call. That enough Malays will vote for the grand coalition. 

This is more PAS than PN, and the evidence is not only in the decision to use the party logo for Johor. 

It is more evident in how muted PN chairman Samsuri Mokhtar is, ceding authority to his party leaders Hadi Awang and Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man.

Umno gets mirrored

Up to June, when Onn Hafiz set a course for elections, Umno was on the up.

Its 80th anniversary, and the homecoming of who’s who in Malay politics. Even MCA and MIC were out partying in the streets, ready to collect seat victories on the shoulder of big brother.

They felt the only downside was the association with Pakatan inside the Madani government, and therefore the need to put distance between Umno and DAP.

That’s what they thought till PAS went into overdrive this week.

Now, they are in a race to rack up their Malay credentials as PAS and Reset Malaysia play up their romance for the sake of Malays under threat.

It has to politely shy away from PAS’ “true” Malay movement even if Akmal foolishly wills it. 

Expect the op-eds on how Pejuang, Iman and Putra saddling up beside PAS is insignificant. 

After all, as Gerakan Tanah Air (GTA), all three parties lost all deposits at the 2022 General Election. 

Yet, younger voters are a bother.

At the last state polls, with 55 per cent turnout, BN snatched 40 of the 56 seats, or 71 per cent. 

Eight months later at the general election when 73 per cent or an increase of over one million voters, BN only secured nine of the 26 seats (35 per cent). When more showed up, ostensibly more younger voters, BN suffered.

The Manchurian Test

In the 1962 thriller The Manchurian Candidate, a political candidate was brainwashed with a trigger word planted through hypnosis. 

That the candidate cannot help himself, the idea is too embedded in the person that once activated he can only do what he is programmed to do. 

Malaysia may have a degree of the Manchurian Candidate, in our case the voters, not the election candidates. 

That Malay voters — by virtue of living through lives dominated by PAS clerics and Umno right-wingers — cannot refuse the allure of the dream united Malay movement. That once triggered, everything else pales in significance.

For the sake of balance, let’s consider Johor’s challenges.

Facilitate the Johor- Singapore Special Economic Zone (JS-SEZ) undertaking. While GDP growth exceeds the national average, electricity supply is not amped up to match the investment. 

This is central to the jobs creation venture to raise the state median monthly wage above the national median which is a couple of hundred above RM3,000. With better and higher paying jobs, the ability to own homes in an inflated market. 

While the Johor Economic Transformation Plan intends to raise the game at the other towns — Mersing, Segamat, Kluang and Batu Pahat for instance — it is still about the state capital region gobbling up growth.  

The RTS Link, the game-changer ,kicks off in 2027 but question marks ensue about the Johor end processing 40,000 passengers daily. 

If smooth travels from the Singapore end are met by bottlenecks on the Johor side, all may come to naught.

That’s just a short list, and insanely, none are campaign issues.

Both Umno-BN and PAS-Muafakat are convinced that the votes centre around who is more Malay dedicated and the Manchurian effect triggers as election day looms. 

Which means, if like in 2022, the online vitriol hits fever pitch to drown out all other considerations. 

Scare voters about the spectre of not-Malay enough winners, and therefore government.

There is a toll here. The sanity of the people. The Manchurian effect is about psychological trauma, in this case of entire peoples'. 

That people are constantly made to be afraid of dangers they cannot see and the need to suspend reason and to become completely tribal. 

These politicians forget that these people they milk for votes have to live between elections too. 

Living daily with the fear of the loss of Malay power leaves a regular person troubled. And fuels social ills. Not that the politicians care, they have elections to win. 

  • ✇The Independent SG
  • UMNO seeking former glory with the Johor snap elections Kazi Mahmood
    MALAYSIA: Liew Chin Tong, a Deputy Minister of Finance of Malaysia, warns United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) and Barisan Nasional (BN) of a painful realisation in Malaysia’s general election after the allies in the Madani government insisted they will go solo in the Johor elections. Now that the Legislative Assembly of Negeri Sembilan has also been dissolved, there are talks that UMNO-BN will contest these elections without their government partners. It appears that BN is not changing co
     

UMNO seeking former glory with the Johor snap elections

6 June 2026 at 00:01

MALAYSIA: Liew Chin Tong, a Deputy Minister of Finance of Malaysia, warns United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) and Barisan Nasional (BN) of a painful realisation in Malaysia’s general election after the allies in the Madani government insisted they will go solo in the Johor elections.

Now that the Legislative Assembly of Negeri Sembilan has also been dissolved, there are talks that UMNO-BN will contest these elections without their government partners.

It appears that BN is not changing course from its plans to contest all seats in the upcoming Johor state election, despite Pakatan Harapan (PH) chief Anwar Ibrahim’s desire to work out a deal to avoid clashes.

BN chief and Deputy Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said he is in the midst of finalising the list of candidates for all 56 seats. It clearly means there will be no Madani deal in the state that borders Singapore.

“I will finalise BN’s list of candidates for the 56 state seats as soon as possible and, God willing, the names will be announced a week before nomination day,” he was quoted as saying by The Star today.

For Liew, BN wants to go solo in the Johor polls because UMNO wants to use this state election to restore itself as the “dominant party” like its former supreme position in the pre-2018 one-party state.

He says, “Umno wants to turn back the clock to before 2018.”

This is the year UMNO was dethroned after six decades of rule, marking a historic moment in the country with the first Prime Minister, Najib Razak, defeated in an election.

He believes that UMNO is going solo in Johor because they have a good chance of winning these elections, but things will be very different at the national level, where Umno failed to win more than 23 seats.

He warns UMNO and BN that the debacle of the coalition at the national level will continue in the next general election.

Liew also lamented that Johor BN has decided not to hold the state election concurrently with the general election.

“It has also decided to contest all 56 state seats, even if this means contesting against Pakatan Harapan (PH), its coalition partner in the federal Unity Government.

“BN is now confident of winning more than 40 seats out of 56 seats in the Johor state assembly. Some even think BN will win 45 to 48 seats.

“In the general election on 19 November 2022, PH won 82 parliamentary seats, Perikatan Nasional (PN) 74, BN 30, and GPS 23,” he recalls.

Liew says the cooperation between PH and BN has largely passed the tests of governing together and winning elections together.

He says there was a real possibility that both coalitions could work together in the next general election in direct one-on-one contests between the Unity Government and Perikatan Nasional (PN).

However, he says some people are still dreaming of bringing back the era when UMNO was the overwhelmingly dominant political force. He reminds UMNO that in the 2022 general election, of the Peninsula’s 165 parliamentary seats, PH and PN won 71 seats each, while BN only secured 23 and also blames the Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) for pushing UMNO to go solo, that is, without PH, in elections.

The reason he says is that if both PH and BN were to be together, MCA would only be able to contest 2 seats, but without PH, MCA can have a larger representation in the elections.

“Although MCA is part of the governing coalition, it has consistently behaved like an opposition party, playing up issues, stoking insecurity among the Chinese, and fanning dissatisfaction towards Prime Minister Dato’ Seri Anwar Ibrahim, the DAP and the Unity Government,” he says.

He concluded his missive on Facebook saying he hopes that BN and Umno leaders will soon realise that “no Malaysians in their right mind want to return to pre-2018 UMNO’s dominance. The era has changed.”

This article (UMNO seeking former glory with the Johor snap elections) first appeared on The Independent Singapore News.

  • ✇Malay Mail - All
  • Khaled: Separate state polls offer no edge to BN Malay Mail
    KUALA LUMPUR, June 13 — Barisan Nasional (BN) will have to depend on its own strength to win over voters, regardless of whether the Johor and Negeri Sembilan state elections are held separately or simultaneously, Umno vice-president Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin said today.Asked whether BN stood to gain any advantage from the staggered election schedule, Khaled said the coalition did not enjoy an edge over Pakatan Harapan (PH) or other political parties.Instea
     

Khaled: Separate state polls offer no edge to BN

13 June 2026 at 04:23

Malay Mail

KUALA LUMPUR, June 13 — Barisan Nasional (BN) will have to depend on its own strength to win over voters, regardless of whether the Johor and Negeri Sembilan state elections are held separately or simultaneously, Umno vice-president Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin said today.

Asked whether BN stood to gain any advantage from the staggered election schedule, Khaled said the coalition did not enjoy an edge over Pakatan Harapan (PH) or other political parties.

Instead, he said BN and its component parties would need to secure the people’s mandate through their own efforts.

“We do not depend on whether the elections are held together or not.

“As for why the Johor and Negeri Sembilan state elections are being held separately or otherwise, that is a question for the Election Commission (EC),” he told Utusan Malaysia today.

Khaled said Umno and BN had made preparations to face any election.

“When Johor dissolved its state assembly before this, there was no issue of holding the state election simultaneously with Negeri Sembilan.

“We ourselves did not know that Negeri Sembilan would dissolve and hold a state election,” he added.

Khaled, who is the defence minister, was speaking after officiating the Defence Ministry’s Program Jiwa Murni Madani at Sekolah Kebangsaan Johor Kampong in Kota Tinggi, Johor.

Election Commission chairman Datuk Seri Ramlan Harun announced yesterday that Johor voters will head to the polls on July 11, with nomination day set for June 27 and early voting on July 7.

Negeri Sembilan will follow on August 1, with nominations scheduled for July 18 and early voting on July 28.

 

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