Malaysia's king wants new premier to face confidence vote
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[August 18, 2021]
By Rozanna Latiff and Liz Lee
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) -Malaysia's king
will name a new prime minister as soon as possible but the appointee
will have to face a confidence vote in parliament to prove his majority,
the palace said in a statement on Wednesday.
Muhyiddin Yassin resigned as prime minister on Monday after
conceding he had lost his majority in parliament but remains caretaker
premier until a successor is named.
He did not face a confidence vote in the 17 months that he held office
despite repeated calls to do so.
The resignation has deepened a months-long political crisis as Malaysia
grapples with a COVID-19 surge and an economic slump. No political party
has a majority in parliament, so the winning candidate has to put
together a coalition.
King Al-Sultan Abdullah, the constitutional monarch, will appoint a
premier who he thinks can command a majority. He has given members of
parliament until 4 p.m. local time (0800 GMT) to submit the name of one
candidate they want as premier.
In a statement, the palace said the prime minister appointed by the king
must table a motion of confidence in parliament as soon as possible to
prove "legitimately that he has the majority".
"His Majesty... (has) expressed that the unending political turmoil
without any full stop has disrupted the government's governance during a
time when we still face the threat of the COVID-19 pandemic," the palace
said.
The king will meet with the country's other senior royals on Friday to
discuss the current situation, the palace said. It was not clear if a
decision on the new prime minister will be announced only after that.
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A general view of Malaysia's Prime Minister's office, in Putrajaya,
Malaysia October 26, 2020. REUTERS/Lim Huey Teng
Ismail Sabri Yaakob, Muhyiddin's deputy and a
politician from the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO)
party, emerged as the leading candidate to be the next prime
minister.
He has secured a majority from political parties that were in
Muhyiddin's coalition, media reported, citing UMNO officials.
Ismail Sabri spearheaded security policies during the COVID-19
crisis and was promoted to deputy prime minister in July.
Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim was also trying to secure the
numbers to form a government, media reported.
Malaysia has been in a state of political flux since widespread
graft accusations led to the 2018 election defeat of UMNO which had
governed for more than 60 years since independence.
Mahathir Mohamad led the opposition to election victory for the
first time, but the alliance collapsed from infighting last year.
Muhyiddin then put together a coalition with political parties that
were defeated in the polls, including UMNO, but that alliance was
also fragile.
(Reporting by Rozanna Latiff, Liz Lee and Mei Mei Chu; writing by A.
AnanthalakshmiEditing by Ed Davies and Michael Perry)
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