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The BN coalition held onto its crucial two-thirds majority after Saturday's vote in Sarawak but the opposition had its best result for nearly a quarter century in the resource-rich state. The vote was seen as an important gauge of popularity for Najib, who has dished out money for rural development.
Some observers said it was the most crucial test for the BN since the 2008 general elections when the opposition seized a third of parliamentary seats and threatened the BN's half-century grip on power.
In Saturday's Sarawak election the BN clinched 55 seats while Anwar Ibrahim's opposition Pakatan Rakyat alliance won 15. An independent candidate took one seat. Previously the BN had held 63 seats and the opposition eight. The two-thirds majority effectively allows the BN coalition to pass legislation without any obstruction.
But political analyst Khoo Kai Peng said Najib had suffered a "massive" dip in the popular vote compared with BN's performance at 2006 state polls in Sarawak. "The popular vote for BN dipped by eight percentage points to 55 percent. This is a massive number for a state which has been a traditional BN fortress," he told AFP. Khoo said the results showed that the crucial parliamentary seats in Sarawak and neighbouring Sabah that the BN needs to stay in power could be at risk.
There are 31 parliamentary seats in Sarawak and BN holds 29. In Sabah BN has 24 out of 25 seats. The opposition only has three in both the states. Both sides found positives in the result. Najib described the victory as a "strong mandate" to rule Sarawak, although he was cagey on whether he would call snap polls.
It was the opposition's best performance in 24 years in Sarawak as it rode a rode a wave of discontent against the long reign of 74-year-old chief minister Taib Mahmud and Christian anger over the government's attempt to restrict Bibles printed in Malay. Khoo said Najib had emerged bruised from the poll, which is regarded as a key barometer on how voters in peninsular Malaysia and Sabah state, which neighbours Sarawak, may vote in the national election.
The BN's losses in some rural constituencies was due to displeasure over the state government's action to seize ancestral land, he said. "There was a big swing of votes in the urban and rural areas to the opposition," he added. "Najib will not call national elections this year. I think he will be pushed out by his ruling Umno if he fails to secure a two-thirds majority (in the national election)," Khoo said.
Monash University Malaysia political scientist James Chin said Anwar galvanised the opposition by focusing on poverty and the alleged corrupt rule of chief minister Taib. Taib has denied allegations of large-scale corruption involving his family and political allies.
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Jeniri said voters' anger against Taib, who has refused to step aside despite Najib's cajoling, could mean the BN will lose parliamentary seats in Sarawak. While the BN must tackle corruption and abuse of power in the state to claw back votes, support for the opposition is strong and Anwar remains a "threat to BN's half-century grip on power," he said.- AFP
source:malaysiakini
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