The split followed a constitutional amendment allowing Melaka’s government to appoint up to seven unelected assembly members with voting rights. PH’s five lawmakers opposed the bill, which passed 23-5 on Tuesday.
The walkout will not bring down Chief Minister Ab Rauf Yusoh, according to analysts, as BN holds 21 of the 28 seats and can govern alone. But it shows how quickly Anwar’s alliance of former rivals is splintering across Malaysia’s states.
“What has come apart is not a formal agreement, but the spirit of power-sharing created after the unity government was formed in Putrajaya,” said Awang Azman Awang Pawi, a political analyst at the University of Malaya.
BN never needed PH’s numbers in Melaka, Awang said, but handed its coalition partner government posts in the state as a gesture after Malaysia’s inconclusive 2022 general election brought the former rivals together in Putrajaya.
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