Timeline A Week Of Political Crisis In Malaysia
The country was plunged into a week of political crisis following the unexpected resignation of 94-year-old Dr Mahathir Mohamad as prime minister on Monday, Feb 24
Mahathir's move fractured a coalition with his old rival Anwar Ibrahim, 72, that had scored a surprise election victory in 2018. The volatile relationship between Anwar and Mahathir helped trigger the current crisis after Mahathir resisted pressure to set a date for a promised transfer of power
Feb 23Politicians from the coalition hold talks at a hotel near Kuala Lumpur on a possible new alliance with some members of the ousted main opposition Umno and other groups, according to sources
That night, Anwar says some colleagues from the coalition are trying to bring down the government and form a new one to deny him the premiership
Mahathir had been angry that he was pressured by pro-Anwar ministers at a meeting of the coalition on Feb 21 to set a clear timeline for a handover, according to political sources
Feb 24Mahathir resigns. Sources said he was upset by accusations that he was now willing to work with the same group that he defeated in the last general election amid allegations of corruption
The king re-appoints him as interim leader until a successor is named. Cabinet dissolved
The resignation brings down the Pakatan Harapan coalition. Mahathir's party pulls out of it
Feb 25The palace says Yang di-Pertuan Agong Sultan Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah will meet all the 222 elected members of parliament before deciding on the next step
Mahathir proposes to lead a unity government, inviting lawmakers from across rival political parties to join
But the alliance defeated by Mahathir's coalition in 2018 calls for elections and rejects his idea of a grand coalition
Feb 26In his first comments since the resignation, Mahathir apologises for the political turmoil his decision brought
The veteran leader says he would return as full-time premier if he had the support of parliament and that he wanted to form a government that is not aligned with any political party
Anwar opposes a "backdoor government". Three parties in the former ruling coalition nominate him as their candidate for prime minister, setting the stage for a potential showdown between the old political rivals
Feb 27Mahathir meets the king and later tells a news conference that the king's decision is to call a special session of Parliament on March 2 to see who has majority support to become prime minister. Mahathir says there will be snap elections if nobody gets majority support
Doubts are immediately raised about Mahathir's comments and the constitutionality of the process he described
The Anwar-led group says the call for a parliamentary session to elect a new prime minister is a challenge to the rights and powers of the monarch
The palace does not comment
Feb 28The speaker in Parliament rejects Mahathir's request for a special session on March 2 without a decree from king
After the king meets all lawmakers, the palace says the monarch does not have confidence that any parliamentarian has majority support to form a new government
The palace says there will be no special parliamentary sitting but it will continue to engage with political leaders to see if any one can muster the majority to be prime minister
Mahathir's Bersatu party nominates former home minister Muhyiddin Yassin as its prime ministerial candidate. Umno and Islamist party PAS vow to back him
Feb 29Mahathir says he will stand for the premiership on behalf of the former ruling coalition, Pakatan Harapan, and that he is confident he has numbers needed to garner majority support. The coalition throws full support for Mahathir as candidate
Mahathir and Anwar are allies again
In the afternoon, the king names former home minister Muhyiddin Yassin as next prime minister, on grounds that he possibly has the majority support among lawmakers in parliament. Palace says Muhyiddin to be sworn in the next morning
Muhyiddin, 72, says he hopes Malaysians will accept the palace's decision. His support comes also from Umno and PAS, who were defeated in the 2018 elections
After nightfall, Anwar says Harapan has the majority in Parliament with 114 lawmakers backing Mahathir as a candidate. Mahathir says plans to inform the king in a letter of the support he has
Around 200 people gather late in central Kuala Lumpur to protest a "backdoor government" being formed, despite police warnings that the rally was illegal
March 1Mahathir promises to seek an urgent Parliament sitting to challenge Muhyiddin's support, but concedes he might not win
Mahathir says the king would no longer see him
Mahathir accuses Muhyiddin of plotting for a long time to take the premiership, and questions if a government involving the former ruling party would be ready to pursue graft cases against its politicians
Muhyiddin is sworn in as Malaysia's 8th prime minister. - Mkini
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