Malaysian kingmaker urges opposition to stop undercutting Anwar

Published Mon, Jan 29, 2024 · 08:32 AM

A KEY backer of Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s fragile ruling alliance urged the nation’s politicians to stop undermining the government, arguing the country needs political stability to focus on pressing economic challenges.

Abang Johari Tun Openg – who leads Malaysia’s largest state, Sarawak, on the island of Borneo – said he’s told his political colleagues to “stop creating so many problems” for the 14-month-old government. That followed reports that opposition leaders met in Dubai last month to discuss undercutting Anwar, Malaysia’s fifth prime minister since 2018.  

“There are many external problems that can affect us,” the premier told Bloomberg News in his office in Kuching city. “We must be able to look at ourselves and how we can strengthen our own competitive advantage,” he said, adding that “leaders cannot concentrate” if domestic politicians keep creating instability.

The warning from Abang Jo, as the 73-year-old premier is popularly known, comes just over a year after he threw the support of his state’s ruling coalition, Gabungan Parti Sarawak (GPS), behind Anwar when the 2022 elections produced a hung parliament. GPS – which has 23 seats in Malaysia’s 222-member lower house – had been courted by both Anwar and his rival, Muhyiddin Yassin, after the vote.

“We want a stable federal government regardless of who is in power,” Abang Johari said. Ever since then-Prime Minister Najib Razak stepped down following the 2018 election, Malaysia’s prime ministers have lasted less than two years on the job on average.

Moody’s Investors Service echoed Abang Johari’s concerns about the economic impact of the political turmoil. In a Jan 16 report, Moody’s said, “Entrenched concerns around the stability of the unity government risks fomenting negative investor perceptions of Malaysia’s political risks and policy gridlock, hampering the country’s longer-term economic competitiveness.”

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The tumult has weighed on Malaysia’s currency, with the ringgit the worst-performing currency since the start of 2023 among emerging markets in Asia. It has not reversed that slide in 2024, falling 2.9 per cent against the US dollar this month.

Support for Anwar also tumbled to 50 per cent late last year from 68 per cent in December 2022. About 43 per cent of respondents said they were dissatisfied with the economy, up from 19 per cent soon after he took power.

But with Anwar staving off his political opponents for now, the partnership Abang Johari has established with the federal government has been a boon for Sarawak and its population of about 2.8 million. The premier said he’s pressing ahead with plans for Sarawak to own its own bank, port and airline while providing free tertiary education for locals.

“Abang Johari and Anwar need each other,” said Awang Azman Awang Pawi, a socio-political analyst from Universiti Malaya. He said the state’s voters might not take kindly to the alternative to Anwar – the Islamic party PAS, the biggest national opposition party.  

Sarawak is the only state in Malaysia with a majority non-Muslim population.

Economic ambitions

In the interview, Abang Johari said he’s happy with how Anwar has dealt with Sarawak, having facilitated the transfer of Bintulu port, northeast of Kuching, to the state and backed Sarawak’s takeover of Malaysia Airlines’ subsidiary, MASWings – a move that will make Sarawak the first Malaysian state with its own airline.

Abang Johari said the airline is a strategic asset for the state, which wants to see airfares stabilise to help boost travel to Borneo, an island divided between Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei.

“We are an island, you have to fly,” he said. “If we don’t stabilise the price, then we are in a difficult situation.”

Sarawak also looks set to finalise a deal to have its own bank in the coming days. Abang Johari said there is a “bank on the market” and that an effort to seek regulatory approvals for a takeover are underway.

Affin Bank briefing

Affin Bank, previously reported as being the lender of interest to Sarawak, has announced a special briefing with Abang Johari in Kuala Lumpur on Tuesday. The bank is majority-controlled by the Armed Forces Pension Fund.

“Sarawak used to have banks,” he said. “Then they were all absorbed into bigger, centralised banking groups. We don’t have a banking instrument to boost our small and medium enterprises.”

Abang Johari has been adept at flexing his influence, said Universiti Malaya’s Awang Azman.

“Federal power is quite weak,” he said. “They are using the weakness to gain more power.”

Despite the emphasis on Sarawak’s autonomy, Abang Johari said his state remains committed to Malaysia.

After Sarawak was recognised as a high-income state by the World Bank last year, Abang Johari said his next challenge is to boost incomes in rural areas, where poverty rates remain high. As part of that effort, he said that starting in 2026, Sarawak will provide free tertiary education for locals studying in Sarawak-owned universities – a first for a Malaysian state.

Political heritage

The son of Sarawak’s first governor, Abang Johari has had a role in every administration since 1982. Yet beyond being an influential voice in national politics, he never sought a formal role in the federal government.

He moved quickly in 2018 when the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition lost federal power for the first time since independence. The premier led his Sarawak-based alliance out of Barisan and rebranded it as a regional power, emphasising a “Sarawak First” theme. His GPS coalition now controls 80 of 82 state assembly seats – a feat that Sarawak’s longest tenured chief minister, former Governor Taib Mahmud, did not manage to achieve in 33 years in power.

And while Sarawak’s economy under Taib was oriented towards heavy industries, logging and fossil fuels, Abang Johari – whose government changed the title of his role to premier from the chief minister – says he is trying to shift the state towards new energy sources, attracting talent and putting less emphasis on forestry.

“His time is different, my time is different,” Abang Johari said of Taib, who retired this month at age 87. BLOOMBERG

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