Commentary: Malaysia opposition party PAS’ overconfidence might be its undoing

Of course, the only issue is PAS’s unfavorable track record in gathering and partnership partnerships.

The single popular party that has never remained affiliated with a group it has collaborated with is this one. This is in contrast to the partnership made up of Parti Keadilan Rakyat, the Democratic Action Party, and Amanah, as well as the UMNO, Malaysian Chinese Association, Malaysia Indian Congress, Gabungan Parte Sarawak partnership.

Even in situations requiring similar collaboration, PAS has a propensity to be domineering and bulldozing its approach. The group’s refusal to budge and yield is demonstrated by its boycott of the Gerakan presidential campaign in the Malay-majority chair of Bayan Lepas.

THE Anguish OF PAS CHIEF ABDUL HADI AWANG

However, Abdul Hadi is a person on the go, and his constant need to buy the” state collapse” story shows how impatient his supporters are. Hadi Awang urged voters to elect his alliance, PN, as the state government for the six states throughout the August state elections in an effort to topple the federal government.

This is true even though state-level partnership formations have no bearing on national levels, and the federal government currently holds a two-thirds majority in parliament, making defections unlikely to be successful for the first time in 15 years.

In any case, the anti-party leaping law makes it randomly difficult for defections to occur without repercussions. A crash ultimately did not occur because the one government bloc kept its three states.

Abdul Hadi did the same for the new Pulai by-election to emphasize his desperation, claiming that gaining one more seat would spark the movement to modify the federal government, but absurd this may sound.