
Significant benefits for Anwar are achieved by establishing a two-term maximum for the best company. When political support is established, it would not need to go through a complicated and drawn-out process. It would also not require any financial commitment.
It has the potential to gain significant support both within and outside the coalition because, if anything, it increases the chances that more parliamentarians will have a chance to hold the top position. Some Rm leaders have supported it beyond the wide support of PH.
The criticism has responded to a variety of these ideas. According to PAS head Hadi Awang, the action is “against God’s will,” and parliamentarian Syahir Suleiman has demanded that any constitutional amendments also require that the primary minister become a Muslim.
This defiance is most likely a result of the awareness that a transformation of this nature might open the door for Anwar. However, PAS ‘ status is undermined by the fact that it has repeatedly backed this exact reform in the past.
This change is likely to lead to a gain for Anwar. No one would mistake Anwar for running for a second phrase given Malaysia’s current run of damaged perfect governmental terms and his difficult path to becoming prime minister.
If Anwar were to manage this change to the rules and get the following election, it might leave him with a delicate exit, which would be his most obvious advantage over Mahathir.
Francis E. Hutchinson is the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute’s Senior Fellow and Program Coordinator. The ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute’s site, Fulcrum, originally contained this remark.