The single largest party in either the ruling or opposition coalition must play a dominant role in order to create political stability, according to Umno supreme council member Johari Abdul Ghani (above).
Only then, he said, would Malaysia enjoy robust economic growth and investments in the aftermath of the economic fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic.
He said this amidst speculation that Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin had issued an "ultimatum" to Umno to decide, by March 1, if it wanted to contest the next general election as part of the Perikatan Nasional governing coalition.
Umno is the single largest party in Muhyiddin's coalition, with 39 parliamentary seats to Bersatu's 31, and it will decide whether to sever ties with PN at its annual general assembly slated to be held on March 27 and 28.
Most of Umno's divisions rejected cooperation with Bersatu during their respective division-level annual general meetings last month.
"I am always of the opinion that the single largest party must either lead the government or the opposition. You cannot be somewhere in between. When you are somewhere in between, it will create lots of political instability," Johari told Malaysiakini when contacted.
Political instability when smaller parties lead coalitions
He believes the political instability started when Bersatu, a minor party that won only 13 parliamentary seats in the 2018 general election, had its founder Dr Mahathir Mohamad named as prime minister.
"The political instability led to the collapse of Pakatan Harapan," said Johari, who is a former second finance minister.
Such instability continues until today as Bersatu remains a minority governing party that controls 31 parliamentary seats, after recruiting defected lawmakers from Umno, Johari noted.
In the 14th general election, Umno secured 55 parliamentary seats, he added.
He pointed out how Umno contributed to political stability during BN's era as the Malay-based party played the dominant role in the coalition.
Asked if Umno should be given the prime minister's post, Johari said the premiership candidate should be decided by the coalition.
However, he said it was his personal opinion that the leader of another party could become the prime minister, as long as the anchor party is in control of the ruling coalition and helming significant ministries.
"But the deputy prime minister, education minister, and finance minister portfolios should be given to the anchor party; then only will the coalition be stable," he said.
"Who will be named as the prime minister will depend on who is on board. I don't mind who is governing (the country) but the leader must provide political stability," Johari added. - Mkini
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