Malaysian PM to justify shutting parliament to fight Covid

Bloomberg

Malaysia’s parliament will sit for the first time this year on Monday, providing lawmakers an opportunity to grill Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin over his government’s handling of the pandemic and the economy.
The five-day sitting will see Malaysia’s emergency declaration and bills on fake news and penalties for breaching Covid protocols finally laid before the house for legislators to scrutinise. The emergency, set to end on August 1, handed the embattled premier wide-ranging powers to tackle the coronavirus outbreak, including shuttering parliament and introducing ordinances without legislative approval.
Despite Muhyiddin’s actions, daily coronavirus cases have more than tripled since the emergency was first imposed on January 12. Confirmed cases have breached the one million mark and public anger is intensifying. Much of the country remains under lockdown as it added a record-high number of new infections for the third straight day on Sunday.
“The best way for Muhyiddin to save himself is to embrace multi-partisan governance,” said Wong Chin Huat, a professor of political science at the Jeffrey Sachs Center on Sustainable Development at Sunway University in Malaysia. Otherwise, the king’s speech in parliament in September and the tabling of the 2022 budget later this year could leave him vulnerable, said Wong. Both will be put to a vote and their defeat is equivalent to a vote of no confidence, he added.
Still, Muhyiddin is set to face colleagues from a slightly more stable position than a month ago. One major threat — the powerful United Malays National Organisation’s call for him to quit — was diffused when his cabinet, which includes UMNO members, pledged to continue backing him. UMNO MPs have also been given the party’s blessings to vote according to their conscience.
Another key risk was neutralized when the opposition coalition Pakatan Harapan said Wednesday it won’t propose a no-confidence vote against Muhyiddin.
“We only want this special sitting to focus on important Covid-19 matters, and the people’s hardship throughout this economic crisis,” said leaders Anwar Ibrahim, Lim Guan Eng, and Mohamad Sabu in the joint statement.
The government extended an olive branch ahead of the parliament’s opening, inviting opposition politicians onto a council tasked with overseeing the country’s recovery plan. It
was a move “based on collaboration, inclusion and whole-of-nation,” said Finance Minister Tengku Zafrul Abdul Aziz in a statement.

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