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KUALA LUMPUR – Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim on Monday received the backing of two-thirds of Malaysias parliamentarians in a confidence vote, cementing his position as the premier with the strongest majority since 2008.

The confidence motion for Datuk Seri Anwar, 75, was passed by a voice vote which usually indicates strong majority support in the 222-member Lower House during a special Parliament sitting, the first time that Parliament had sat since he became Prime Minister on Nov 24.

The motion was tabled by Deputy Prime Minister Fadillah Yusof. A total of 12 lawmakers from both sides of the political divide debated the motion.

Newly-installed opposition leader Hamzah Zainudin from Perikatan Nasional (PN), which has 74 lawmakers, dubbed the confidence motion a gimmick as it took place after a deal had already been signed between all the parties in Mr Anwars government.

Under the deal, called a memorandum of agreement, all parties undertook to back Mr Anwar in any confidence motion or supply Bills. They also agreed that rogue MPs who failed to do so would lose their lawmaker status under the new anti party-hopping law.

Datuk Seri Hamzah said: When you sign an agreement to force someone to vote for you, we feel it is (done) under duress. It is not fair for some MPs. Then youre not sure if people really support you or simply because of this agreement

The PN MPs abstained from the confidence motion, with PN chief whip Takiyuddin Hassan saying that they did not want to legitimise the unconstitutional coalition agreement.

Mr Anwar leads what is dubbed by his administration as a unity government, after the Nov 19 general election resulted in a hung Parliament. It comprises his Pakatan Harapan coalition, the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition and multiple smaller outfits and independent MPs.

Having supermajority backing allows Mr Anwars government to make constitutional amendments, in addition to passing crucial supply Bills which only need a simple majority to gain passage in Parliament.

The last prime minister to command this level of support in Parliament was Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, whose BN controlled an overwhelming 198 out of 222 Parliament seats just before the general election in 2008. No Malaysian party has singlehandedly won a supermajority since.

On Monday, Mr Anwars government also voted in their candidate for Parliament Speaker with a strong majority. Datuk Johari Abdul, a former three-term MP and former chief whip for Mr Anwars Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR), was elected as Speaker with 147 votes, just one shy of a two-thirds majority.

PN had nominated Tan Sri Radzi Sheikh Ahmad, an ex-home minister and former senator, for the role of Speaker, but he obtained only 74 votes all from PN, the only coalition in the opposition.

The government also managed to elect its deputy speaker candidates Madam Alice Lau from Democratic Action Party, a component of PH, and Datuk Ramli Mohd Nor from BN. Both are MPs for the wards of Lanang and Cameron Highlands respectively. Mr Ramli was elected with 148 votes.

Mr Anwars government is expected to pass a temporary supplementary expenditure Bill in Parliament on Tuesday, while it prepares a new iteration of the 2023 federal budget, which did not gain Parliamentary passage before the Lower House was dissolved in October to pave the way for the Nov 19 polls.

His government is seeking RM56 billion (S$17 billion) in supplementary expenditure, a fraction of the RM372.3 billion budget that was tabled by Mr Anwars predecessor Ismail Sabri Yaakob in October, just before Parliament was dissolved.

A new budget is expected to be tabled by Mr Anwar in early 2023, as he looks to further consolidate his position before crucial state assembly elections in mid-2023. These polls will ostensibly act as a barometer for the level of support and approval his government has. More On This Topic Interactive: How a divided Malaysia gave rise to Perikatan Nasionals teal tsunami Anwars move to team up with Barisan Nasional may backfire Despite winning only 74 seats in Parliament, PN primarily led by Malay Muslim parties Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia and Parti Islam SeMalaysia is seen as leading a green wave of support in many Malay heartlands and stands a strong chance of making further gains in the six state assemblies that are due to hold polls next year.

Shortly after being appointed as PM, Mr Anwars PH lost their long-held Padang Serai ward to PN with a 16,000 vote majority. PHs government partner BN only managed to retain the Tioman state seat in Pahang by a three-digit majority, after a strong challenge by PN.

Both seats held an election on Dec 7 after the deaths of candidates in the days leading up to the Nov 19 general election forced the Election Commission to delay the election for the two wards. More On This Topic Malaysias poll results signal a hardening of the ethnic divide Why young Malaysian voters are drawn to Perikatan Nasional

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