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1994 Sabah state election

State election in Sabah, Malaysia


State election in Sabah, Malaysia

FieldValue
countrySabah
typelegislative
previous_election1990 Sabah state election
previous_year1990
previous_mpsList of Malaysian State Assembly Representatives (1990-95)#Sabah
next_election1999 Sabah state election
next_year1999
elected_mpsList of Malaysian State Assembly Representatives (1995-99)#Sabah
seats_for_electionAll 48 seats in the Sabah State Legislative Assembly
majority_seats25
election_date18–19 February 1994
image_size130x130px
image1File:Penampang Sabah Joseph-Pairin-Kitingan-02.jpg
leader1Joseph Pairin Kitingan
leader_since11985
leaders_seat1Tambunan
party1PBS
alliance1Gagasan Rakyat
last_election134 seats
seat_change19
seats125
image2File:Semporna Sabah Tun-Sakaran-Dandai-01.jpg
leader2Sakaran Dandai
leader_since21993
leaders_seat2Sulabayan
party2UMNO
alliance2Barisan Nasional
colour2000080
last_election2*New party*
seat_change223
seats223
titleChief Minister
before_electionJoseph Pairin Kitingan
before_partyGR-PBS
after_electionJoseph Pairin Kitingan
after_partyGR-PBS

Background

The Assembly were dissolved by Yang di-Pertua Negeri of Sabah Said Keruak on advice from Chief Minister Joseph Pairin Kitingan on 9 January 1994, 16 months before the Assembly term of 5 years expire, paving the way to a snap election.

PBS has ruled Sabah for almost 9 years since winning the 1985 Sabah state election, winning 3 state elections including 1985, and also were in Barisan Nasional from 1986 until exiting the BN in 1990 and joined opposition pact Gagasan Rakyat with DAP.

Contesting parties

Before the election, PBS had already produced 2 splinters, SAPP (which were only formed 3 weeks before on 21 January, and contesting for the first time) and AKAR (formed in 1989, and have contested in 1990 state and federal elections), both which had contested under BN banner. LDP would also contest under BN.

This was the first Sabah state election to feature peninsula-based party United Malays National Organisation (UMNO). UMNO Sabah was born of the merger between United Sabah National Organisation (USNO) and Sabah People's United Front (BERJAYA) in 1991, as a party to counter PBS influence in Sabah.

Other parties contesting included SETIA, BERSEKUTU, DAP (a partner of PBS in Gagasan Rakyat but is contesting in 2 seats against PBS), PAS and independent candidates. SETIA however, through its president Suhaidin Langkap on the eve of the election announced all 14 of its candidates withdrawal from contesting and changing their support for BN, although the candidates name were still on the ballot list.

Results

Source:

Aftermath

As per stated above, PBS won the election by a tight margin. PBS president Joseph Pairin Kitingan was sworn in as chief minister of Sabah, his fourth time, on 21 February 1994, together with the state EXCO members. However, less than a month later, as a result of defections by elected PBS assemblymen to BN, Pairin was forced to resign on 17 March 1994, and PBS was forced out of power, resulting in BN forming government in Sabah. Sakaran Dandai, leader of UMNO and BN in Sabah, was sworn in as the new Chief Minister on the same day.

Bernard Dompok, the former PBS vice-president, formed Parti Demokratik Sabah (PDS) with 18 assemblymen (PDS later changed name to UPKO). Joseph Kurup left PBS and formed Parti Bersatu Rakyat Sabah (PBRS). Jeffery Kitingan, Pairin's brother, also left PBS and joined Angkatan Keadilan Rakyat (AKAR). All of these parties stated their support to BN, and later joined BN. As a result of these defections, PBS was left with 5 seats.

The outcome of this election and the defections resulted in the term katak being coined in, the literal meaning of which is "frog", due to the actions of PBS members "jumping" to another political party.

CM rotation system

After BN regains power in Sabah, it introduced Chief Minister rotation system between Muslim bumiputera, Non-Muslim bumiputera, and Chinese leaders for two year tenure each. This was one of the promises of BN during the election campaign. Sakaran only become CM for less than one year before resigning and accepting the Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah role on 1 January 1995; Salleh Said Keruak replaced him. Yong Teck Lee of SAPP then becomes CM from 1996 to 1998, before Bernard Dompok took the CM role from 1998 to 1999, when the Sabah Assembly was dissolved to make way for the state election on February that year.

References

References

  1. The count includes seats won by UMNO, [[Sabah Progressive Party. SAPP]] and [[Liberal Democratic Party (Malaysia). LDP]], the component parties of BN.
  2. (20 February 1994). "Victory by a whisker". news.google.com.
  3. (10 January 1994). "Sabah dissolves Assembly".
  4. (19 February 1994). "Parti Setia's candidate Kiwon wages lonely war as colleagues abandon field". New Straits Times.
  5. "HISTORICAL-ELECTION-RESULTS/1994-SABAH-STATE-ELECTIONS/1994_SABAH_DUN_RESULTS.csv at main · TindakMalaysia/HISTORICAL-ELECTION-RESULTS".
  6. (22 February 1994). "Pairin sworn in as CM".
  7. "Historical Background".
  8. (18 April 1994). "The only honourable thing to do". eresources.nlb.gov.sg.
  9. Kalimullah Hassan. (18 November 2007). "OPINION: Reforms yes, but not through violence in the streets". New Straits Times.
  10. (18 April 1994). "New Sabah leader sworn in". eresources.nlb.gov.sg.
  11. (1999). "Regime change and regime maintenance in Asia and Pacific - Discussion paper No 24 - "Kataks", Kadazan-Dusun nationalism and development: The 1999 Sabah state election". The Department of Political and Social Change - Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies The Australian National University.
  12. (28 December 1994). "Salleh sworn in as new Sabah Chief Minister". New Straits Times.
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