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First Rahman cabinet


FieldValue
cabinet_nameFirst Rahman cabinet
jurisdictionMalaya
cabinet_number1st
flagFlag of Malaya.svg
imageCabinet of Malaya, 1955.jpg
captionChief minister Tunku Abdul Rahman (sitting, third from right) with the first Malayan cabinet at the King's House, 9 August 1955.
image_size300px
date_formed9 August 1955
date_dissolved19 August 1959
government_headTunku Abdul Rahman
deputy_government_headAbdul Razak Hussein (19571959)
state_head{{unbulleted list
political_partiesAlliance Party:
*borderdarkgray}} UMNO
*borderdarkgray}} Malayan Chinese Association
*borderdarkgray}} Malayan Indian Congress
legislature_statusCoalition government
opposition_partyPan-Malayan Islamic Party
opposition_leaderAhmad Tuan Hussein (de facto)
election[1955 Malayan general election](1955-malayan-general-election)last_election=[1959 Malayan general election](1959-malayan-general-election)legislature_term=
successorSecond Rahman cabinetincumbent=[9 August 1955](1955-malayan-general-election) [19 August 1959](1959-malayan-general-election)members_number=10

|Elizabeth II (19551957) |Abdul Rahman (19571959)

  • UMNO
  • Malayan Chinese Association
  • Malayan Indian Congress

The first Rahman cabinet (9 August 1955 19 August 1959) was the first cabinet of the Federation of Malaya following the conclusion of Malaya's first nationwide general elections held on 27 July 1955. It was formed by chief minister-designate Tunku Abdul Rahman of the Alliance Party upon the invitation by the High Commissioner of Malaya, Donald MacGillivray from the King's House on 2 August 1955.

The cabinet was sworn on 9 August 1955 and dissolved on 19 August 1959 prior to Malaya's second general election. The original cabinet had ten ministers and five assistant ministers. There were two reshuffles in the cabinet, the first on 29 February 1956 and a second on 29 August 1957. The tenure of the cabinet extended beyond the independence of Malaya on 31 August 1957. It was the last cabinet to hold office under British protectorate and was the first to hold office after independence.

History

In Malaya's first nationwide general elections held on 27 July 1955, the Alliance Party achieved a major landslide by winning 51 of the 52 seats it contested. Tunku Abdul Rahman, leader of the Alliance, became chief minister-designate tasked to form the cabinet.

Five important positions or ministries in the government, the chief secretary, financial secretary, attorney-general, and the ministers of economics affairs and defence were reserved for the High Commissioner, but were expected to support the Alliance in the Federal Legislative Council. Discussions about the cabinet were made between Tunku and Tan Cheng Lock on 31 July 1955, and were discussed with and accepted by High Commissioner Donald MacGillivray on 1 August at the King's House.

The Alliance tethered around deciding 10 or 11 ministers in the cabinet. A new unnamed ministry was proposed for Malacca Central member of parliament Tan Siew Sin, but he refused the offer and the ministry was never formed. K. L. Devaser was also proposed to be the cabinet's first Indian minister but it went to V. T. Sambanthan instead. The Alliance also planned for five assistant ministers but believed it needed at least two in the government.

On 2 August 1955, the first iteration of the cabinet was announced, involving 10 ministers and 5 assistant ministers. There were six Malays, three Chinese and an Indian minister, reflecting the three major communal parties within the Alliance (UMNO, MCA, and MIC). The reception was favorable even among opposition politicians and union leaders, with praise given to its relatively young ministers and its multiracial composition. The ministers were sworn in at a private ceremony in the King's House on 9 August. The cabinet dissolved on 19 August 1959 in anticipation of the country's second general election held the same day.

1956 reshuffle

After the Treaty of London, a reshuffle of the Malayan government was seen as inevitable. On 28 February 1956, a reshuffle was announced by Tunku Abdul Rahman. The ministries of Natural Resources and Communications were abolished the former divided between the Ministry of Agriculture and Local Government; the latter merged with the Ministry of Works to form the Ministry of Works and Communications. The ministries of Defence and Finance were introduced in the reshuffle.

Reappointments include Tunku as the inaugural Minister of Internal Defence and Security, Ismail Abdul Rahman from Natural Resources as the inaugural Minister of Commerce and Industry, H. S. Lee from Transport as the inaugural Minister of Finance, Ong Yoke Lin from Communications to Transport, Khir Johari as Assistant Minister of Works and Communications, and Abdul Rahman Talib as Assistant Minister for Local Government. The reshuffle was confirmed on 29 February.

1957 reshuffle

In anticipation of Malayan independence on 31 August 1957, a reshuffle was announced as early as 7 August. As late as 27 August, the Alliance Party leadership decided that assistant ministers would be abolished from the new government. On 28 August, the new list of ministers from the reshuffled government was announced, which featured a complete reshuffle except for three ministers apart from the prime minister in the original government. The new ministers were sworn in by the inaugural King of Malaysia, Abdul Rahman of Negeri Sembilan on 31 August at the Istana Negara.

Although tipped to replace Leong Yew Koh as the Minister of Health, Assistant Minister of Education Too Joon Hing was removed from the cabinet in the 1957 reshuffle and was reassigned to a diplomatic position. The removal created a minor controversy as Tunku insisted that his role remained in the government despite its abolishment after independence, much to the surprise of the new education minister Khir Johari. Too's term was terminated on 31 December 1957, four months after independence.

List of ministers

Original composition

On 2 August 1955, the first iteration of the cabinet was announced, involving ten ministers and five assistant ministers.

PortfolioPortraitMinister
(Birth–Death)
ConstituencyTerm of officeNotesTook officeLeft officeFull ministersAssistant ministers
Chief minister[[File:Tunku abd rahman (cropped, 4to3 port, bypass).jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerHis Highness**Tunku Abdul Rahman**{{ScriptArabتونكو عبدالرحمن}}(19031990)
Minister of Education{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**Abdul Razak Hussein**{{ScriptArabعبد الرزاق حسين}}(1922–1976)
Minister of Natural Resources{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**Ismail Abdul Rahman**{{ScriptArabاسماعيل عبدالرحمن}}(19151973)
Minister of Transport[[File:Tun Henry H S Lee (cropped, 4to3 portrait).jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerColonel Tun Sir**H. S. Lee**{{ScriptChinese李孝式}}(19001988)
Minister of Agriculture and Co-operatives[[File:Aziz ishak.jpg108x108px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerThe Honorable**Aziz Ishak**{{ScriptArabعزيز اسحاق}}(1915–1999)MP for Selangor Barat
Minister of Health[[File:Leong yew koh.jpg111x111px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerMajor General Tun**Leong Yew Koh**{{ScriptChinese梁宇皋}}(1888–1963)MP for Ipoh-Menglembu9 August
1955
Minister of Works[[File:Sardon-jubir.jpg115x115px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun Dato' Seri Utama**Sardon Jubir**{{ScriptArabسعدون زبير}}(1917–1985)MP for Segamat9 August
1955
Minister of Lands, Mines and Local Government[[File:Sulaiman abdul rahman.jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerDato'**Suleiman Abdul Rahman**{{ScriptArabسوليايمان عبدالرحمن}}(1912–1963)MP for Johore Bahru9 August
1955
Minister of Communications, Telecommunications and Posts[[File:President John F. Kennedy Meets with Ambassador Omar Ong Yoke Lin of the Federation of Malaya (cropped, 4to3).jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**Ong Yoke Lin**{{ScriptChinese翁毓麟}}(1917–1985)MP for Kuala Lumpur Barat9 August
1955
Minister of Labour{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**V. T. Sambanthan**திருஞானசம்பந்தன்(1919–1979)MP for Kinta Utara9 August
1955
Assistant Minister of Home Affairs[[File:Bahaman Samsudin.jpg105x105px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTan Sri**Bahaman Samsudin**{{ScriptArabبهامن شمس الدين}}(1906–1995)MP for Telok Anson9 August
1955
Assistant Minister of Education[[File:Too joon hing (cropped, 3to4 portrait).jpg105x105px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerDato'**Too Joon Hing**{{ScriptChinese朱運興}}(1911–2002)MP for Kinta Selatan9 August
1955
Assistant Minister of Agriculture and Co-operatives[[File:Khir Johari.jpg108x108px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTan Sri**Mohamad Khir Johari**{{ScriptArabمحمد خير جوهري}}(1923–2006)
Assistant Minister of Health[[File:Abdul rahman talib 01.jpg104x104px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerThe Honorable**Abdul Rahman Talib**{{ScriptArabعبدالرحمن طالب}}(1916–1968)MP for Pahang Timor9 August
1955
Assistant Minister of Works[[File:Coat of arms of the Federation of Malaya.svg78x78px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTan Sri**Abdul Khalid Awang Osman**{{ScriptArabعبدالخالد اوڠ عثمان}}(1925–1986)MP for Kelantan Selatan9 August
1955

Reshuffled ministers (1956)

The cabinet reshuffle on 29 February 1956 abolished the ministries of Natural Resources and Telecommunications, introduced the ministries of Defence and Finance, and reassigned three ministers and two assistant ministers.

PortfolioPortraitMinister
(Birth–Death)
ConstituencyTerm of officeNotesTook officeLeft officeFull ministersAssistant ministers
Chief minister[[File:Tunku abd rahman (cropped, 4to3 port, bypass).jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerHis Highness**Tunku Abdul Rahman**{{ScriptArabتونكو عبدالرحمن}}(19031990)
Minister of Defence29 Feb.
195630 August
1957Ministry created on 29 February 1956.
Minister of Finance[[File:Tun Henry H S Lee (cropped, 4to3 portrait).jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerColonel Tun Sir**H. S. Lee**{{ScriptChinese李孝式}}(19001988)
Minister of Commerce and Industry{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**Ismail Abdul Rahman**{{ScriptArabاسماعيل عبدالرحمن}}(19151973)
Minister of Transport[[File:President John F. Kennedy Meets with Ambassador Omar Ong Yoke Lin of the Federation of Malaya (cropped, 4to3).jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**Ong Yoke Lin**{{ScriptChinese翁毓麟}}(1917–1985)MP for Kuala Lumpur Barat29 Feb.
1956
Assistant Minister of Works and Communications[[File:Khir Johari.jpg108x108px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTan Sri**Mohamad Khir Johari**{{ScriptArabمحمد خير جوهري}}(1923–2006)
Assistant Minister of Lands, Mines and Local Government[[File:Abdul rahman talib 01.jpg104x104px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerThe Honorable**Abdul Rahman Talib**{{ScriptArabعبدالرحمن طالب}}(1916–1968)MP for Pahang Timor29 Feb.
1956

Merdeka cabinet (1957)

The cabinet reshuffle in anticipation of Malayan independence was announced on 28 August 1957, featuring a complete reshuffle except for three ministers apart from the prime minister in the original government and the removal of all assistant ministers. Health minister Leong Yew Koh, assistant minister of education Too Joon Hing, and assistant minister of works Awang Khalid Awang Hassan were removed from cabinet.

PortfolioPortraitMinister
(Birth–Death)
ConstituencyTerm of officeNotesTook officeLeft office
Prime minister[[File:Tunku abd rahman (cropped, 4to3 port, bypass).jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerHis Highness**Tunku Abdul Rahman**
Minister of External Affairs31 August
195719 August
1959
Deputy prime minister{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**Abdul Razak Hussein**
Minister of Finance[[File:Tun Henry H S Lee (cropped, 4to3 portrait).jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerColonel Tun Sir**H. S. Lee**
Minister of Commerce and Industry[[File:Tan Siew Sin.jpg113x113px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**Tan Siew Sin**
Minister of Education[[File:Khir Johari.jpg108x108px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTan Sri**Mohamad Khir Johari**
Minister Plentipotentiary{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**Ismail Abdul Rahman**
Minister of Interior and Justice[[File:Sulaiman abdul rahman.jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerDato'**Suleiman Abdul Rahman**{{ScriptArabسوليايمان عبدالرحمن}}(1912–1963)
Minister of Natural Resources[[File:Bahaman Samsudin.jpg105x105px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTan Sri**Bahaman Samsudin**{{ScriptArabبهامن شمس الدين}}(1906–1995)
Minister of Transport[[File:Abdul rahman talib 01.jpg104x104px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerThe Honorable**Abdul Rahman Talib**{{ScriptArabعبدالرحمن طالب}}(1916–1968)
Minister of Agriculture
and Co-operatives[[File:Aziz ishak.jpg108x108px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerThe Honorable**Aziz Ishak**{{ScriptArabعزيز اسحاق}}
Minister of Health{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**V. T. Sambanthan**திருஞானசம்பந்தன்(1919–1979)
Minister of Labour and Social Welfare[[File:President John F. Kennedy Meets with Ambassador Omar Ong Yoke Lin of the Federation of Malaya (cropped, 4to3).jpg106x106px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun**Ong Yoke Lin**{{ScriptChinese翁毓麟}}(1917–1985)
Minister of Works, Posts and Telecommunications[[File:Sardon-jubir.jpg115x115px]]{{unbulleted listitem_style=text-align:centerTun Dato' Seri Utama**Sardon Jubir**{{ScriptArabسعدون زبير}}(1917–1985)

Notes

References

References

  1. (28 July 1955). "Alliance rules Malaya". [[Singapore Tiger Standard.
  2. (30 July 1955). "Party leaders take time off to cool heels". [[Singapore Tiger Standard.
  3. (31 July 1955). "Rahman{{ndash}}Tan Talks". [[Singapore Tiger Standard.
  4. (30 July 1955). "Alliance controls 70 votes". [[The Straits Times]].
  5. (2 August 1955). "The 10 who will rule". [[The Straits Times]].
  6. (4 August 1955). "Cabinet making talks set at King’s House". [[The Straits Times.
  7. (31 July 1955). "Mr. Tan Siew Sin declines cabinet post". [[Singapore Tiger Standard.
  8. (3 August 1955). "Cabinet is a good choice, says the public". [[The Straits Times]].
  9. (3 August 1955). "A sound cabinet". [[The Straits Times]].
  10. (9 August 1955). "Tunku's final briefing". [[Singapore Tiger Standard.
  11. (18 August 1959). "Changes likely in the cabinet". [[The Straits Times]].
  12. (11 February 1956). "Tengku to give home affairs to new man". [[The Straits Times]].
  13. (28 February 1956). "Cabinet shuffle settled". [[The Straits Times]].
  14. (8 March 1956). "Tengku takes over defence today". [[The Straits Times.
  15. (7 August 1957). "Merdeka reshuffle of top Government posts". [[The Straits Times]].
  16. (27 August 1957). "Alliance drops a bombshell". [[Singapore Tiger Standard.
  17. (4 September 1957). "Only 3 men stay put in cabinet switch". [[The Straits Times.
  18. (1 September 1957). "The Agong takes his oath, then swears in the Premier and Cabinet". [[The Straits Times]].
  19. (8 August 1957). "Full Ministers". [[The Straits Times]].
  20. (14 November 1957). "He is...he isn't...Mr. Too mystery deepens". [[The Straits Times]].
  21. (22 January 1958). "Too mystery is solved". [[The Straits Times]].
  22. Sabai, Rosaline Mapong. (10 September 2004). "Mesyuarat kali pertama kabinet merdeka".
  23. (2 August 1955). "10-man cabinet picked". [[Singapore Tiger Standard.
  24. (24 August 1957). "Staff thanked". [[The Straits Times]].
  25. (11 August 1957). "MacG names the two governors". [[The Straits Times]].
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