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Parti Melayu Semangat 46

Malaysian political party


Malaysian political party

FieldValue
countryMalaysia
nameSpirit of 46 Malay Party
native_nameParti Melayu Semangat 46
logoLogo Parti Melayu Semangat 46.svg
logo_size150px
abbreviationS46
presidentTengku Razaleigh Hamzah
leader1_titleDeputy President
leader1_nameRais Yatim
secretary_generalSuhaimi Kamaruddin
leader2_titleYouth Chief
leader2_nameIbrahim Ali (1989-1991), Ahmad Shabery Cheek (after 1991)
leader3_titleWanita Chief
leader3_nameRahmah Osman
foundation3 June 1989
dissolution8 October 1996
splitUnited Malays National Organisation (UMNO)
successorUnited Malays National Organisation (UMNO)
headquartersKuala Lumpur, Malaysia
youth_wingPergerakan Pemuda S46
membership_year1996
membership200,000
ideologyMalay nationalism
Islamism
Conservatism
positionRight-wing
nationalAngkatan Perpaduan Ummah (1990–1996)
Gagasan Rakyat (1990–1996)
coloursYellow and green
colorcodeyellow
flag[[File:Flag of Parti Melayu Semangat 46.svgborder150px]]

Islamism Conservatism Gagasan Rakyat (1990–1996) The Parti Melayu Semangat 46 or Spirit of 46 Malay Party (S46) was a Malaysian political party. The party was formed in 1988, and dissolved in 1996. It was formed by Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah's "Team B" faction of the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), as a challenge to prime minister Mahathir Mohamad and UMNO.

Establishment

The idea of Semangat 46 first came about in 1985 or 1986 when Malaysia was experiencing an economic recession. In 1987, Razaleigh's "Team B" faction challenged Mahathir's "Team A" faction for control of UMNO. and removed all Team B members from the cabinet. Team B leaders claimed many party delegates were improperly elected, and filed suit to overturn the election. This led to UMNO being declared illegal on technical grounds in 1988. Mahathir immediately reconstituted UMNO, with only Team A members.

Razaleigh and Team B formed their own party. On 3 June 1989, Semangat 46 was officially registered with the electoral college. The first party's general meeting was held on 12 October 1989, officiated by Malaysia's first Prime Minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj. Among notable leaders that joined Semangat 46 were Marina Yusoff, Ilyani Ishak, Rais Yatim, Harun Idris, Suhaimi Kamaruddin, Ahmad Shabery Cheek, Othman Saat, Salleh Abas, Mohd Radzi Sheikh Ahmad, Tengku Azlan Sultan Abu Bakar, and Ibrahim Ali.

General election

In 1990, Semangat 46 formed two coalitions with other opposition parties to contest the 1990 Malaysian general election. The Gagasan Rakyat (GR) coalition was with the multi-racial Democratic Action Party (DAP) and Parti Rakyat Malaysia (PRM). The Angkatan Perpaduan Ummah (APU) coalition was with the Muslim parties Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), Pan-Malaysian Islamic Front (BERJASA), Parti Hizbul Muslimin Malaysia (HAMIM) and the newly formed Malaysian Indian Muslim Congress (KIMMA).

Despite these alliances, Semangat 46 did poorly in the 1990 federal election, winning only 8 of 180 seats. However, the Angkatan alliance swept the state election in Razaleigh's home state, Kelantan, winning all 39 seats. Semangat 46 won 15, PAS won 24. For the first time in UMNO history, the party failed to win any seats in a state level.

Over the next few years, Semangat 46 lost support; many of its members defected to UMNO, including the party's youth chief Ibrahim Ali. After Ibrahim left S46, the youth chief was replaced by Zulkifli Othman, which was previously the S46 Youth Johor chairman. Others remained as members but withdrew from political activity. In February 1994, Semangat 46 decided to challenge UMNO on Malay communal issues. The party was renamed Parti Melayu Semangat 46, and thus renounced its multi-ethnic stance.

In the mid-1990s, Semangat 46's relationship with DAP deteriorated, which eventually led to the breakup of the Gagasan Rakyat (GR) coalition, shortly before the 1995 Malaysian general election. At the same time, Semangat 46 had increasingly strained ties with PAS over power-sharing in Kelantan state, though they still managed to retain control of Kelantan and worked together in the 1995 election. By this time, the party's credibility was severely compromised by winning so few electoral victories and the loss of many key figures. The deputy president, Rais Yatim, lost his parliamentary seat in the 1995 election, though Tengku Razaleigh was re-elected. In the end, Semangat 46 won six parliamentary seats, with support coming mainly from Kelantan.

Dissolution

By May 1996, Semangat 46 was greatly reduced in size and influence. Razeleigh was finally worn out after spending millions of ringgit to upkeep the party. On 6 October 1997, an extraordinary general meeting were called and members voted for party dissolution. Razaleigh officially announced to the remaining 200,000 members that he would disband the party. Razaleigh rejoined UMNO with most of the party members. Some were denied re-admission to UMNO; they either left politics altogether or joined PAS.

Government offices

State governments

  • Kelantan (1990–1996)

Note: bold as Menteri Besar/Chief Minister, italic as junior partner

General election results

ElectionTotal seats wonSeats contestedTotal votesShare of votesOutcome of electionElection leader19901995
55826,39814.77%8 seat; Opposition coalition (Angkatan Perpaduan Ummah)/(Gagasan Rakyat)Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah
67616,58910.35%2 seat; Opposition coalition (Angkatan Perpaduan Ummah)/(Gagasan Rakyat)Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah

State election results

State electionState Legislative AssemblyPerlisKedahKelantanTerengganuPenangPerakPahangSelangorNegeri SembilanMalaccaJohorTotal won / Total contested
2/3 majority
1990
1995

References

Bibliography

References

  1. Hwang (2003), p. 224
  2. "Sokongan orang Melayu terhadap UMNO semakin terserlah - Keadilan sudah tidak relevan lagi".
  3. British Broadcasting Corporation Monitoring Service. (1996). "Summary of World Broadcasts". [[British Broadcasting Corporation]].
  4. "Persaingan 3 penjuru -- Keputusan di Pengkalan Pasir bakal tentukan masa depan Kelantan".
  5. Wong Chin Huat. (17 August 2007). "Splits in Umno and Opposition unity". [[The Sun (Malaysia).
  6. Mahathir won the party election with a slim 41 votes majority in the controversial [[1987 United Malays National Organisation leadership election
  7. Rodan (1996), p. 138
  8. Hwang (2003), p. 182
  9. (2008). "The Indie Story: 'PARTI MELAYU SEMANGAT 46' (Penghormatan buat UMNO LAMA) Ditulis Oleh Moderator".
  10. Hwang (2003), p. 184
  11. Francis Kok et al. (2002), p. 95
  12. Yahaya (2003), p. 5
  13. (1996-01-20). "Pas looked down on Semangat 46', say Razaleigh". [[New Straits Times]].
  14. Hwang (2003), p. 260-1
  15. Abdullah, Ashraf. (1996-10-06). "D-Day for S46 and future of Malay unity". [[New Straits Times]].
  16. (1 May 2008). "The Indie Story: 'PARTI MELAYU SEMANGAT 46' (Penghormatan buat UMNO LAMA) Moderator".
  17. Stewart (2003), p. 28
  18. (18 August 1996). "S46-Dissolve: Parti Melayu Semangat '46 To Be Dissolved On Oct 6". [[Bernama]].
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