Malaysia PM-in-waiting Anwar Wins Parliamentary By-election
Charismatic Malaysian politician Anwar Ibrahim won a by-election for a parliamentary seat with a landslide victory on Saturday in a grand political comeback to help him prepare for his eventual takeover from Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.
Port Dickson, Oct 13 (AP) Charismatic Malaysian politician Anwar Ibrahim won a by-election for a parliamentary seat with a landslide victory on Saturday in a grand political comeback to help him prepare for his eventual takeover from Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.
Anwar was designated as Mahathir's successor after the two men set aside a bitter feud and joined hands to win a stunning victory in May's general election. Anwar couldn't participate in the election due to a sodomy conviction — a charge that he alleged was politically motivated — but he was freed and received a royal pardon days after the polls.
The Election Commission said Anwar received 31,016 votes for the parliamentary seat in the southern coastal town of Port Dickson, defeating six other candidates. His closest rival secured only 7,456 votes.
He will be sworn in as a lawmaker in parliament on Monday.
Anwar was once a high-flying member of the former ruling coalition but was convicted of homosexual sodomy and corruption after a power struggle with Mahathir, who was prime minister for 22 years until 2003.
Anwar was freed in 2004 but was once again convicted for sodomy in 2015, charges he said were concocted to destroy his political career. Angered by a massive corruption scandal at a state investment fund, Mahathir made a political comeback and the two men forged an alliance that paid off in the May 9 national election.
Mahathir, the world's oldest leader at 93, has said he expects to be in office for at least two years and will keep his promise to hand over power to Anwar. Anwar has said he wants to focus on parliamentary reforms and will not interfere in Mahathir's governance.
"Attention should focus on what he would do in parliament and his relationship with those in government," said Bridget Welsh, a political science lecturer and Southeast Asia expert at John Cabot University in Rome. AP
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