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Dewan Rakyat

The Dewan Rakyat (English: 'House of Representatives'; lit.'People's Assembly') is the lower house of the bicameral Parliament, the federal legislature of Malaysia. The chamber and its powers are established by Article 44 of the Constitution of Malaysia. The Dewan Rakyat sits in the Houses of Parliament in Kuala Lumpur, along with the Dewan Negara, the upper house.

House of Representatives

Dewan Rakyat
15th Parliament
Type
Type
Leadership
Johari Abdul, PH-PKR
since 19 December 2022
Deputy Speaker I
Ramli Mohd Nor, BN-UMNO
since 19 December 2022
Deputy Speaker II
Alice Lau, PH-DAP
since 19 December 2022
Nizam Mydin
since 13 May 2020
Anwar Ibrahim, PH-PKR
since 24 November 2022
Deputy Prime Minister I
Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, BN-UMNO
since 3 December 2022
Deputy Prime Minister II
Fadillah Yusof, GPS-PBB
since 3 December 2022
Hamzah Zainudin, PN-BERSATU
since 10 December 2022
Structure
Seats222
Political groups
(As of 10 December 2022)

Government (148)

  PH (82)
  BN (30)
  GPS (23)
  GRS (6)
  WARISAN (3)
  KDM (2)
  PBM (1)

Opposition (74)

  PN (74)
Committees
5
Length of term
Up to 5 years
Elections
First-past-the-post
Last election
19 November 2022
Next election
By 17 February 2028
Meeting place
Dewan Rakyat chamber
Malaysian Houses of Parliament,
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Website
Official website

The Dewan Rakyat is a directly elected body consisting of 222 members known as Members of Parliament (MPs). Members are elected by first-past-the-post voting with one member from each federal constituency. Members hold their seats until the Dewan Rakyat is dissolved, the term of which is constitutionally limited to five years after an election. The number of seats each state or territory is entitled to is fixed by Article 46 of the Constitution.

While the concurrence of both chambers of Parliament is normally necessary for legislation to be enacted, the Dewan Rakyat holds significantly more power in practice; the Dewan Negara very rarely rejects bills that have been passed by the Dewan Rakyat and the Dewan Rakyat can bypass the Dewan Negara if it refuses to pass a specific law twice, with at least one year in between. The Cabinet is solely responsible to the Dewan Rakyat, and the prime minister only has to maintain the support of the lower house.

History

The history of the Dewan Rakyat can be traced back during the Federal Legislative Council era. At that time, 52 out of the 100-member council were elected directly by the people using first-past-the-post system, returning one representatives from each constituencies. The council was dissolved in 1959, a year ahead of its expiration term to pave the way for a new election for the new Dewan Rakyat, which will be the lower house for the Parliament of Malaysia.

The voting system was retained from the previous election, and has since taken place in the subsequent elections post-independence. The number of seats increased to 104, abolishing the nominated seats in favour of elected members. The ruling Alliance returned as the Government with a majority of 44 seats. Tunku Abdul Rahman reelected as the Prime Minister, while the new Parliament convened on 2 September 1959.

After the formation of Malaysia, a special autonomy status allowing representatives from Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore to be elected indirectly by the state assemblies. Therefore, in 1964 elections, only 65% of the total seats were contested. The Alliance retained its position with a higher margin.

The 1969 elections marked the first time Alliance failed to win a supermajority and majority popular vote. The racial unrests resulted in the Parliament being suspended until 1971. Upon the reopening of the Parliament, the Alliance returned with a supermajority government after Bornean local parties, PAS and GERAKAN joined the coalition, later to be known as Barisan Nasional.

Membership

Members are referred to as "Members of Parliament" ("MPs") or "Ahli Dewan Rakyat" (lit.'member of the Dewan Rakyat') in Malay. The term of office is as long as the member wins in the elections.

A member of the Dewan Rakyat must be at least 21 years of age and must not concurrently be a member of the Dewan Negara. The presiding officer of the Dewan Rakyat is the Speaker, who is elected at the beginning of each Parliament or after the vacation of the post, by the MPs. Two Deputy Speakers are also elected, and one of them sits in place of the Speaker when he is absent. The Dewan Rakyat machinery is supervised by the Clerk of the House who is appointed by the King; he may only be removed from office through the manner prescribed for judges or by mandatory retirement at age 60.[1]

As of the 2018 general election, the Dewan Rakyat has 222 elected members. Members are elected from federal constituencies drawn by the Election Commission. Constituency boundaries are redrawn every ten years based on the latest census.

Each Dewan Rakyat lasts for a maximum of five years, after which a general election must be called. In the general election, voters select a candidate to represent their constituency in the Dewan Rakyat. The first-past-the-post voting system is used; the candidate who gains the most votes wins the seat.

Before a general election can be called, the King must first dissolve Parliament on the advice of the Prime Minister.[1] According to the Constitution, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong has the right at his own discretion to either grant or withhold consent to dissolve the parliament.

Powers and procedure

Parliament is the legislative branch of the federal government and is responsible for passing, amending and repealing primary legislation. These are known as Acts of Parliament.

Members of Parliament possess parliamentary privilege and are permitted to speak on any subject without fear of censure outside Parliament; the only body that can censure an MP is the House Committee of Privileges. Immunity is effective from the moment a member of Parliament is sworn in, and only applies when that member has the floor; it does not apply to statements made outside the House. An exception is made by the Sedition Act passed by Parliament in the wake of the 13 May racial riots in 1969. Under the Act, all public discussion of repealing certain Articles of the Constitution dealing with Bumiputra privileges such as Article 153 is illegal. This prohibition is extended to all members of both houses of Parliament.[2] Members of Parliament are also forbidden from criticising the King and judges.[3]

The executive government, comprising the Prime Minister and his Cabinet, is usually drawn from members of Parliament; most of its members are typically members of the Dewan Rakyat. After a general election or the resignation or death of a Prime Minister, the King selects the Prime Minister, who is the head of government but constitutionally subordinate to him, from the Dewan Rakyat. In practice, this is usually the leader of the largest party in Parliament. The Prime Minister then submits a list containing the names of members of his Cabinet, who will then be appointed as Ministers by the King. Members of the Cabinet must also be members of Parliament. If the Prime Minister loses the confidence of the Dewan Rakyat, whether by losing a no-confidence vote or failing to pass a budget, he must either advise the King to dissolve Parliament and hold a general election or submit his resignation to the King. The King has the discretion to grant or withhold consent to the dissolution. If consent is withheld, the government must resign and the King would appoint a new Prime Minister that has the support of the majority of members of Parliament. The Cabinet formulates government policy and drafts bills, meeting in private. Its members must accept "collective responsibility" for the decisions the Cabinet makes, even if some members disagree with it; if they do not wish to be held responsible for Cabinet decisions, they must resign. Although the Constitution makes no provision for it, there is also a Deputy Prime Minister, who is the de facto successor of the Prime Minister should he die or be otherwise incapacitated.[4]

A proposed act of law begins its life when a particular government minister or ministry prepares a first draft with the assistance of the Attorney-General's Department. The draft, known as a bill, is then discussed by the Cabinet. If it is agreed to submit it to Parliament, the bill is distributed to all MPs. It then goes through three readings before the Dewan Rakyat. The first reading is where the minister or his deputy submits it to Parliament. At the second reading, the bill is discussed and debated by MPs. At the third reading, the minister or his deputy formally submit it to a vote for approval. A simple majority is usually required to pass the bill, but in certain cases, such as amendments to the constitution, a two-thirds majority is required. Should the bill pass, it is sent to the Dewan Negara, where the three readings are carried out again. The Dewan Negara may choose not to pass the bill, but this only delays its passage by a month, or in some cases, a year; once this period expires, the bill is considered to have been passed by the house.[5]

If the bill passes, it is presented to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong who has 30 days to consider the bill. Should he disagree with it, he returns it to Parliament with a list of suggested amendments. Parliament must then reconsider the bill and its proposed amendments and return it to the King within 30 days if they pass it again. The King then has another 30 days to give the royal assent; otherwise, it passes into law. The law does not take effect until it is published in the Government Gazette.[6]

The government attempts to maintain top secrecy regarding bills debated; MPs generally receive copies of bills only a few days before they are debated, and newspapers are rarely provided with copies of the bills before they are debated. In some cases, such as a 1968 amendment to the Constitution, an MP may be presented with a bill to be debated on the same day it is tabled, and all three readings may be carried out that day itself.[7] In rare circumstances, the government may release a White paper containing particular proposals that will eventually be incorporated into a bill; this has been done for legislation such as the Universities and University Colleges Act.[8]

Although the process above assumes only the government can propose bills, there also exists a process for private member's bills. However, unlike most other legislatures following the Westminster system, few members of Parliament actually introduce bills.[9] To present a private member's bill, the member in question must seek the leave of the House in question to debate the bill before it is moved. Originally, it was allowed to debate the bill in the process of seeking leave, but this process was discontinued by an amendment to the Standing Orders of the Dewan Rakyat.[10] It is also possible for members of the Dewan Negara to initiate bills; however, only cabinet ministers are permitted to move finance-related bills, which must be tabled in the Dewan Rakyat.[11]

It is often alleged that legislation proposed by the opposition parties, which must naturally be in the form of a private member's bill, is not seriously considered by Parliament. Some have gone as far as to claim that the rights of members of Parliament to debate proposed bills have been severely curtailed by incidents such as an amendment of the Standing Orders that permitted the Speaker to amend written copies of MPs' speeches before they were made. Nevertheless, it is admitted by some of these critics that "government officials often face sharp questioning in Parliament, although this is not always reported in detail in the press."[12]

Special Chamber

In 2016, Speaker Pandikar Amin Mulia introduced a Special Chamber of the Dewan Rakyat which holds proceedings separately from the main house, to "allow matters of national importance or urgency to be discussed without interrupting the normal proceedings of the Lower House."[13] Government and opposition leaders both welcomed the move, with Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Azalina Othman Said, Democratic Action Party whip Anthony Loke, and People's Justice Party whip Johari Abdul Ghani issuing favourable statements to the press.[13] Amendments to the Standing Orders of the Dewan Rakyat in April 2016 established the Special Chamber to host debates on "any matter of administration for which the government is responsible" or "a defined matter of urgent public importance".[14]

Liew Chin Tong, at the time an opposition Member of Parliament, claimed he had lobbied Pandikar to institute the Special Chamber, which he has said takes inspiration from both the Australian and British parliaments. Liew has proposed expanding the remit of the Special Chamber: "A full-fledged second chamber should take away all constituency-specific issues off the main chamber and move them to the second chamber so that the main chamber focuses only on the most important things."[15] When he and Pandikar spoke at a panel on parliamentary reform in 2021, Liew also proposed expanding the amount of time allotted for Special Chamber debates: "Currently, only two speeches of seven and a half minutes each by backbenchers or opposition MPs with replies from government of equal time are permitted, amounting to only 30 minutes each day."[16]

In 2023, after being elected Speaker of the Dewan Rakyat, Johari announced that the Special Chamber would double the number of motions permitted per session from two to four. He also announced that opposition and government backbencher MPs would be allowed to preside over the Special Chamber, instead of limiting the chair to just the Speaker and Deputy Speakers.[17]

Current composition

Members per state and federal territory

State /
federal territory
Number of seats Population
(2020
census)
Population per seat
  F. T. Kuala Lumpur 11 1,982,112 180,192
  F. T. Labuan 1 95,120 95,120
  F. T. Putrajaya 1 109,202 109,202
  Johor 26 4,009,670 154,218
  Kedah 15 2,131,427 142,095
  Kelantan 14 1,792,501 128,036
  Malacca 6 998,428 166,405
  Negeri Sembilan 8 1,199,974 149,997
  Pahang 14 1,591,295 113,664
  Penang 13 1,740,405 133,877
  Perak 24 2,496,041 104,002
  Perlis 3 284,885 94,962
  Sabah 25 3,418,785 136,751
  Sarawak 31 2,453,677 79,151
  Selangor 22 6,994,423 317,928
  Terengganu 8 1,149,440 143,680

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b "Government: Parliament: Dewan Rakyat". Retrieved 8 February 2006. 14 June 2004 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Means, Gordon P. (1991). Malaysian Politics: The Second Generation, pp. 14, 15. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-588988-6.
  3. ^ Myytenaere, Robert (1998). "The Immunities of Members of Parliament" 25 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 12 February 2006.
  4. ^ "Branches of Government in Malaysia" 7 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 3 February 2006.
  5. ^ Shuid, Mahdi & Yunus, Mohd. Fauzi (2001). Malaysian Studies, pp. 33, 34. Longman. ISBN 983-74-2024-3.
  6. ^ Shuid & Yunus, p. 34.
  7. ^ Tan, Chee Koon & Vasil, Raj (ed., 1984). Without Fear or Favour, p. 7. Eastern Universities Press. ISBN 967-908-051-X.
  8. ^ Tan & Vasil, p. 11.
  9. ^ Ram, B. Suresh (16 December 2005). "Pro-people, passionate politician" 27 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine. The Sun.
  10. ^ Lim, Kit Siang (1997). "Consensus Against Corruption". Retrieved 11 February 2006.
  11. ^ Henderson, John William, Vreeland, Nena, Dana, Glenn B., Hurwitz, Geoffrey B., Just, Peter, Moeller, Philip W. & Shinn, R.S. (1977). Area Handbook for Malaysia, p. 219. American University, Washington D.C., Foreign Area Studies. LCCN 771294.
  12. ^ "Malaysia". Retrieved 22 January 2006.
  13. ^ a b Kumar, Kamles (16 May 2016). "Parliament convenes Special Chamber for first time". Malay Mail. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  14. ^ Hassan, Hafiz (20 July 2021). "LETTER | Is the special sitting of Parliament a sitting of special chamber?". Malaysiakini. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  15. ^ Liew, Chin Tong (27 November 2019). "Let's speed up the remaking of our parliament - Liew Chin Tong". liewchintong.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  16. ^ Liew, Chin Tong (8 September 2021). "Key agenda for parliamentary reform - Liew Chin Tong". liewchintong.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  17. ^ "PMQ pilot test to start next week". The Star. 9 February 2023. Retrieved 23 February 2023.

dewan, rakyat, english, house, representatives, people, assembly, lower, house, bicameral, parliament, federal, legislature, malaysia, chamber, powers, established, article, constitution, malaysia, sits, houses, parliament, kuala, lumpur, along, with, dewan, n. The Dewan Rakyat English House of Representatives lit People s Assembly is the lower house of the bicameral Parliament the federal legislature of Malaysia The chamber and its powers are established by Article 44 of the Constitution of Malaysia The Dewan Rakyat sits in the Houses of Parliament in Kuala Lumpur along with the Dewan Negara the upper house House of Representatives Dewan Rakyat15th ParliamentTypeTypeLower house of the Parliament of MalaysiaLeadershipSpeakerJohari Abdul PH PKR since 19 December 2022Deputy Speaker IRamli Mohd Nor BN UMNO since 19 December 2022Deputy Speaker IIAlice Lau PH DAP since 19 December 2022SecretaryNizam Mydin since 13 May 2020Prime MinisterAnwar Ibrahim PH PKR since 24 November 2022Deputy Prime Minister IAhmad Zahid Hamidi BN UMNO since 3 December 2022Deputy Prime Minister IIFadillah Yusof GPS PBB since 3 December 2022Leader of the OppositionHamzah Zainudin PN BERSATU since 10 December 2022StructureSeats222Political groups As of 10 December 2022 Government 148 PH 82 DAP 40 PKR 31 AMANAH 8 UPKO 2 MUDA 1 BN 30 UMNO 26 MCA 2 MIC 1 PBRS 1 GPS 23 PBB 14 PRS 5 PDP 2 SUPP 2 GRS 6 Direct member 4 PBS 1 STAR 1 WARISAN 3 KDM 2 PBM 1 Independent 1 Opposition 74 PN 74 PAS 43 BERSATU 31 Committees5 Committee of SelectionPublic Accounts CommitteeHouse CommitteeCommittee of PrivilegesStanding Orders CommitteeLength of termUp to 5 yearsElectionsVoting systemFirst past the postLast election19 November 2022Next electionBy 17 February 2028Meeting placeDewan Rakyat chamberMalaysian Houses of Parliament Kuala Lumpur MalaysiaWebsiteOfficial websiteThe Dewan Rakyat is a directly elected body consisting of 222 members known as Members of Parliament MPs Members are elected by first past the post voting with one member from each federal constituency Members hold their seats until the Dewan Rakyat is dissolved the term of which is constitutionally limited to five years after an election The number of seats each state or territory is entitled to is fixed by Article 46 of the Constitution While the concurrence of both chambers of Parliament is normally necessary for legislation to be enacted the Dewan Rakyat holds significantly more power in practice the Dewan Negara very rarely rejects bills that have been passed by the Dewan Rakyat and the Dewan Rakyat can bypass the Dewan Negara if it refuses to pass a specific law twice with at least one year in between The Cabinet is solely responsible to the Dewan Rakyat and the prime minister only has to maintain the support of the lower house Contents 1 History 2 Membership 3 Powers and procedure 3 1 Special Chamber 4 Current composition 5 Members per state and federal territory 6 Notes and referencesHistory EditThe history of the Dewan Rakyat can be traced back during the Federal Legislative Council era At that time 52 out of the 100 member council were elected directly by the people using first past the post system returning one representatives from each constituencies The council was dissolved in 1959 a year ahead of its expiration term to pave the way for a new election for the new Dewan Rakyat which will be the lower house for the Parliament of Malaysia The voting system was retained from the previous election and has since taken place in the subsequent elections post independence The number of seats increased to 104 abolishing the nominated seats in favour of elected members The ruling Alliance returned as the Government with a majority of 44 seats Tunku Abdul Rahman reelected as the Prime Minister while the new Parliament convened on 2 September 1959 After the formation of Malaysia a special autonomy status allowing representatives from Sabah Sarawak and Singapore to be elected indirectly by the state assemblies Therefore in 1964 elections only 65 of the total seats were contested The Alliance retained its position with a higher margin The 1969 elections marked the first time Alliance failed to win a supermajority and majority popular vote The racial unrests resulted in the Parliament being suspended until 1971 Upon the reopening of the Parliament the Alliance returned with a supermajority government after Bornean local parties PAS and GERAKAN joined the coalition later to be known as Barisan Nasional Membership EditMembers are referred to as Members of Parliament MPs or Ahli Dewan Rakyat lit member of the Dewan Rakyat in Malay The term of office is as long as the member wins in the elections A member of the Dewan Rakyat must be at least 21 years of age and must not concurrently be a member of the Dewan Negara The presiding officer of the Dewan Rakyat is the Speaker who is elected at the beginning of each Parliament or after the vacation of the post by the MPs Two Deputy Speakers are also elected and one of them sits in place of the Speaker when he is absent The Dewan Rakyat machinery is supervised by the Clerk of the House who is appointed by the King he may only be removed from office through the manner prescribed for judges or by mandatory retirement at age 60 1 As of the 2018 general election the Dewan Rakyat has 222 elected members Members are elected from federal constituencies drawn by the Election Commission Constituency boundaries are redrawn every ten years based on the latest census Each Dewan Rakyat lasts for a maximum of five years after which a general election must be called In the general election voters select a candidate to represent their constituency in the Dewan Rakyat The first past the post voting system is used the candidate who gains the most votes wins the seat Before a general election can be called the King must first dissolve Parliament on the advice of the Prime Minister 1 According to the Constitution the Yang di Pertuan Agong has the right at his own discretion to either grant or withhold consent to dissolve the parliament Powers and procedure EditParliament is the legislative branch of the federal government and is responsible for passing amending and repealing primary legislation These are known as Acts of Parliament Members of Parliament possess parliamentary privilege and are permitted to speak on any subject without fear of censure outside Parliament the only body that can censure an MP is the House Committee of Privileges Immunity is effective from the moment a member of Parliament is sworn in and only applies when that member has the floor it does not apply to statements made outside the House An exception is made by the Sedition Act passed by Parliament in the wake of the 13 May racial riots in 1969 Under the Act all public discussion of repealing certain Articles of the Constitution dealing with Bumiputra privileges such as Article 153 is illegal This prohibition is extended to all members of both houses of Parliament 2 Members of Parliament are also forbidden from criticising the King and judges 3 The executive government comprising the Prime Minister and his Cabinet is usually drawn from members of Parliament most of its members are typically members of the Dewan Rakyat After a general election or the resignation or death of a Prime Minister the King selects the Prime Minister who is the head of government but constitutionally subordinate to him from the Dewan Rakyat In practice this is usually the leader of the largest party in Parliament The Prime Minister then submits a list containing the names of members of his Cabinet who will then be appointed as Ministers by the King Members of the Cabinet must also be members of Parliament If the Prime Minister loses the confidence of the Dewan Rakyat whether by losing a no confidence vote or failing to pass a budget he must either advise the King to dissolve Parliament and hold a general election or submit his resignation to the King The King has the discretion to grant or withhold consent to the dissolution If consent is withheld the government must resign and the King would appoint a new Prime Minister that has the support of the majority of members of Parliament The Cabinet formulates government policy and drafts bills meeting in private Its members must accept collective responsibility for the decisions the Cabinet makes even if some members disagree with it if they do not wish to be held responsible for Cabinet decisions they must resign Although the Constitution makes no provision for it there is also a Deputy Prime Minister who is the de facto successor of the Prime Minister should he die or be otherwise incapacitated 4 A proposed act of law begins its life when a particular government minister or ministry prepares a first draft with the assistance of the Attorney General s Department The draft known as a bill is then discussed by the Cabinet If it is agreed to submit it to Parliament the bill is distributed to all MPs It then goes through three readings before the Dewan Rakyat The first reading is where the minister or his deputy submits it to Parliament At the second reading the bill is discussed and debated by MPs At the third reading the minister or his deputy formally submit it to a vote for approval A simple majority is usually required to pass the bill but in certain cases such as amendments to the constitution a two thirds majority is required Should the bill pass it is sent to the Dewan Negara where the three readings are carried out again The Dewan Negara may choose not to pass the bill but this only delays its passage by a month or in some cases a year once this period expires the bill is considered to have been passed by the house 5 If the bill passes it is presented to the Yang di Pertuan Agong who has 30 days to consider the bill Should he disagree with it he returns it to Parliament with a list of suggested amendments Parliament must then reconsider the bill and its proposed amendments and return it to the King within 30 days if they pass it again The King then has another 30 days to give the royal assent otherwise it passes into law The law does not take effect until it is published in the Government Gazette 6 The government attempts to maintain top secrecy regarding bills debated MPs generally receive copies of bills only a few days before they are debated and newspapers are rarely provided with copies of the bills before they are debated In some cases such as a 1968 amendment to the Constitution an MP may be presented with a bill to be debated on the same day it is tabled and all three readings may be carried out that day itself 7 In rare circumstances the government may release a White paper containing particular proposals that will eventually be incorporated into a bill this has been done for legislation such as the Universities and University Colleges Act 8 Although the process above assumes only the government can propose bills there also exists a process for private member s bills However unlike most other legislatures following the Westminster system few members of Parliament actually introduce bills 9 To present a private member s bill the member in question must seek the leave of the House in question to debate the bill before it is moved Originally it was allowed to debate the bill in the process of seeking leave but this process was discontinued by an amendment to the Standing Orders of the Dewan Rakyat 10 It is also possible for members of the Dewan Negara to initiate bills however only cabinet ministers are permitted to move finance related bills which must be tabled in the Dewan Rakyat 11 It is often alleged that legislation proposed by the opposition parties which must naturally be in the form of a private member s bill is not seriously considered by Parliament Some have gone as far as to claim that the rights of members of Parliament to debate proposed bills have been severely curtailed by incidents such as an amendment of the Standing Orders that permitted the Speaker to amend written copies of MPs speeches before they were made Nevertheless it is admitted by some of these critics that government officials often face sharp questioning in Parliament although this is not always reported in detail in the press 12 Special Chamber Edit In 2016 Speaker Pandikar Amin Mulia introduced a Special Chamber of the Dewan Rakyat which holds proceedings separately from the main house to allow matters of national importance or urgency to be discussed without interrupting the normal proceedings of the Lower House 13 Government and opposition leaders both welcomed the move with Minister in the Prime Minister s Department Azalina Othman Said Democratic Action Party whip Anthony Loke and People s Justice Party whip Johari Abdul Ghani issuing favourable statements to the press 13 Amendments to the Standing Orders of the Dewan Rakyat in April 2016 established the Special Chamber to host debates on any matter of administration for which the government is responsible or a defined matter of urgent public importance 14 Liew Chin Tong at the time an opposition Member of Parliament claimed he had lobbied Pandikar to institute the Special Chamber which he has said takes inspiration from both the Australian and British parliaments Liew has proposed expanding the remit of the Special Chamber A full fledged second chamber should take away all constituency specific issues off the main chamber and move them to the second chamber so that the main chamber focuses only on the most important things 15 When he and Pandikar spoke at a panel on parliamentary reform in 2021 Liew also proposed expanding the amount of time allotted for Special Chamber debates Currently only two speeches of seven and a half minutes each by backbenchers or opposition MPs with replies from government of equal time are permitted amounting to only 30 minutes each day 16 In 2023 after being elected Speaker of the Dewan Rakyat Johari announced that the Special Chamber would double the number of motions permitted per session from two to four He also announced that opposition and government backbencher MPs would be allowed to preside over the Special Chamber instead of limiting the chair to just the Speaker and Deputy Speakers 17 Current composition EditMain article Members of the Dewan Rakyat 15th Malaysian Parliament See also List of members of the Dewan Rakyat Affiliation Leader in Parliament Status Seats2022 election CurrentPakatan Harapan Anwar Ibrahim Majority coalition government 82 82Barisan Nasional Ahmad Zahid Hamidi 30 30Gabungan Parti Sarawak Fadillah Yusof 23 23Gabungan Rakyat Sabah Jeffrey Kitingan 6 6Heritage Party Shafie Apdal 3 3Social Democratic Harmony Party Wetrom Bahanda 2 2Parti Bangsa Malaysia Larry Sng 1 1Independents 1 1Perikatan Nasional Muhyiddin Yassin Opposition 74 74Total 222 222Members per state and federal territory EditState federal territory Number of seats Population 2020census Population per seat F T Kuala Lumpur 11 1 982 112 180 192 F T Labuan 1 95 120 95 120 F T Putrajaya 1 109 202 109 202 Johor 26 4 009 670 154 218 Kedah 15 2 131 427 142 095 Kelantan 14 1 792 501 128 036 Malacca 6 998 428 166 405 Negeri Sembilan 8 1 199 974 149 997 Pahang 14 1 591 295 113 664 Penang 13 1 740 405 133 877 Perak 24 2 496 041 104 002 Perlis 3 284 885 94 962 Sabah 25 3 418 785 136 751 Sarawak 31 2 453 677 79 151 Selangor 22 6 994 423 317 928 Terengganu 8 1 149 440 143 680Notes and references Edit a b Government Parliament Dewan Rakyat Retrieved 8 February 2006 Archived 14 June 2004 at the Wayback Machine Means Gordon P 1991 Malaysian Politics The Second Generation pp 14 15 Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 588988 6 Myytenaere Robert 1998 The Immunities of Members of Parliament Archived 25 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 12 February 2006 Branches of Government in Malaysia Archived 7 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 3 February 2006 Shuid Mahdi amp Yunus Mohd Fauzi 2001 Malaysian Studies pp 33 34 Longman ISBN 983 74 2024 3 Shuid amp Yunus p 34 Tan Chee Koon amp Vasil Raj ed 1984 Without Fear or Favour p 7 Eastern Universities Press ISBN 967 908 051 X Tan amp Vasil p 11 Ram B Suresh 16 December 2005 Pro people passionate politician Archived 27 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine The Sun Lim Kit Siang 1997 Consensus Against Corruption Retrieved 11 February 2006 Henderson John William Vreeland Nena Dana Glenn B Hurwitz Geoffrey B Just Peter Moeller Philip W amp Shinn R S 1977 Area Handbook for Malaysia p 219 American University Washington D C Foreign Area Studies LCCN 771294 Malaysia Retrieved 22 January 2006 a b Kumar Kamles 16 May 2016 Parliament convenes Special Chamber for first time Malay Mail Retrieved 23 February 2023 Hassan Hafiz 20 July 2021 LETTER Is the special sitting of Parliament a sitting of special chamber Malaysiakini Retrieved 23 February 2023 Liew Chin Tong 27 November 2019 Let s speed up the remaking of our parliament Liew Chin Tong liewchintong com Retrieved 23 February 2023 Liew Chin Tong 8 September 2021 Key agenda for parliamentary reform Liew Chin Tong liewchintong com Retrieved 23 February 2023 PMQ pilot test to start next week The Star 9 February 2023 Retrieved 23 February 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dewan Rakyat amp oldid 1151109235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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