Wednesday, January 28

In his letter on Tuesday, Muhyiddin acknowledged that PN’s deputy secretarygeneral Takiyuddin Hassan had on Jan 24 issued an invitation notice for an extraordinary meeting of the PN supreme council scheduled for Jan 29, which he was not invited to.

He said that the notice listed – among other things – the appointment of a new PN chairman as one of the agendas for the meeting. 

“This agenda is inconsistent with the consensus reached by the top leadership of Bersatu and PAS on Jan 16, 2026, which was also agreed upon by the presidents of Gerakan and MIPP,” Muhyiddin said in his letter. 

He said that in line with the spirit of consensus among the PN component parties that it was only appropriate that the meeting was cancelled. 

In its place, Muhyiddin invited all the presidents of PN’s component parties to a pre-council meeting at his residence scheduled for the same time and date. 

“Let us return to the path of consensus between us to resolve PN’s internal crisis harmoniously,” he said.      

Following Muhyiddin’s letter, Takiyuddin had on Jan 27 issued a cancellation of the planned PN supreme council meeting. 

Earlier, Takiyuddin had during a press conference on Jan 23 dismissed suggestions that as Muhyiddin was still seen by some as technically still chairman of the coalition, not inviting him for the PN supreme council meeting had violated PN’s constitution.

“While the resignation should only be effective after it is accepted by the PN supreme council, from a legal perspective, when the PN chairperson stepped down, and he stated a date when his resignation takes effect … here he stated Jan 1, based on his own letter.

“So, from a legal perspective, it is functus officio, meaning it has taken effect. But it will still be taken to the PN supreme council for endorsement,” Takiyuddin was quoted as saying by news site Malaysiakini.

Muhyiddin’s resignation as PN chairman followed a political crisis in the northeastern state of Perlis, whose state assembly is controlled by PN.

The upheaval saw PAS’ Sanglang assemblyman Mohd Shukri Ramli resigning as chief minister and Bersatu’s Kuala Perlis assemblyman Abu Bakar Hamzah replacing him in the post.

But Shukri’s resignation came after eight statutory declarations were signed by state assemblymen – three from PAS and five from Bersatu – retracting their support for him.

There are 15 seats in Perlis’ state assembly, and the three PAS assemblymen have since been sacked by the Islamist party. PAS holds six of the remaining seats, Bersatu holds five, and Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s Parti Keadilan Rakyat holds one.

Following the upheaval in Perlis, PAS said that it would support the state government’s stability but would refuse to join the state executive council in a sign of solidarity with the ousted Shukri.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/malaysia-perikatan-nasional-pn-chairman-opposition-muhyiddin-yassin-bersatu-pas-5890396

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