Malaysian United Indigenous Party of Sabah

Malaysian United Indigenous Party of Sabah (Malay: Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia Sabah), also abbreviated as Sabah BERSATU or Sabah PPBM, is the Malaysian United Indigenous Party (BERSATU) branch in Sabah, Malaysia.[1]

Malaysian United Indigenous Party of Sabah
Malay nameParti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia Sabah
ڤرتي ڤريبومي برساتو مليسيا سابه
Chinese name沙巴土著团结党
沙巴土著團結黨
Shābā Tǔzhù Tuánjié Dǎng
Tamil nameபிபிபீஏம் (மலேசிய ஐக்கிய மக்கள் கட்சி)
Malēciya aikkiya makkaḷ kaṭci
AbbreviationSabah BERSATU / Sabah PPBM
ChairmanRonald Kiandee
FounderMahathir Mohamad
Muhyiddin Yassin
Hajiji Noor
Founded6 April 2019; 5 years ago (2019-04-06)
Split fromPHRS (2019)
UMNO Sabah (2021)
Succeeded byGAGASAN (2023) (under Hajiji Noor)
National affiliationPakatan Harapan (2019–2020)
Perikatan Nasional (since 2020)
Regional affiliationGabungan Rakyat Sabah (2020–2022)
Colours    Red and white
SloganBersatu, Beramanah, Bermaruah
(United, Trustworthy, Dignified)
Dewan Negara Malaysia
0 / 70
Dewan Rakyat Malaysia
1 / 25
(Sabah seats)
Sabah State Legislative Assembly
0 / 79
Chief ministers in Malaysia
(Sabah Chief Minister)
0 / 13
Election symbol
Party flag

The branch had effectively split from the central leadership of the Malaysian United Indigenous Party under the leadership of Hajiji Noor in March 2022 and participated in the 2022 general election in alliance with Barisan Nasional, contrary to the mother party which contested in the opposing Perikatan Nasional coalition. The branch suffered a split when Hajiji Noor left the party in December 2022, later founding Parti Gagasan Rakyat Sabah in 2023.

History

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2022 general election and split

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The Malaysian United Indigenous Party of Sabah had participated in the 2022 general election as part of the Gabungan Rakyat Sabah coalition in alliance with Barisan Nasional, with both groups supporting the formation of the unity government under Anwar Ibrahim in its aftermath. Conversely, the mother party under the leadership of president Muhyiddin Yassin, who also led the Perikatan Nasional coalition, opted to sit in opposition. This disagreement between the mother party and its Sabahan chapter was reported to be the reason for branch chairman Hajiji Noor's split from the party, bringing with him all 15 state assemblymen and four members of parliament,[2][3] with the remainder of the party being expelled from the Gabungan Rakyat Sabah coalition a few days later.[4]

The branch's sole remaining member of parliament, Ronald Kiandee, succeeded Hajiji as chairman.

List of leaders

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List of Chairmen

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No. Portrait Chairmen Term start Term end Time in office Deputy Chairmen
1   Hajiji Noor
(born 1956)
MLA for Sulaman, since 1990
6 April 2019 10 December 2022 3 years, 248 days Masidi Manjun
(2019–2022)
During this interval, the position was vacant. (10–11 December 2022)
2   Ronald Kiandee
(born 1961)
MP for Beluran, since 1999
11 December 2022 Incumbent 1 year, 219 days Aksyah Nasrah

Elected representatives

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Dewan Rakyat (House of Representatives)

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Members of Parliament of the 15th Malaysian Parliament

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Sabah BERSATU has 1 member in the House of Representatives.

State No. Parliament Constituency Member
  Sabah P183 Beluran Ronald Kiandee
Total Sabah (1)

General election results

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Election Total seats won Seats contested Total votes Voting Percentage Outcome of election Election leader
2022
5 / 222
6 (GRS) (Sabah, except Beluran)
1 (under PN) (Beluran)
105,388 0.68%  2 seats; Governing coalition
(Gabungan Rakyat Sabah)
 1 seat; Opposition coalition
(Perikatan Nasional)
Hajiji Noor
Ronald Kiandee

State election results

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State election State Legislative Assembly
Sabah Total won / Total contested
2/3 majority
2 / 3
2 / 3
2020
(under GRS ticket)
11 / 73
11 / 21

See also

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References

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  1. ^ JalinLuin, JalinLuin (20 May 2022). "Bersatu Sabah Berbeza Dengan Bersatu Semenanjung". JALINLUIN.COM. Retrieved 3 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Winds of change in Sabah". The Star. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
  3. ^ "Sabah Bersatu members quit party en-masse". The Star. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
  4. ^ Miwil, Olivia (18 December 2022). "GRS dumps Bersatu | New Straits Times". NST Online. Retrieved 17 July 2024.

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