HEADLINES

MIC reconsiders PN entry after leadership shift to PAS

Party to consult grassroots as earlier decision was based on Bersatu-led coalition

4:24 PM MYT

 

KUALA LUMPUR – MIC is reviewing its bid to join Perikatan Nasional (PN) following a change in the coalition’s leadership.

Party president Tan Sri S.A. Vigneswaran said the application was made when PN was led by Bersatu under Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, but the situation has since changed with PAS now at the helm.

“As far as the Supreme Council is concerned, the decision made at last year’s general meeting was based on PN being led by Bersatu. Now that PAS is leading, we need to bring this back to the grassroots,” he said.

He stressed that the move was not due to objections towards PAS, but to ensure any decision reflects the views of party members.

“We are not saying whether the party is extremist or otherwise. This is about the change in leadership. We do not want to make a decision that goes against the grassroots,” he added.

Vigneswaran said MIC will hold divisional and state-level meetings over the next two to three months to gather feedback before making a final decision.

The party had previously submitted its application to join PN on Nov 15 last year to Muhyiddin, who was then the coalition’s chairman.– April 2, 2026

Topics

 

Popular

National shuttlers demand RM2 million salaries: can BAM keep up financially?

Several top athletes aim for salaries that could outpace even the highest-earning footballers, raising questions about the sustainability of funding within Malaysian sports

Of Chinese gangs, a M’sian ex-deputy minister, and Burmese rebels: KL event ensnared in Myanmar scam centre?

Human rights group reveals event at JW Marriott for controversial Dongmei Zone, which allegedly sourced billions of ringgit in investments from prominent individuals, and reported by Chinese human trafficking victim to be rife with crime, drugs, brothels

Agong’s warning on ‘flying coffins’: A look back at Malaysia’s Skyhawk jet fiasco – A. Azim Idris

Sultan Ibrahim highlighted the costly A-4 Skyhawk deal as a lesson in scrapping the procurement of 30-year-old Black Hawk choppers, urging Malaysia to avoid past failures in defence strategies

Related