‘Scary’ polarisation is Malaysia’s greatest challenge, PM Anwar’s daughter Nurul Izzah warns
- Nurul Izzah says social media is a key driver behind the shift, which has seen the conservative ‘green wave’ sway voters and split the country
- Malaysia and the PKR must continue to uphold justice and fairness to bridge the social divide and stay true to reform principles, she says
Squabbles over culture have flecked Prime Minister Anwar’s time in office, after a national election in 2022 that ended without a clear winner but brought the rise of a powerful Malay-nationalist minority bloc to parliament.
“Polarisation is our biggest challenge. And it is not religious. I think it is more ethnocentric than anything else,” Nurul Izzah said in an interview with This Week in Asia.
“We have to retell Malaysian stories and celebrate those different voices, but we don’t have a safe space now because everything is very scary,” she said about attempting to bridge cultural divides.
Nurul Izzah, Anwar’s eldest daughter and a founding member of his Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR), said the outrage was enabled by the “green wave” – reflecting the primary colour of the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) – during the 2022 election.
Many Malay voters threw their lot in with PAS, in a rejection of corruption-tainted former ruling party Umno, which for decades was the political vehicle representing the voice and interests of the country’s largest ethnic group.