DAP Marginalised: Sabah’s Tsunami and a Coalition in Crisis
The Nov 29, 2025, Sabah state election delivered one of the most dramatic verdicts in Malaysia’s recent political history: DAP, once confident in its Sabah foothold, lost all eight seats it contested - a devastating wipeout from the six seats it held after the 2020 state election.
This was not a narrow loss but a
sweeping rejection, even in urban Chinese-majority constituencies that were
once considered DAP strongholds, such as Likas, Kapayan, and Luyang.
To understand the broader
national implications, this electoral collapse cannot be viewed in isolation.
It is both a symptom and a
catalyst of deeper strategic realignments within the Madani government, one
where DAP’s political appeal appears to be eroding just as its PH partners,
particularly PKR and Amanah, have refrained from robustly defending it against
UMNO’s public pressure.
The Sabah Election as a Litmus
Test
Sabah voters sent a clear
message: dissatisfaction with federal parties that are perceived as detached
from local realities. Analysts pointed to several factors driving DAP’s rout.
National narratives crafted in Putrajaya failed to resonate in Sabah, where
local issues such as autonomy, revenue entitlements, and grassroots development
dominated voters’ priorities.
Sabahans struggled to see how the
Madani government’s broader reform agenda translated into tangible improvements
in their daily lives, especially as federal-level controversies including the
lingering fallout from the Albert Tei affair which undermined Pakatan Harapan’s
once-strong anti-corruption credentials.
Additionally, the rise of the
Sabah-for-Sabahans sentiment, championed by regional parties like Warisan,
siphoned off not just Malay and indigenous support but also significant chunks
of the urban Chinese vote that were once DAP’s base. Voters coalesced around
local representatives who, unlike DAP’s candidates, could credibly claim to
champion Sabah’s distinct political and fiscal priorities.
In this respect, Sabah’s results
are more than a local setback—they are a harbinger of urban voter
disillusionment with DAP’s relevance under the current PH leadership and a
reminder that the party’s electoral strength is not immutable.
DAP’s Weakening Within PH
But why has DAP’s appeal
weakened? Part of the answer lies in internal coalition dynamics. Since the
formation of the Madani government, DAP has frequently found itself defending
coalition policies that are unpopular with its core supporters, while receiving
little support from its coalition partners when under attack.
UMNO’s public jabs at DAP have
become a pattern: rather than resolving disagreements discreetly within cabinet
deliberations or party consultations, sensitive issues especially those
involving racial and religious sensitivities are aired in the open, with DAP
often absorbing the brunt of criticism.
This tactic is reminiscent of
Barisan Nasional’s old strategy, where UMNO would publicly undermine its own
partners like MCA, MIC and Gerakan; thereby diminishing their relevance and
autonomy while retaining ultimate control of the coalition agenda.
Yet this time, the consequences
are arguably more severe because DAP is not a peripheral partner; it is the
largest component party in PH in terms of parliamentary seats.
Despite this, PKR and Amanah have
exhibited remarkable restraint in defending DAP when UMNO’s rhetoric has
escalated. This restraint is often justified in the name of “government
stability” or “coalition unity.” But there is a fine line between strategic
silence for stability and tacit acquiescence to political marginalisation.
Is PKR Engaging in a Quiet
Strategy?
The absence of a full-throated
defence of DAP raises uncomfortable questions about PKR’s approach. PKR, as the
leading partner in the Madani government, has both the motive and capacity to
assert coalition solidarity—but it has seldom done so with vigour when UMNO
publicly pressures DAP.
This dynamic leads to a troubling
inference: rather than protecting the coalition’s multiracial integrity, PKR
may be implicitly tolerating a hierarchy that privileges UMNO’s political
narratives over DAP’s core constituencies. The result is a government where the
power balance seems skewed in favour of UMNO, both in the court of public
opinion and within the machinery of governance.
Some observers now speculate
whether PKR could be positioning itself for a realignment ahead of GE16: a
scenario in which it retains UMNO as a Malay-base partner while sidelining DAP
to form a different coalition focused more sharply on Malay and conservative
voters.
This is not a far-fetched
strategic calculus if PKR believes that its political survival depends on
aligning with the dominant Malay sentiment, especially after Sabah’s results
underscored national governing stigma among non-Malay voters.
The Broader Strategic Question
Should PKR pursue such a
strategy, the implications would be profound. DAP’s marginalisation would not
only weaken PH as a coalition but also potentially undermine the very
multiracial foundation that was supposed to define the Madani government. It
would risk alienating constituencies that had believed in a post-BN vision of
inclusive governance.
Moreover, Sabah’s election has
shown that PH’s national brand has weaknesses in both East Malaysia and urban
centres. The DAP wipeout in Sabah is a stark indicator that its supporters are
no longer assured that the party can deliver on its promises within the
constraints of the current coalition.
Loss of trust among key
constituencies - urban Chinese voters, liberal reformists, and younger
Malaysians signal that DAP must urgently reassess its strategy if it hopes to
remain electorally relevant.
An Urgent Inflection Point
The Sabah state election results
are not merely a snapshot of regional discontent; they are a mirror reflecting
national-level dissatisfaction with how PH and its partners have managed
coalition politics.
If PKR and Amanah continue to
refrain from defending DAP against public political pressure, they risk not
just the weakening of a key partner but the erosion of the multiracial
coalition architecture itself.
For DAP, the challenge ahead is
existential: can it rebuild trust among its base while navigating the political
constraints of Madani governance?
For PH, the question is equally
existential: will it uphold a genuinely multiracial coalition, or will it
capitulate to Malay-majoritarian realignment?
The answers will shape the
trajectory of Malaysian politics long after GE16 is over.
23.12.2025
Kuala Lumpur.
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https://focusmalaysia.my/dap-marginalised-sabahs-tsunami-and-a-coalition-in-crisis/
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