Isham Jalil | |
|---|---|
| هشام جليل | |
| Information Chief of the United Malays National Organisation | |
| In office 20 November 2022 – 22 March 2023 | |
| President | Ahmad Zahid Hamidi |
| Preceded by | Shahril Sufian Hamdan |
| Succeeded by | Azalina Othman Said |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Hizatul Isham bin Abdul Jalil (1976-06-11)11 June 1976 (age 49) |
| Political party | United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) (2000–2023)[note 1] Independent (2023–present) |
| Other political affiliations | Barisan Nasional (BN) (2000–2023) |
| Education | Sultan Alam Shah School |
| Alma mater | University of Bristol (BEng) The Wharton School (MBA) Harvard University (MPP) |
| Occupation | Politician |
| Website | https://ishamjalil.wordpress.com/biodata/ |
| Isham Jalil onFacebook Isham Jalil onTikTok | |
Hizatul Isham bin Abdul Jalil (Jawi:هيذاتول اشعام بن عبدالجليل,Malay pronunciation:[isham]; born 11 June 1976) or more commonly known asIsham Jalil, is aMalaysianpolitician who was a member of theUnited Malays National Organisation (UMNO), a component party of theBarisan Nasional (BN) coalition. He is a former Member of the UMNO Supreme Council from June 2022 to December 2023,[1][2] and has previously served as the Information Chief of UMNO from November 2022 to March 2023.[3]
Born in Hospital Besar Kuala Lumpur and raised in Selangor, Isham is the third child of seven siblings and was brought up in a low-income family. His father had to juggle various jobs to make ends meet where he had worked as a gardener, truck driver and night market trader to raise his family. Despite all the adversities, Isham was a hardworking student where he excelled with straight A's throughout his schooling days. Isham studied atSekolah Alam Shah.
He eventually received a scholarship to study for his bachelor's degree in engineering abroad where he graduated at theUniversity of Bristol. Isham then furthered his postgraduate studies atIvy League universities where he completed his first master's degree in Public Policy (MPP) in Political Economy and Development with a minor in Law fromHarvard University, and a second master's in Business Administration (MBA) in Finance fromThe Wharton School,University of Pennsylvania.[4] At Harvard, Isham Jalil wrote a book titled "Malaysia Beyond 2020: Ideologies and Institutions for Growth" where it is currently archived in the Harvard University library.[5]
Isham has nearly 20 years of shared experience working in the civil service and the government-linked company,Tenaga Nasional Berhad (TNB). His career advanced when he was appointed to the Prime Minister's Office under the former Prime MinisterNajib Razak as his Special Officer and the Director at the Prime Minister's Office.[6] In 2008 he was sent to the Economic Planning Unit, Prime Minister's Department to help the government enact national energy policies, especially those involving petroleum, electricity and gas.[7]
During his time working at the civil service, he has been involved in the formulation of the 10th Malaysia Plan, the National Energy Policy 2010–2030, the subsidy rationalization program, and the restructuring of the country's electricity industry. Isham had also worked as a part-time lecturer atUniversity of Technology MARA (UiTM) andUniversity of Technology Malaysia (UTM) for three years between 2000 and 2003.
Isham has had a long history with BN and UMNO ever since he was at the early age of 10 where he had followed and accompanied his parents to political talks during election seasons.[8] As he was raised by parents who are UMNO stalwarts, Isham has helped his parents and UMNO campaign where in the1986 Malaysian general election, he started putting up BN posters and helped write speeches for his father at the branch level for election campaigns.[9]Prior to his sacking, Isham was a member of UMNOPutrajaya[10] andSungai Buloh. Before he was appointed as Member of the Supreme Council of UMNO,[11] Isham was also appointed and served as the State Information Chief of BN Selangor.[12] Isham was Information Chief of UMNO after GE-15 from November 2022 to March 2023 before being replaced byMinister of Law and Institutional Reform,Azalina Othman Said after he handed over the post to contest for the UMNO Supreme Council. Isham contested in the UMNO election in March 2023 and won the post placing 19th out of 85 candidates with a total votes of 42,340 and 101 UMNO divisions out of 191 nationwide.[13] On 7 December 2023, he was sacked from the party by UMNO President for not agreeing to cooperate with DAP in elections.[14]
In the2022 general election, he was hinted and expected to contest for theShah Alam federal seat.[15][16] On 1 November 2022, he was confirmed to be nominated as a candidate representing the BN coalition to contest for the seat but eventually lost toPakatan Harapan candidateAzli Yusof.
Described as a "Conservative nationalist", Isham believes that Malaysia should maintain its vision of cultural integration rather than forced assimilation in order to maintain racial and social harmony. He believes that Chinese and Indian vernacular schools should not be abolished and rejects the "Malaysian Malaysia" identity as it would exacerbate racial tensions within Malaysia.[17][18] In the case of meritocracy, Isham has the stance where it breeds injustice and it would promote selective discrimination due to its incomplete nature. FromAstro Awani's three way dialogue withBachokMPSyahir Sulaiman andSunway University ProfessorWong Chin Huat, Isham has stated that:[19]
I've said why meritocracy is not fair in Malaysia, why? Because meritocracy is based on criteria, and these criterias are written by humans, and if the criterias are not fair, then it can cause systemic discrimination. For example, students in Terengganu are among the many students who get the highest results in Malaysia every year, but if you want to compare their ability to speak English compared to students in Kuala Lumpur, it is very different, but if you want to give scholarships based on the language criteria alone, it will create systemic discrimination.
— Isham Jalil
The regression of Malaysia'sgrand old party political influence after the2022 Malaysian general election has led Isham to advocate for BN and UMNO to persist in going solo.[20] He believes that in order to regain confidence and relevance, BN should have not joined with either coalitions PH or PN but instead continued in parliament as a separate independent block that could provide check and balance as a credible opposition. Although, BN eventually formed a unity-government with PH,Gabungan Parti Sarawak (GPS),Gabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS), andParti Warisan under the behest of theKing of Malaysia,Abdullah of Pahang.
He has pessimistic views over the rulingPakatan Harapan (PH) coalition particularly its largest member, theDemocratic Action Party (DAP) where he claims that the party's ideology contradicts with the national constitution and blames them for their lack of commitment which caused BN to lose votes during the2023 Malaysian state elections.[21][22][23] Previously, Isham was offered board seats for GLCs twice under the PH and also the PN government but he turned down the offers.[24]
Isham is known to be a strong supporter and loyalist of his former boss Najib Razak and has continued to pressure the government for his release where he has described Najib's prosecution as unjust and plagued with political motives.[25] He believes that Najib's presence was vital and crucial for BN's electoral success post-GE14,[26] particularly in both the2021 Melaka state election and2022 Johor state election where BN had won two-third majorities in both state assemblies, as well as various by-elections where BN had secured and swayed various seats such as inSemenyih,Cameron Highlands,Kimanis, andTanjung Piai. Isham posited that one of the three fundamental reasons of UMNO's loss of support and growing irrelevance is due to the absence of Najib.[27]
| Year | Constituency | Candidate | Votes | Pct | Opponent(s) | Votes | Pct | Ballots cast | Majority | Turnout | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | P108Shah Alam | Hizatul Isham Abdul Jalil (UMNO) | 28,266 | 20.82% | Azli Yusof (AMANAH) | 61,409 | 45.23% | 136,689 | 18,095 | 82.44% | ||
| Afif Bahardin (BERSATU) | 43,314 | 31.90% | ||||||||||
| Muhammad Rafique Rashid Ali (PEJUANG) | 2,781 | 2.05% | ||||||||||