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Liberal Democratic Party (Malaysia)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Political party in Malaysia
Liberal Democratic Party
Liberal Democratic Party of the State of Sabah
Malay nameParti Liberal Demokratik
Parti Liberal Demokratik Sabah
AbbreviationLDP
LDP Sabah
PresidentChin Su Phin
Secretary-GeneralChin Shu Ying
Deputy PresidentYong Wui Chung
Youth Movement LeaderJimmy Lai Khin Hiong
Women Movement LeaderWong Kuen Yin
FounderHiew Min Kong
Founded1989
HeadquartersP.O.Box 16033, 88866Kota Kinabalu,Sabah
Youth wingYouth Movement
Women's wingWomen Movement
IdeologyLiberal conservatism
Classical liberalism
Political positionCentre-right
National affiliationBarisan Nasional(1991–2018)
Gabungan Rakyat Sabah(since 2023)
ColoursOrange, black, red[1]
Dewan Negara:
0 / 70
Dewan Rakyat:
0 / 26
(Sabah and Labuan seats)
Sabah State Legislative Assembly:
0 / 79
Election symbol
Party flag
Website
www.ldp.org.my
This article is part ofa series on the
Politics of
Malaysia

TheLiberal Democratic Party or well known asLiberal Democratic Party of Sabah (Malay:Parti Liberal Demokratik, or Parti Liberal Demokratik Sabah;abbrev:LDP, orLDP Sabah) is aSabah-based political party founded in the town ofTawau by Hiew Min Kong in 1989. The party has been part of theGabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS) since April 2023.

The party is considered a minor political party inMalaysia, having its base mainly inSabah. It has had no representation in either theDewan Rakyat or theSabah Legislative Assembly since its then-presidentLiew Vui Keong was defeated inSandakan during the2013 general election.

It left theBarisan Nasional coalition in 2018 following thatyear's general election.

History

[edit]

The Liberal Democratic Party was formed in 1989 during the era whenParti Bersatu Sabah (PBS), then a federal opposition party, was the state government of Sabah. The formation of LDP then was seen more as "a storm in a teacup" as the existence ofSabah People's United Front (BERJAYA),United Sabah National Organisation (USNO) and theSabah Chinese Party (SCP) had posed a larger challenge to the mighty PBS then as LDP was a small party.

LDP contested the 1990 Sabah State Election and fielded 14 candidates but lost all the seats it contested. PBS won 36 seats out of the 48 State Constituencies it contested in the election. Despite LDP's defeat in the 1990 State Election, in 1991, LDP was admitted into the fold of BN as its first Chinese-based political party in Sabah.[2]Chong Kah Kiat became the president then and had since replaced Pro tem President Hiew Ming Kong as the President of LDP.

As theUnited Malay National Organisation (UMNO) was introduced into Sabah to fight PBS, other BN political parties in Sabah who had contested in the 1990 State Election like BERJAYA and USNO were forced to disband and disappeared from the political scene altogether. Under the Barisan ticket, LDP was allocated three seats,Tenom,Kudat and Sembulan. LDP's candidate won the Kudat seat while lost the other two to the PBS's candidate. The aftermath of the1994 State Election saw many state elected representatives switching their political parties. This resulted in the collapse of PBS and the emergence of Sabah UMNO which went on to form the next government. The new State Government of Sabah included LDP's sole representative, Kong Hong Ming, into the Sabah Cabinet. In 1995, LDP presidentChong Kah Kiat was picked as a senator to theDewan Negara. However, later, Chong was challenged for the presidency by Kong. Chong eventually emerged as the winner and Kong left the LDP, quitting his ministerial post from the Sabah cabinet.

Chong continued as a Federal Minister in the Prime Minister's Department from 1995 till 1999 when he resigned to return to state politics. LDP was allocated two State Constituencies seats for the 1999 State Election namely Kudat and Karamunting where the candidates are Wong Lien Tat, the Party's vice-president and Chong himself. They eventually won both seats handsomely. Both were made ministers in the state cabinet.

LDP reached its political peak when Chong became the 13thChief Minister of Sabah under the Rotation System introduced by the thenPrime Minister of Malaysia,Mahathir Mohamad in 2001. Chong Kah Kiat became Chief Minister for two years till 2003 before the post went back to UMNO and the post was never again rotated as in the 2004 Sabah state election, BN swept 59 out of the 60 state seats. LDP won all the three state seats it was allocated under the BN ticket. Despite this, LDP lost the Sandakan parliamentary seat to an independent candidate who had the backing ofSabah Progressive Party (SAPP). In 2005,Liew Vui Keong was appointed as the party'sSecretary General.

In 2006, Chong Kah Kiat decided to retire as party president.Liew Vui Keong and Chin Su Phin then took over as the Party President and Deputy President posts respectively.[3]Teo Chee Kang was appointed Secretary General. Chong Kah Kiat, however, did not retire from politics as he remained as the State's Deputy Chief Minister cum Minister of Tourism, Culture and Environment. On 13 April 2007, Chong Kah Kiat resigned from the State Cabinet due to his differences with the Chief MinisterMusa Aman over the State Government's stoppage order for the construction of aMazu statue which was undertaken by the Kudat Thean Hou Charitable Foundation in Kudat. Chong resignation from the state cabinet completes his exit in politics.

In the 2008 Sabah state election, all new faces were fielded in the three state seats allocated to LDP. LDP won all three seats comfortably as BN swept 61 seats out of the 62 state seats. Secretary general Teo Chee Kang won the Tanjong Kapor seat which was previously held by Chong Kah Kiat. New LDP PresidentLiew Vui Keong also won the Sandakan Parliamentary seat and was subsequently appointed Deputy Minister of Trade and Industries. After the SAPP announced it would quit BN on 17 September 2008, its quota of Sabah's Deputy Chief Minister was handed over to LDP. Deputy President Chin Su Phin suggested that the party's three assemblymen were too young-and-inexperienced and therefore not ready to take up such a senior position and instead recommendedMalaysian Chinese Association (MCA) for the post citing that it is the largest Chinese-based BN component party.[4]

In spite of that, first term assemblyman Peter Pang was appointed to the post by the Chief Minister Musa. Pang was chosen because compared to the other two LDP assemblymen, Teo Chee Kang (Tanjung Kapor) and Pang Yuk Ming (Merotai), Pang is not closely aligned to Chong Kah Kiat. In September 2010, LDP lost its representation in the state cabinet when Peter Pang left the LDP.[5] In March 2011, Peter Pang applied to joinParti Gerakan Rakyat Malaysia (GERAKAN).[6] Peter Pang was later stripped off his position as Deputy Chief Minister, with the position eventually going to senior state assemblyman Yee Moh Chai of the PBS.[7] Few days after the 2018 general election, the party left the defeated BN coalition.[8]

In 2021, the party's supreme council endorsed its application to join the rulingPerikatan Nasional (PN) coalition. However, the application was rejected.[9] On 5 April 2023, the party was admitted intoGabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS).[10]

Leadership

[edit]

Presidents

[edit]

Supreme Council (2021-2024)

[edit]

Source:[11]

  • President:
    • Chin Su Phin
  • Deputy President:
    • Yong Wui Chung
  • Vice President:
    • Ng Tet Hau
    • Peter Chin Kee Yong
    • David Ong Choon Chung
    • Chong Thien Ming
    • Wong Min Kong
    • Thien Kui Sang
    • Sim Fui
  • Youth Chief:
    • Jimmy Lai Khin Hiong
  • Women's Chief:
    • Wong Kuen Yin
  • Secretary-General:
    • Chin Shu Ying
  • Deputy Secretary-General:
    • Chin Soon Ho
  • Treasurer-General:
    • John Lee Tsun Vui
  • Deputy Treasurer-General:
    • Chin Kiang Ming
  • Chief Publicity Officer:
    • Simon Chin Hock Siong
  • Organising Secretary:
    • Goh Soo Yee
  • Speaker:
    • Edward Wong Kon Fan
  • Deputy Speaker:
    • Mok Cheh Hung
  • Committee Members:
    • Shim Nyat Yun
    • Yii Ming Seng
    • Eric Lau kah Hon
    • Ng Kwan Loong
    • Shim Tshin Choo
    • Jason Liew Chien Yan
    • Lam Jin Dak
    • Steven Chung Kiam Fui
    • Wong Chung On
    • Chong Nyuk Fong
    • Yong Khim Vun
    • Alvin Saw Eng Seng
    • Jimmy Lai Khin Hiong
    • Max Voo Min Chung
    • Fung Thau Chim
    • Michelle Lee Cheng Wen
    • Edward Wong Kon Fan
    • Mok Cheh Hung @ Mok Kiong
    • Jin Tze Vun
    • Jacky Wong Kwan How
    • Chin Vun Pheaw
    • Lim Chin Siong
    • Nicholas Ban Wai Tzhing

General election results

[edit]
ElectionTotal seats wonSeats contestedTotal votesVoting PercentageOutcome of electionElection leader
1990
6 / 187
10194,3241.25%Increase4 seats;Governing coalition
(Gagasan Rakyat)
Hiew Min Kong
1995
1 / 192
1Increase1 seat;Governing coalition(Barisan Nasional)Chong Kah Kiat
1999
1 / 193
1Steady;Governing coalition(Barisan Nasional)Chong Kah Kiat
2004
0 / 219
18,2080.12%Decrease1 seat;No representation in Parliament(Barisan Nasional)Chong Kah Kiat
2008
1 / 222
18,2970.10%Increase1 seat;Governing coalition(Barisan Nasional)Liew Vui Keong
2013
0 / 222
113,1380.12%Decrease1 seats;No representation in Parliament(Barisan Nasional)Liew Vui Keong
2018
0 / 222
18,9960.07%Steady;No representation in Parliament(Barisan Nasional)Teo Chee Kang

State election results

[edit]
State electionState Legislative Assembly
SabahTotal won / Total contested
2/3 majority
2 / 3
1990
0 / 48
0 / 14
1994
1 / 48
1 / 3
1999
2 / 48
2 / 2
2004
3 / 60
3 / 3
2008
2 / 60
2 / 2
2013
3 / 60
3 / 4
2018
0 / 60
0 / 4
2020
0 / 73
0 / 46

References

[edit]
  1. ^"About LDP [LDP Logo and Song]". Liberal Democratic Party. Archived fromthe original on 15 December 2009. Retrieved20 September 2009.
  2. ^"About LDP". Liberal Democratic Party. Archived fromthe original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved20 September 2009.
  3. ^"About LDP [Milestones of LDP]". Liberal Democratic Party. Archived fromthe original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved20 September 2009.
  4. ^Ronnie Klassen (8 June 2009).""Sabah's Cabinet re-shuffle". Musa the "ultimate winner"". Malaysia Today. Archived fromthe original on 11 June 2009. Retrieved9 June 2009.[unreliable source?]
  5. ^"Peter Pang to remain in state cabinet for the time being - CM".Sin Chew Daily. 2 September 2010. Retrieved3 September 2010.
  6. ^"Sabah DCM opts for multiracial Gerakan".Free Malaysia Today. 14 March 2011. Retrieved12 March 2011.
  7. ^"Yee Moh Chai made Sabah DCM".Bernama.The Malaysian Insider. 21 March 2011. Archived fromthe original on 9 August 2011. Retrieved16 August 2012.
  8. ^Ruzaini Zulkepli (12 May 2018)."Parti LDP keluar Barisan Nasional serta-merta" (in Malay).Astro Awani. Retrieved25 June 2018.
  9. ^"PN rejects Sabah's LDP application, says Muhyiddin".The Star. Retrieved27 October 2021.
  10. ^"Sabah's GRS now seven-party coalition after two local parties admitted".The Star. 5 April 2023. Retrieved8 April 2023.
  11. ^"Sabah-based parties should form political front – LDP".Borneo Post Online. 5 December 2021. Retrieved5 December 2021.

External links

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