Gagasan Sejahtera | |
---|---|
Malay name | Gagasan Sejahtera ݢاݢسن سجهترا |
English name | Ideas of Prosperity |
Chinese name | 和諧陣綫 和谐阵线 Héxié zhènxiàn |
Abbreviation | GS/GAGASAN |
Leadership | Abdul Hadi Awang Abdul Kadir Sheikh Fadzir Abdul Kadir Mamat |
Secretary-General | Takiyuddin Hassan |
Founded | 16 March 2016 |
Dissolved | 2020 |
Preceded by | Pakatan Rakyat |
Succeeded by | Perikatan Nasional Gerakan Tanah Air |
Headquarters | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (PAS & IKATAN) Pasir Mas, Malaysia (BERJASA) |
Newspaper | Harakah 1Media.my |
Youth wing | Pemuda Gagasan Sejahtera |
Ideology | Majority: Islamism Factions: Islamic democracy Social democracy |
Political position | Far-right |
Colours | Green and white |
Slogan | Sejahtera Bersama Islam Malaysia Sejahtera |
Senate: | 4 / 70 |
House of Representatives: | 18 / 222 |
State Legislative Assemblies: | 91 / 593 |
Election symbol | |
Website | |
gagasansejahtera | |
The Gagasan Sejahtera (English: Ideas of Prosperity, abbrev: GS) was a coalition of opposition Islamist political parties which promote the "ideas of peace" in Malaysia. The informal electoral pact was formed initially on 16 March 2016 by Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) and Parti Ikatan Bangsa Malaysia (IKATAN) as a Third Force to face both ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) and the opposition Pakatan Harapan (PH) coalitions in the upcoming 2018 Malaysian general election (GE14).[1][2][3] It had announced on 13 August 2016 the pact to be formally called Gagasan Sejahtera.[4][5] Pan-Malaysian Islamic Front (BERJASA) had later joined the coalition on 23 September 2016.[6] The formation of the alliance brought criticism from both the main coalitions of BN and PH.[7]
Gagasan Sejahtera is also considered a successor to the dissolved opposition Pakatan Rakyat (PR) coalition which PAS had been a part of it formerly[8] and PH being the other one new coalition which PAS decided not joining.[9] The main campaign of the alliance focuses mainly on PAS political agenda and uniting Malay Muslims matters,[10][11] while upholding democracy as the best way to govern the country.[12][13]
In May 2018, the Gagasan Sejahtera pact of the three opposition parties led by PAS as the core mover, along with minor parties IKATAN and BERJASA finally contested using the PAS logo the GE14, but only PAS won seats in the election, securing 18.[N 1][13] IKATAN was allotted to field candidates in five non-Muslim seats in Selangor,[15] while BERJASA was given 'unwinnable' seats.[16][17][18] Both parties failed to win any of the seats, with all of their candidates losing their deposits.[19] BERJASA for the reason had left tacitly the alliance to contest 2019 Tanjung Piai by-election on its own ticket as PAS and GS supported BN instead of BERJASA recontesting by its president as candidate.[20]
The alliance's strategic partners Love Malaysia Party (PCM)[21][22][23] and People's Alternative Party (PAP), also failed in chosen non-Muslim seats in Penang.[24][25] The yet to be registered Parti Harapan Malaysia (PHM) was another strategic partner but did not contest.[26][27]
The alliance became inactive after PAS aligned itself with former rival United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) to set-up Muafakat Nasional (MN) while affiliating along with UMNO's offshoot the Malaysian United Indigenous Party (BERSATU). PAS further distanced itself from the alliance by joining Perikatan Nasional (PN), the new ruling coalition, during the chaotic events of the 2020–2022 political crisis during the 14th Malaysian Parliament term.[14][28][29]
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