People's Justice Party | |
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Malay name | Parti Keadilan Rakyat ڤرتي كعاديلن رعيت |
Chinese name | 人民公正党 Rénmín gōngzhèng dǎng |
Tamil name | மக்கள் நீதி கட்சி Makkaḷ Nīti Kaṭci |
Abbreviation | KEADILAN (official), PKR |
President | Anwar Ibrahim |
Secretary-General | Fuziah Salleh |
Deputy President | Rafizi Ramli |
Vice-Presidents | Amirudin Shari Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad Chang Lih Kang Aminuddin Harun Nurul Izzah Anwar Saraswathy Kandasami Awang Husaini Sahari |
AMK's Chief | Adam Adli |
Women's Chief | Fadhlina Sidek |
Founder | |
Founded | 10 December 1998 (Formation of Pergerakan Keadilan Sosial NGO) 4 April 1999 (Takeover of Ikatan Masyarakat Islam Malaysia and renamed Parti Keadilan Nasional) 3 August 2003 (Merger with Parti Rakyat Malaysia and renamed Parti Keadilan Rakyat) |
Merger of |
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Preceded by |
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Headquarters | A-1-09, Merchant Square, Jalan Tropicana Selatan 1, 47410 Petaling Jaya, Selangor |
Newspaper | Suara Keadilan |
Think tank | Institut Rakyat |
Student wing | Mahasiswa Keadilan |
Youth wing | Angkatan Muda Keadilan (AMK) |
Women's wing | Wanita Keadilan |
Women's youth wing | Srikandi Keadilan |
Membership (2022) | 2.97 million |
Ideology | Social liberalism[1][2] Reformism |
Political position | Centre-left[3] |
National affiliation | Barisan Alternatif (1999–2004) Pakatan Rakyat (2008–2015) Pakatan Harapan (since 2015) |
Colours | Light blue, red, white |
Slogan | Keadilan Untuk Semua Ketuanan Rakyat Demi Rakyat Reformasi Lawan Tetap Lawan Membujur Lalu Melintang Patah |
Anthem | Arus Perjuangan Bangsa |
Dewan Negara: | 8 / 70 |
Dewan Rakyat: | 31 / 222 |
Dewan Undangan Negeri: | 38 / 611 |
Chief minister of states | 2 / 13 |
Election symbol | |
Party flag | |
Website | |
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This article is part of a series on the |
Politics of Malaysia |
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The People's Justice Party (Malay: Parti Keadilan Rakyat; abbrev: PKR or KEADILAN),[4] is a reformist political party in Malaysia formed on 3 August 2003 through a merger of the party's predecessor, the National Justice Party, with the socialist Malaysian People's Party.[5] The party's predecessor was founded by Wan Azizah Wan Ismail during the height of the Reformasi movement on 4 April 1999 after the arrest of her husband, former Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. At the 2022 Malaysian general election, the PH coalition which the PKR was part of was returned to power again, albeit without a majority, leading it to form a unity government with political rivals. The party is one of main partners of the Pakatan Harapan (PH) ruling coalition in Malaysia.
In the first general elections contested by the party in 1999, the party won five seats in the Dewan Rakyat. A resurgence of the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition in the 2004 general elections reduced the party to just one seat. However, an election wave in the 2008 general elections favoring the opposition increased the party's parliamentary representation to 31 seats, as well as allowing them to form the government in 5 states. This triggered the resignation of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and a lift on the five-year political ban imposed on Anwar Ibrahim on 14 April 2008.
The Pakatan Harapan coalition defeated Barisan Nasional, which had ruled the country for 60 years since independence, in the 2018 general elections, allowing the coalition to form the government. However, defections from within PKR as well as the withdrawal of the Malaysian United Indigenous Party (BERSATU) from the coalition caused the collapse of the PH government after just 22 months in power, culminating in the 2020 Malaysian political crisis that resulted in the rise of the Perikatan Nasional government with ally-turned-enemy Muhyiddin Yassin at the helm. The PH coalition would return to power once again after the 2022 elections. The elections produced a hung parliament for the first time in the country's history, but an alliance with other parties allowed Anwar Ibrahim to become the 10th Prime Minister of Malaysia through a unity government with his political rivals in Barisan Nasional as well as other political coalitions and parties to achieve a two-thirds majority in the Dewan Rakyat.
The party enjoys strong support from urban states such as Selangor, Penang, Perak, Negeri Sembilan and Johor, as well as the capital city of Kuala Lumpur. It promotes an agenda with a strong emphasis on social justice and anti-corruption, as well as adopting a platform that seeks to abolish the New Economic Policy to replace it with an economic policy that takes a non-ethnic approach in poverty eradication and correcting economic imbalances.
... and the Malaysian People's Party (PRM), a former socialist party. PKR is basically a social-liberal party committed to social justice, equality, equal rights, ...
... In the 2008 elections, Anwar's multiracialist and centrist PKR united the two, not just in opposition to the BN, but by pulling their political ideologies toward the political center. It is this feat that allows the Pakatan coalition to ...