AP Explains: Why every vote is not equal in Malaysia polls
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Malaysia’s opposition parties have never come close to winning a majority of seats in a national election, even in 2013 when their total vote exceeded the ruling coalition’s. That year, the ruling National Front won 47 per cent of votes but 60 per cent of the seats in Parliament. The party has advantages in Wednesday’s election too. Opposition parties and activists have long complained they’re unable to compete on equal terms. Here are some reasons why:
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RURAL SEATS ARE KEY
Not every vote is equal. Multi-ethnic urban seats, which lean toward the opposition, generally have much higher numbers of voters than those dominated by rural majority Malays, who traditionally support the National Front. That means it takes fewer votes to elect a government lawmaker than it does to elect an opposition lawmaker. Tindak, a group lobbying for reform of the electoral system, says one third of voters decide half of the seats. These distortions are particularly evident in the thinly populated states of Sabah and Sarawak on the island of Borneo, which together elect a quarter of seats in Parliament.