Summary: | This paper aims to examine regime change in Malaysia post-GE14. It employs the notion of
electoral authoritarianism to understand the importance of elections in legitimizing
authoritarian rule. As the UMNO-BN regime employed higher levels of electoral
authoritarianism over the years, the people began to put pressure on the regime by demanding
for greater accountability, transparency and inclusivity. The outcome of the 14th General
Election demonstrated the people’s power and was a crucial first step in restoring the
democratic system and ending the political dominance of the UMNO-BN. Yet, more recent
political developments in the country, amid Covid-19 pandemic, have raised the concerns of
how fragile the situation of regime change is. Based on a qualitative method and analyses from
in-depth interviews, this paper argues that while regime change was unexpectedly short-lived,
the power exercised by the electorates in the GE-14 has not only substantially weakened the
once dominant UMNO-BN coalition but also indirectly contributed to new political
partnerships and manoeuvrings in an attempt to remain relevant.
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