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Who should run KL? Local polls study sparks racial balance fears
The Straits Times
|February 19, 2026
Move revives debate over who should control ethnically mixed capital city
In most democracies, choosing the mayor of a capital city is routine. But in Malaysia, reintroducing local elections is so politically charged that touching it risks a racial backlash.
A new government-commissioned feasibility study into electing Kuala Lumpur's mayor has revived a long-running debate over who should control the country's political and economic nerve centre: the federal government or the city's two million residents.
The fight over electing KL's mayor is not just about local politics - it is also about whether Malaysia's most ethnically mixed city can balance democratic representation with the delicate power sharing between races that has shaped the country for decades. The debate reveals deeper fears over who controls urban centres and whether ethnic demographics should decide who runs a modern capital.
"Introducing a mayoral election in this situation could lead to voting based on racial sentiment, where the larger group dominates the smaller one," Mr Mohd Zai Mustafa, chairman of hardline Malay-Muslim coalition Gerakan Pembela Ummah, told The Straits Times.
He warned that a direct vote could affect ethnic harmony and reduce Malay influence in the federal territory, handing control to the community that they claim has already dominated its wealth.
Mr Zai also argued that KL's administration requires close coordination with the federal government as it houses foreign embassies, the national palace and key federal agencies. An elected mayor, he argued, could complicate policy alignment and development planning.
Federal Territories Minister Hannah Yeoh previously said the study, conducted by the International Islamic University of Malaysia (IIUM), is merely examining the legal and practical implications of introducing a mayoral election.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition February 19, 2026 de The Straits Times.
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