JULY 8 — As Malaysians await the outcome of the Johor state election, a familiar temptation has resurfaced. Politi...JULY 8 — As Malaysians await the outcome of the Johor state election, a familiar temptation has resurfaced. Politi...

Johor state election will not be a wave that affects Negeri Sembilan: They truly are different — Phar Kim Beng

2026/07/08 09:32
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JULY 8 — As Malaysians await the outcome of the Johor state election, a familiar temptation has resurfaced. Political commentators and party strategists alike are eager to treat Johor as a bellwether for the next state election in Negeri Sembilan. Such a conclusion may be politically convenient, but it is analytically unsound.

Johor and Negeri Sembilan may both lie in peninsular Malaysia, yet their electoral dynamics differ profoundly. 

What happens in Johor should not automatically be interpreted as a predictor of voting behaviour in Negeri Sembilan.

Johor has always occupied a unique position in Malaysian politics. It is the historical birthplace of modern Umno and remains one of the party's deepest reservoirs of organisational strength. Even after Malaysia's political transformation since 2008, Johor has retained an institutional conservatism that cannot be easily replicated elsewhere. 

Local political networks, longstanding patronage structures, and deeply rooted party machinery continue to matter greatly.

At the same time, Johor possesses a distinctive economic geography. 

Hundreds of thousands of Johoreans work across the Causeway in Singapore while maintaining households in Malaysia. Their voting behaviour is shaped not merely by national issues but also by exchange rates, cross-border employment, housing affordability, transportation, and the overall management of Malaysia-Singapore relations.

These factors simply do not exist in Negeri Sembilan to the same degree.

Negeri Sembilan presents an entirely different political landscape. Rather than being dominated by one historic political tradition, it is characterised by a more balanced competition among coalition partners. 

Electoral contests are often decided by local candidates, constituency service, and the ability of competing parties to mobilise mixed urban, semi-urban and rural voters simultaneously.

The author says Johor’s unique electoral landscape means its outcome is unlikely to foreshadow the next state election in Negeri Sembilan. — Bernama pic

Its demographic composition also differs significantly. The distribution of Malay, Chinese and Indian voters varies from Johor, while the influence of younger commuters to the Klang Valley creates a different set of political priorities. 

Cost of living, public transportation, employment opportunities around Greater Kuala Lumpur, and access to education frequently weigh more heavily than the cross-border issues that dominate Johor.

Equally important is electoral psychology.

Johor voters often seek stability after prolonged periods of political uncertainty. 

Negeri Sembilan voters, however, have historically demonstrated a greater willingness to evaluate governments based on current performance rather than historical loyalty. Their electoral choices are frequently more fluid and pragmatic.

The existence of a coalition government at the federal level further complicates any attempt to compare the two states.

Supporters of both major coalitions are no longer mobilised by the same emotions that characterised elections between 2018 and 2022. 

Some voters have become more complacent because their preferred parties now share power in Putrajaya. Others have become more demanding, expecting concrete delivery instead of perpetual political campaigning.

These sentiments will manifest differently in Johor and Negeri Sembilan.

Turnout itself should also be interpreted carefully. A lower turnout in Johor may reflect logistical challenges, voter fatigue or complacency rather than a wholesale rejection of any coalition. Likewise, a higher turnout in Negeri Sembilan could stem from highly localised contests instead of any broader national political swing.

Political analysts therefore need to distinguish between electoral momentum and electoral transferability. A coalition can perform exceptionally well in one state without enjoying identical success elsewhere. Malaysia's increasingly fragmented political landscape makes nationwide electoral waves less common than they once were.

Indeed, recent elections have repeatedly demonstrated that state elections are becoming progressively more localised. Candidate quality, constituency engagement, local economic conditions and specific community concerns increasingly outweigh simplistic national narratives.

For Pakatan Harapan, Barisan Nasional and Perikatan Nasional alike, the lesson is identical. None should assume that Johor's verdict provides a ready-made blueprint for Negeri Sembilan. Each state demands its own campaign, its own policy emphasis and its own organisational strategy.

Malaysia has entered a mature electoral era where voters increasingly distinguish between federal governance and state administration. They are capable of rewarding one coalition in one state while favouring another elsewhere without perceiving any contradiction.

That is precisely why Johor should be understood on its own terms.

Its election will undoubtedly generate intense political discussion. It may influence morale within competing parties, affect media narratives and reshape strategic calculations in Putrajaya. Yet it will not automatically create an electoral wave capable of sweeping across Negeri Sembilan.

Political geography still matters. Local history still matters. Demography still matters. Economic realities still matter.

Most importantly, voters themselves continue to demonstrate that they evaluate elections according to the specific circumstances of their own states rather than merely following a national tide.

Johor will choose Johor's future. Negeri Sembilan, when its turn comes, will choose its own.

* Phar Kim Beng is a professor of Asean Studies, International Islamic University Malaysia and director, Institute of International and Asean Studies.

** This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.

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