1983 Sarawak state election

The fourth Sarawak state election was held between Wednesday, 28 December and Thursday, 29 December 1983 with a nomination date on Thursday, 8 December 1983. The two-day duration of the election was shorter than the eight-day election in 1979 state election because of improvements in transportation and communication systems. Only 45 out of 48 seats were contested. The state assembly was dissolved on 18 November 1983 by the governor of Sarawak with the advice of chief minister of Sarawak, which was one year and 15 days earlier than the expiration of the state assembly on 3 December 1984.[1]

1983 Sarawak state election

28–29 December 1983

All 48 seats in the Sarawak State Legislative Assembly
25 seats needed for a majority
Registered505,872
Turnout367,060 (72.56%)
  Majority party Minority party Third party
 
Leader Abdul Taib Mahmud James Wong Leo Moggie
Party BN SNAP PBDS
Leader since 26 March 1981 (1981-03-26) December 1981 (1981-12) 17 July 1983 (1983-07-17)
Leader's seat Sebandi Limbang Not contesting
Last election 45 seats, 61.2% 16 seats, 16.7% New party
Seats before 45 16 -
Seats won 30 8 6
Seat change Decrease15 Decrease8 -
Popular vote 166,819 46,741 33,712
Percentage 46.2% 13.0 9.3
Swing Decrease3.9% Decrease3.7% -

Chief Minister before election

Abdul Taib Mahmud
BN

Subsequent chief minister

Abdul Taib Mahmud
BN

The election was held during the peak of monsoon season. This election saw 505,872 registered voters eligible to vote, with 367,060 voters (72.56%) actually casting their votes. In this election, Sarawak Barisan Nasional (BN) fielded candidates for 32 seats, SNAP for 18 seats, PBDS for 14 seats, Democratic Action Party (DAP) for 7 seats, and Sarawak Democratik Bersatu (BERSATU) for 4 seats. There were 80 independents contesting for the seats.[1]

Background

The leadership crisis of Sarawak National Party (SNAP, a component party of BN) has caused the emergence of an offshoot party named Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak (PBDS). However, chief minister Abdul Taib Mahmud decided to accept PBDS into the BN coalition. This has caused dissatisfaction of SNAP leadership towards Taib. Both parties SNAP and PBDS were unwilling to compromise any of their seats. Therefore, Taib decided to allow SNAP and PBDS to compete against each other by under their respective party symbols.[2] Serious competitions occurred in state constituencies contested by PBDS and SNAP. Generally, this election was carried out in a peaceful and orderly manner except for the clashes between PBDS candidate and the election officials in N 35 Machan constituency.[1] Sarawak BN, composed of Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB) and Sarawak United Peoples' Party (SUPP), won 29 seats on the election day. They later accepted SNAP and PBDS into the coalition, thus securing a total of 44 of 48 seats.

Results

Summary

Party or allianceVotes%Seats+/–
Barisan NasionalParti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu77,69421.52190
Sarawak United Peoples' Party89,16124.70110
Total166,85546.22300
Sarawak National Party46,74112.9580
Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak33,7129.346New
Democratic Action Party31,2468.6500
Sarawak Demokratik Bersatu2,5400.700New
Independents79,93122.144+1
Total361,025100.00480
Valid votes361,02598.35
Invalid/blank votes6,0701.65
Total votes367,095100.00
Registered voters/turnout505,87272.57
Source: Hazis[2]

Results by constituency

The full list of representatives is shown below:[1]

Three seats were won uncontested by Barisan Nasional (BN):

N24. Matu Daro won by Wahab Haji Dollah
N32. Oya won by Haji Salleh Jafaruddin
N44. Miri won by Dr George Chan Hong Nam
No.State ConstituencyElected State Assembly MembersElected Party
BN 30 | SNAP 8 | PBDS 6 | DAP 0 | BERSATU 0 | IND 4
N01LunduRamsay Noel JitamBN
N02Tasik BiruPatau Anak Rubis @ Dr Patau RubisSNAP
N03PadunganSong Swee GuanBN
N04StampinSim Kheng HongBN
N05Petra JayaHafsah binti HarunBN
N06SatokAbang Abdul Rahman Zohari bin Tun Abang Haji OpengBN
N07SebandiDatuk Patinggi Haji Abdul Taib bin MahmudBN
N08Muara TuangAdanan bin Haji SatemBN
N09Batu KawahChong Kiun KongBN
N10BengohWilfred Rata NissomIND
N11TaratRobert Jacob RiduBN
N12TebakangMichael Ben Ak PanggiSNAP
N13SemeraWan Wahab bin Wan SanusiBN
N14GedongMohammad Tawan bin Abdullah @ Hilary Tawan Ak MasanBN
N15LinggaDaniel Tajem Ak MiriPBDS
N16Sri AmanHollis Ak TiniBN
N17EngkililiSing Cho NangIND
N18Batang AirSylvester Langit Ak. UmingSNAP
N19SaribasHaji Zainuddin bin Haji SatemBN
N20LayarAlfred Jabu Anak NumpangBN
N21KalakaWan Yusof bin Tun Datuk Patinggi Tuanku Haji BujangBN
N22KrianLanggu Ak. Sagu @ EdmundPBDS
N23Kuala RajangSaadi bin OliaBN
N24Matu-DaroWahab Haji DollahBN
N25RepokTeng Lung ChiBN
N26MeradongHii Kiang HiongBN
N27MalingWong Soon KaiBN
N28SeduanTing Ing MiengBN
N29IganTiong Chiong ChuBN
N30DudongWilfred Kiroh Ak. JeramIND
N31BalingianWan Habib bin Syed MahmudBN
N32OyaHaji Salleh JafaruddinBN
N33PakanJawie Wilson Mas'PBDS
N34MeluanGerman Ak. ItamSNAP
N35MachanGramong JunaPBDS
N36NgemahJoseph Ak. KudiPBDS
N37KatibasAmbrose Blikau Ak. EnturanBN
N38PelagusNueng Ak. KudiSNAP
N39BalehJames Jemut MasingPBDS
N40BelagaTajang LaingBN
N41TatauBolhassan bin KambarIND
N42KemenaDatuk Celestine Ujang Anak JilanBN
N43SubisUsop bin WahabBN
N44MiriDr George Chan Hong NamBN
N45MarudiEdward Jeli Anak BlayongSNAP
N46Telang UsanBalan SelingSNAP
N47LimbangDato James Wong Kim MinSNAP
N48LawasDatuk Haji Noor bin Haji TahirBN

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.