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Can the Agong withhold consent to the dissolution of Parliament? PDF Print
Monday, 28 January 2008 15:58

Viewing the entire Article 40 in its full perspective, there is no doubt that the powers conferred in Clause (2) are prerogative powers exclusive to the Agong. They are intended to be exercised with the Agong’s own judgement without hindrance from others. And among these is the power to withhold consent to the Prime Minister’s request to dissolve Parliament.

Kim Quek

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{mosgoogle right} At this moment when the Prime Minister is expected to announce the imminent dissolution of Parliament to pave the way for the next general election, it is perhaps relevant and urgent that the critical issue of the power to dissolve Parliament be reviewed.

It seems to be a popular belief that the Prime Minister has absolute power to decide when Parliament is to be dissolved. Is there a constitutional basis for this belief?

The answer is no; for there is a clear-cut provision in the Constitution whereby the Yang di-Pertuan Agong is given the power to withhold consent to a request for dissolution of Parliament. The fact that the Agong has always acceded to the Prime Minister’s request to dissolve Parliament in the past does not detract from this constitutional principle.

Granted that in the normal course of events the Agong is generally bound to act in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister or the Cabinet. However, there are certain functions where the Agong is conferred the exclusive power to act on his own without the advice of the Prime Minister, and the power to withhold consent to dissolution of Parliament is one of them.

AGONG’S DISCRETIONARY POWERS

These discretionary powers of the Agong are clearly and unambiguously prescribed in Article 40 (2) of the Constitution. In order to dispel any doubt as to whether these discretionary powers are really intended to be exercised by the Agong without any advice from the Prime Minister or Cabinet, we will take a look at the entire Article 40 in full, which is titled “Yang di-Pertuan Agong to act on advice”.

Article 40 consists of 4 clauses, which are as follows:

Clause (1) is a general statement which says that when the Agong exercises his functions, he “shall act in accordance with the advice of the Cabinet”, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution.

Clause (1A) elaborates on Clause (1) to say that “where the Yang di-Pertuan Agong is to act in accordance with advice, on advice, or after considering advice, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall accept and act in accordance with such advice”.

Clause (2) prescribes the discretionary powers of the Agong, and I quote this clause in full:

The Yang di-Pertuan Agong may act in his discretion in the performance of the following functions, that is to say –

(a) the appointment of a Prime Minister;

b) the withholding of consent to a request for the dissolution of Parliament;

(c) the requisition of a meeting of the Conference of Rulers concerned solely with the privileges, position, honours and dignities of Their Royal Highnesses, and any action at such a meeting, and any other case mentioned in this Constitution.”

While the discretionary power on item (a) has to be exercised in conjunction with the provision of Article 43 Clause (2) (a) where the Agong is required to appoint “a member of the House of Representatives who in his judgement is likely to command the confidence of the majority of the members of that House”, the Agong’s power over item (b) and (c) is unencumbered by other provisions of the Constitution. Note also that the Agong’s discretionary power is not confined to items (a), (b) and (c) alone, but covers “any other case mentioned in this Constitution.”

Clause (3) merely says that the Agong may be required to act in consultation with bodies other than the Cabinet, if so required by federal law.

Viewing the entire Article 40 in its full perspective, there is no doubt that the powers conferred in Clause (2) are prerogative powers exclusive to the Agong. They are intended to be exercised with the Agong’s own judgement without hindrance from others. And among these is the power to withhold consent to the Prime Minister’s request to dissolve Parliament.

CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION

Despite the clarity of our Constitution on this issue, there are those who think that since we have inherited the Westminster system of government, we must follow the constitutional conventions of Britain and that means the Agong, like the Queen, must not exercise his own judgement, but to accept the Prime Minister’s decision to dissolve Parliament as a fait accompli.

The question I want to put across is: why must we follow the British constitutional convention?

We must understand that Britain is governed through what is famously known as an ‘unwritten constitution’, which is in effect a combination of written documents and unwritten rules. The written documents are statues and court judgements accumulated over the ages, while the unwritten rules are known as ‘constitutional conventions’ which are rules of constitutional behaviour recognized and accepted by the political players, though these are not legally binding. Under such a system, Parliament reigns supreme.

In contrast, Malaysia has a wholly written constitution, which being modelled after the British system, has already included many of the British constitutional conventions that were intended to be incorporated into our system of government. As such, our Constitution is supreme, as stated in Article 4, which clearly states that any law which is inconsistent with the Constitution shall be void. And the courts must interpret the Constitution from the words alone without importing extraneous rules and practices. There is therefore no justification to use any so-called convention to usurp the personal power expressly granted to the Agong under Clause (2) of Article 40.

In fact, as far as adherence to the British constitutional convention is concerned, hardly any commonwealth country is following strictly to these British rules, despite almost all of them having inherited the British system at the time of independence. This is understandable, as no independent state fully exercising its sovereignty can remain contended at faithfully maintaining the constitutional traditions and practices of its former colonial ruler.

A most prominent case is the Australian crisis of 1975, when a political stalemate in the midst of a series of breaches of conventions by both the ruling and opposition parties in parliament led to the sacking of then Prime Minister Gough Whitlam by Governor General John Kerr, which is itself a major breach of convention. Can you imagine the Queen sacking the Prime Minister of Britain? But this is exactly the kind of constitutional drama that took place in Australia, which ironically remains as one of the ex-colonies most closely linked to Britain, symbolized by maintaining a head of state whose official status is a representative of the Queen. These events illustrate the impracticability of expecting the British constitutional conventions to be faithfully adhered to outside the United Kingdom.

And so, Malaysia being a sovereign state with a constitution that is fully written, I don’t see why the Agong should feel any unease when any exercise of his discretionary power sanctioned by the Constitution should be found in variance with the British convention – such as withholding consent to dissolve Parliament.

POLITICAL CRISIS

The real issue Malaysians must focus on is: under what circumstances should the Agong withhold his consent. Though there is no clear statement in our Constitution on this issue, a hint can be found in Article 43 (4), which I quote in full:

If the Prime Minister ceases to command the confidence of the majority of the members of the House of Representatives, then, unless at his request the Yang di-Pertuan Agong dissolves Parliament, the Prime Minister shall tender the resignation of the Cabinet.”

This clause implies that the Agong can turn down the Prime Minister’s request to dissolve Parliament in the event that the latter looses the support of the majority of members of Parliament, in which event, the PM together with the Cabinet will have to resign. Following such resignation, the Agong will have to appoint a new PM who will in turn select a new Cabinet. In short, a new government will be appointed.

This also implies that, in the event the PM looses majority support in Parliament, the Agong has the prerogative to decide on how the political crisis is to be resolved - either by appointing a new Prime Minister who can command majority support in Parliament, or by holding a new election, for which Parliament has first to dissolve.

We can see from this scenario that the Agong possesses vast powers to extricate the nation from a crisis by virtue of the provisions in Article 40 (2). The question in our minds is: apart from the PM loosing majority support in Parliament, what other serious political turmoil or grave abuses that could give rise to the Agong acting under Article 40 (2) (b) – such as the degrading of the electoral system to the point that it has destroyed the democratic foundation of our nation?

I will deal with these issues in my next article.

Comments (28)Add Comment
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written by Mr Smith, January 28, 2008 16:08:37
Never place too much of your hopes on the Agong withholding his consent to the dissolution of Parliament.
BERSIH delivered a petition on the Electoral roll to him, nothing happened so far.
Even Zaki was appointed a Federal Court judge, how come?
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written by Eugene, January 28, 2008 16:17:44
In my opinion think its wishful thinking that Agong will intervene. We the citizen of Malaysia is on our own without hope of any divine intervention.

Any members here is from an advertising agency? We need a viral marketing campaign to better educate
malaysian of the critical situation of our govt and the need for change.
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written by LKO, January 28, 2008 16:24:53
Please don't highlight so early. BN still have time to do another express constitutional amendment.
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written by Birdbrain, January 28, 2008 16:40:32
If my memory serves me well, during the last Umno General Assembly the Umno memebers already proclaimed themselves to be the Rulers of Malaysia. So do you think Umno really give a damn about getting the Agong to consent to the dissolution of Parliament?!

smilies/sad.gif smilies/shocked.gif smilies/cry.gif
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written by workaholic, January 28, 2008 17:03:39
Yes, well said Mr Smith. I have been wondering the same thing. In fact, in his most recent statement referring to the latest happenings in the country, the Agong seemed to imply that the Rakyat are not law-abiding, raise 'sensitive' issues etc. Maybe the Agong really can't do much because of the same old thing called 'protocol'. But then, just how far is the Agong's freedom to exercise his authority and freedom of speech restricted? Maybe the Agong is not that keen to get involved? Or maybe the Agong is actually controlled by the government beyond the protocol? Which is the truth?
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written by asguard, January 28, 2008 17:06:03
Its the devils themselves will declare where or when do they wants dissolution of Parliament so don't place too much hope on the Agong.. he in fact has not much authority.. but the devils has (UMNO)....
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written by DontPlayGod, January 28, 2008 17:24:48
Eugene wrote:

"Any members here is from an advertising agency? We need a viral marketing campaign to better educate
malaysian of the critical situation of our govt and the need for change."

Sorry friend, but which advertising media is going to advertise for us? Remember, everything in this country is controlled by the Government(in terms of approval, permit, licences, enforcement, etc.)
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written by DontPlayGod, January 28, 2008 17:29:52
Sure, according to the constittion, our Yang di pertuan Agong can withhold consent approval for the dissolution of parliament, but, remember, UMNO has made themselves so powerful and omnipotent that it has rendered the royalty powerless. Remember UMNO controls all the organs of authority and power, including the PDRM, the judiciary, the ACA, the armed forces, etc.(although in name the Agong is the supreme commander of the armed forces). When push comes to shove, who do you think the armed forces will take their orders from? From he Agong or UMNO?
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written by doggone, January 28, 2008 18:00:23
Mr.Smith just spoke our mind loud and clear.



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written by Motherchell, January 28, 2008 20:13:40
Does the Little Boy Nazri know what the above is all about?????????? Can he read the Constitution??????/ can he also advise the Sleepy Head?????------ The answer is "No" !!!!

Hes a Law Minister who doesn't know the difference between a DUKKU and a DUNGGU!

I REST MY CASE!!!!!!
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written by TM Nizam, January 28, 2008 21:02:42
Agreed with the opinion of Mr. Smith...
I don't think Agong will intervene with any matters related to politics...
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written by Umar Rentaka, January 28, 2008 21:07:32
If the people are so foolish as wanting to elect the BN, why should the Agong put out his head for us. The fight is on our hands. we gave power to BN, we must take it back and give to whom we want. Thats the right and honorable thing to do.
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written by pirate, January 28, 2008 23:02:38
well petition to Agong by Bersih is a failure. We can't expect a fair election while that idiot Abdul Rashid around. another massive rally is the solution?????
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written by Rohani Hitam, January 28, 2008 23:26:40
The last thing the monarchs want to do is to create a constitutional crisis with the executive as their function is generally ceremonial. Maybe a little bit of executive power in terms of protecting the interests of the indigenous people and Islam but they seldom intervene.

Delaying in consenting to the disolving of the parliament will be seen as an act of defiance against the advise of the PM, the head of the executive. The executive can move a new motion and dilute the powers of the Agong. Fight your case and the judiciary will know who's best to be favoured with.

Singapore had experimented with some executive powers to her elected President, a mini 'crisis' occured. The executive moved in swiftly and things are "back to normal". So you cannot really beat the executive especially the cabinet and the parliament are behind them. So does the Agong has a choice? Did what you expected out of him during a public decent materialised? No it didn't. Why? The Agong doesn't want to be seen to engage in politics unless the country's constitutional and democratic systems have collapsed. At the moment the wayang held by BN still go on despite falling in audience. Just like during the hungry ghost festival, despite no spectators, the show goes on, because it's for the ghosts. Perhaps not hungry ghost but phantom ghosts.
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written by alee, January 29, 2008 03:32:24
Any members here is from an advertising agency? We need a viral marketing campaign to better educate
malaysian of the critical situation of our govt and the need for change.

------------------------------------------------
CAlling ALL Readers of MT, let's use SMS to spread the education. We should take the important points from MT articles, condense them into SMS and send out chain SMS. We should have all all language versions. Encourage everyone to send to everyone else.

We must reach out to all Malaysians, especially the people in the kampongs and new villages !! Let's start today !! Can anyone start posting those SMS in MT so everyone can use ?
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written by kzso, January 29, 2008 07:30:43
come on... why the fuss about this matter? let the government of the day do their job and also the agong carry out his function of a agong.

leave the politics to the politician. once the agong and the sultans are involved in the running of the government chaos will happens. how many agongs, sultans and tengkus, regents, tengku mahkotas, raja mudas etc are willing to be with the rakyat, sitting and having lunch or dinner at the warongs, shopping at pasar tani, using proton cars, go to kampungs, outskirts, no clubbing, not spendinglavishly , overseas holidayss etc... once they're involved in the running of the government they'll grab all projects, commissions etc.

leave the politics and running of the governmet to the politicians and the rakyats; they don't suffer like the rakyats...
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written by Flex Tan, January 30, 2008 13:08:56
WHAT THE AGUNG SHOULD SAY TO THE RULING PARTY IN GOVT (BN) IS;

CLEAN-UP YOUR MESS FIRST AND FULLFILL YOUR 2008 ELECTION PROMISES (YOU STILL HAVE 1 YR LEFT, BEFORE YOUR 5 YR JOB IS OVERDUE) ... THAN YOU CAN HAVE YOUR ELECTION AND TRUELY DESERVE YOUR MANDATE.

IF YOU CANNOT, THEN THE RAKYAT SHALL ACCORDINGLY MAKE THEIR RIGHTFUL DECISION....
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written by Flex Tan, January 30, 2008 13:14:12
PS. BN IS LIKE A CHILD......

THEY HAVE NOT FINISHED THEIR HOMEWORK ..... BUT ALREADY ASKING TO WATCH TV.

NOTE : THE AGUNG IS LIKE A PARENT. ON WHETHER HE IS A DISCIPLINARIAN OR LACK THE DISCIPLINE OF A MODERN PARENT IS ANOTHER CASE.
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written by Flex Tan, January 30, 2008 13:15:39
CLEAN-UP YOUR MESS FIRST AND FULLFILL YOUR 2008 ELECTION PROMISES

PLS READ IT AS "2004" .....
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written by Dominic, January 31, 2008 13:28:37
Seeking YDP Agong intervention on the disoulution of Parliment may not be that easy but in anycase the final onus is still with the Rakyat themselves. The main difference here is the involment of Anwar to stand as a candidate to challenge BN. If GE is held later,AAB know he has Anwar to contend with even though the impact maybe be insigificant. Even then,AAB cannot afford to take chances as he knows too every vote count given the current stituation. Instead, PKR should use this excuse to their advantage. Time is of essence now. People`s power is still the deciding factor with or without the intervention of YDP Agong. Collectively, we all must join hands and close ranks to take on the battle come GE. Set aside what ever differences and for ONCE, count yourself as proactive yawning for a change of goverment. ARE YOU READY?
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written by M0nd0man, January 31, 2008 15:18:16
YDP Agong should withhold consent until Anwar is able to contest in the election. It is giving every opportunity for a fair election, giving Rakyat more choices instead of barring him from contesting. It is a just action., most honorable and kind for Agong to do so.

Yes, the there werent any feedback from YDPAgong, I have no idea why the silence but the issue now is election.

Electorial process, we need to include all possible candidate of man of caliber at the current time frame.
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written by joeawk, January 31, 2008 16:55:16
Is it true that our constitution is supreme? Precedence does not indicate as such. What then has happened to our judiciary?

Can't the Agong sack those judges who did not uphold the supremacy of the constitution, especially those judges who ain't got no balls to make decision concerning Islam but subject non muslims to the syaria court.

Our Agong,can he showed us that he is Agong for all Malaysians despite him, being the head of Islam.
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written by temenggong, January 31, 2008 22:15:40
With the judiciary corrupt for all to see, and the Agong doing nothing about it, I guess this organ of power is dysfunctional. Just like the judicairy.
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written by mikewang, January 31, 2008 23:10:24
"under what circumstances should the Agong withhold his consent." ?
Basically, this issue should never arise because the federal constitution is very clear on the discretionary power of the agong.

It says:-
The Yang di-Pertuan Agong may act in his discretion in the performance of the following functions, that is to say –

(a) the appointment of a Prime Minister;

b) the withholding of consent to a request for the dissolution of Parliament; ... etc.

The King need not seek the advice of anyone not need to act on the advice of the PM.
It is his discretion.
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written by Malaysiaku, February 01, 2008 09:50:30
"Never place too much of your hopes on the Agong withholding his consent to the dissolution of Parliament.
BERSIH delivered a petition on the Electoral roll to him, nothing happened so far.
Even Zaki was appointed a Federal Court judge, how come? "

You are damed right! I have had high hopes that they (the Royalties) will intervene and do something about the political situation that the citizens are suffering under the BN regime but nothing from them. I have now learnt that we should not depend on them unless you are some bigshot like murderers such as a former Tun's grandson or an ex-Minister who got the royal pardon for murder. What about the victim and his/her family? There is no justice and the facts speaks for themselves. Don't waste your time looking at the royalties to help you out. Siapa engkau?
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written by Malaysiaku, February 01, 2008 09:57:40
"We have no other choice except to rely on HRH DYMM SPB YDP AGONG!"

Are you joking? Where does that leads us to? The BERSIH petition incident is testimony to what they can do or won't do. You will get better result praying to ALLAH.
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