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Anwar faces a July test as Johor and Negeri Sembilan call snap polls

Anwar faces a July test as Johor and Negeri Sembilan call snap polls

Two states vote within 60 days; PH fields 56 candidates in Johor on July 11 — a referendum on Anwar's reform record before the 2028 general election

Leaders·election-calendar· pending-decision Qui décide·Comment la vie change ·7 takes ·mis à jour 24 juin 2026

Summary

Anwar Ibrahim faces a mid-year electoral test as two Malaysian states — Johor and Negeri Sembilan — called snap polls, to be held within the 60-day constitutional window. Anwar unveiled Pakatan Harapan's full 56-candidate Johor slate (including former minister Maszlee Malik) on 22 June; voting is set for 11 July. Though the state results do not directly affect his federal majority, significant losses would weaken the unity government before a general election due by early 2028. Anwar is campaigning on his reform record — urging voters, even those living out of state, to back leaders of "integrity, wisdom and humility" — against incumbent Barisan Nasional in Johor and a resurgent Perikatan Nasional. The polls double as a referendum on whether his reform agenda still moves voters amid an unstable coalition.

By the numbers

  • 56 — Pakatan Harapan candidates fielded in Johor.
  • 11 July — Johor polling day; Negeri Sembilan within the same 60-day window.
  • 2020 — the year PH lost control of Johor it now seeks to regain.
  • 2028 — deadline for the next Malaysian general election.

Why it matters

State polls are the clearest read on Anwar's standing between general elections. A weak PH showing — especially to Malay-nationalist Perikatan — would signal erosion of his multiethnic coalition and embolden challengers, constraining the reform agenda and his foreign-policy room (Anwar warns Europe after Norway pulls a missile-export licence: 'we'll seek alternatives').

What to watch

  • The Johor and Negeri Sembilan results on/after 11 July.
  • PH's performance among Malay-majority seats vs. Perikatan Nasional.
  • Whether losses trigger coalition strain or a cabinet rethink.