1955 Malayan general election

A general election was held on Wednesday, 27 July 1955, the only general election before Malaya's independence in 1957. It was held to elect members of the Federal Legislative Council, which prior to this was fully appointed by the British High Commissioner in Malaya. Voting took place in all 52 federal constituencies of Malaya, each electing one Federal Councillor to the Federal Legislative Council. State elections also took place in all 136 state constituencies in 9 states of Malaya and 2 settlements from 10 October 1954 to 12 November 1955, each electing one Councillor to the State Council or Settlement Council.

1955 Malayan general election

27 July 1955 (timelines)

52 (of the 98) seats to the Federal Legislative Council
27 seats needed for a majority
Registered1,280,855
Turnout1,027,211 (82.8%)
  First party Second party Third party
  PMIP
Leader Tunku Abdul Rahman Onn Jaafar Abbas Alias
Party Alliance National Party PMIP
Leader since 23 August 1951 (1951-08-23) February 1954 1953
Leader's seat Sungei Muda No seat No seat
Seats won 51 No seats 1
Popular vote 818,013 78,909 40,667
Percentage 81.7% 7.9% 4.1%

Map of winners by constituancy

Elected Chief Minister

Tunku Abdul Rahman
Alliance

The Pan-Malayan Islamic Party (PMIP, later known as PAS) was formed primarily to contest in the 1955 election. Before that, PMIP was known as the "Pan-Malayan Islamic Association", as a part of UMNO. PMIP won support by proclaiming its aim of making Islam the base of the Malay society in the north of Malay Peninsula, which was facing the lowest economic growth in Malaya.

The election resulted in a decisive win for the Alliance, which consisted of the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), the Malayan Chinese Association (MCA) and Malayan Indian Congress (MIC), and a resounding defeat for Parti Negara, led by former UMNO president Onn Jaafar. Onn himself failed to win a seat, while the Alliance proceeded to form the new government, with its leader Tunku Abdul Rahman becoming Chief Minister.[1]

Thirty Alliance candidates had majorities of over 10,000 votes. Nine of them had majorities of over 20,000. Forty-three of their opponents lost their deposits.

Timelines

Federal Legislative Council

  • Nomination Date : 15 June 1955
  • Election day : 27 July 1955

State Council

StateNomination DateState election
 Johor1 September 195410 October 1954
 Terengganu29 October 1954
 Selangor11 August 195527 September 1955
 Kedah14 August 1955nil
 Kelantan15 August 195519 September 1955
 Perlis17 August 195524 September 1955
 Pahang25 August 195526 September 1955
 Negeri Sembilan8 September 195512 October 1955
 Perak1 October 195512 November 1955

Settlement Council

SettlementNomination DateState election
 Penang13 January 195519 February 1955
 Malacca4 August 1955nil

Results

Federal Legislative Council

The Alliance Party won around 80% of the total vote and 51 out of 52 seats contested. PMIP won their only seat in Krian, Perak. Its sole winning candidate, Haji Ahmad Tuan Hussein, an Islamic scholar, was subsequently nicknamed "Mr. Opposition". Voter turnout was 82.8%.

 Summary of the 27 July 1955 Malayan Federal Legislative Council election results
Party Vote Seats
Votes % Won %
Alliance Party[lower-alpha 1]Alliance818,01381.685198.08
United Malays National OrganisationUMNO589,93358.903465.38
Malayan Chinese AssociationMCA201,21220.091528.85
Malayan Indian CongressMIC26,8682.6823.85
National PartyNegara78,9097.8800.00
Pan-Malayan Islamic PartyPMIP40,6674.0611.92
National Association of PerakNAP20,9962.1000.00
Perak Malay LeaguePML5,4330.5400.00
Labour Party of MalayaLab4,7860.4800.00
Perak Progressive PartyPPP1,0810.1100.00
IndependentsIND31,6423.1600.00
Valid votes1,001,527
Invalid/blank votes25,684
Overall total (turnout: 82.8%)1,027,211100.0052100.00
Did not vote253,644
Registered voters1,280,855
Source: The Malayan Elections, Francis G. Carnell.[2]
  1. Contested using kapal layar election symbol on the ballot papers.

Results by state

State and Settlement Councils

Notes

  1. Gill, Ranjit (1990). Of Political Bondage. Sterling Corporate Services. p. 40. ISBN 981-00-2136-4.
  2. Carnell, Francis G. (December 1955). "The Malayan Elections". Pacific Affairs. University of British Columbia. 28 (4): 315. doi:10.2307/3035316. ISSN 0030-851X. JSTOR 3035316.

References

  • Barbara Watson Andaya dan Leonard Y. Andaya. A History of Malaysia, The MacMlllan Press Ltd. (1982). ISBN 0-333-27673-6.
  • The World Book Encyclopedia, World Book International (1994). ISBN 0-7166-6694-4.


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