Hajiji Noor clearly could not wait. Barely 24 hours after Sabahans delivered one of the most emphatic “Semenanjung, please balik KL” messages in electoral history, he sprinted to Istana Sri Kinabalu to get sworn in — and then unveiled a cabinet line-up so tone-deaf it could qualify as a medical condition. Sabah Bagi Mandat Baru. Tapi Hajiji Masih Main Politik Lama.
Hajiji… “Macam mana saya mau kekal berkuasa walau apa pun jadi?”
For a man who spent the campaign telling Sabahans he heard their aspirations, Hajiji now appears to have developed sudden, selective, self-serving political deafness. Warisan supporters watched with the same facial expression Malaysians reserve for discovering that the nasi lemak has no sambal:- absolute betrayal.
Let’s recap the actual message Sabahans sent:
Sabah gave PKR and Perikatan Nasional the electoral equivalent of a restraining order — one seat each, just to be polite. They weren’t even willing to be polite with DAP. ZERO seats for DAP!
Warisan’s 25 seats and GRS’ 29 weren’t just numbers. Peninsula based parties UMNO won 6 seats, PKR 1 and PH 1 out of 73 seats. This was a referendum:
Sabah belongs to Sabahans. Not KL operatives. Not Semenanjung power-brokers.
Perikatan Nasional got mauled. PAS behaved like they were on a silent retreat. Sabah Muslims voted for moderation, unity and common sense — not imported Taliban Lite.
Sabahans want MA63 honoured, cost of living addressed, illegal immigration tackled, land protected.
They did not vote for a new round of KL-flavoured political musical chairs.
And what did Hajiji do? He formed a cabinet that looked like the exact thing Sabahans had just rejected with a 10-tonne sledgehammer.
Let’s be honest now: This cabinet wasn’t formed to respect the will of voters.
It was formed to spite one man: Shafie Apdal. Sabahans didn’t vote for Hajiji to wage a personal vendetta. They didn’t vote for a petty turf war that has dragged on for years. The voters said: “Enough already — deliver something real.”
Hajiji said:
“Betul bah… after I settle my unfinished business with Shafie dulu, ya?”
This is political immaturity dressed up as governance. Sebaiknya:
GRS patut bentuk kerajaan Sabahans sepenuhnya, without any hangers-on from Semenanjung.
Bincang terbuka dengan Warisan — sebab rakyat bagi sokongan hampir seimbang
Within hours of seeing Hajiji’s “BN + PH Surprise Combo Cabinet,” five independents withdrew support. Another Sabah-based party quietly followed.
This is not normal. This is not stability. This is not mandate consolidation.
This is a slow-motion collapse wearing a songkok and pretending everything is fine. The new administration is so brittle it makes kuih kapit look like reinforced concrete. At this rate, the administration may not last a year — unless divine intervention, or a miracle or a sudden outbreak of integrity among coalition partners, occurs. (Unlikely.)
Hajiji angkat sumpah kabinet dengan 3 Timbalan Ketua Menteri. Sabahan tengok pun pening.
Just imagine kalau sekolah buat macam ni:
“Cikgu Besar ada 3 Penolong Kanan sebab semua nak rasa syok sendiri.” Macam ini sistem mana pun akan runtuh.
Untuk apa sebenarnya? Because Malaysian politics has a long-standing tradition:
When you’ve run out of real ideas, you start creating fancy job titles and hope nobody notices the office is still on fire.
Three DCMs for a state assembly is not a governance structure. Hajiji just handed out participation trophies. It’s padding. It’s political insurance. It’s “please don’t defect, please don’t topple me, here’s a chair for you.”
Sabahans wanted reforms. Hajiji gave them extra chairs. WHY DID HAJIJI DO THIS?
Two reasons:
This ego battle is older than some of the voters.
Hajiji thinks he’s playing 5D chess. He is clearly a bigger fool than Anwar!
This election proved something fundamental:
Warisan is very much alive. They didn’t just survive PKR/DAP’s collapse — they surged. If Hajiji thinks he has a two-thirds-style mandate, he’s hallucinating. This is the actual equation: GRS 29 seats DOES NOT EQUAL A Licence to Invite Semenanjung Parties Into the Bedroom. With five independents pulling out, Hajiji is now politically exposed. Warisan voters have every right to demand accountability.
Public pressure works. GRS knows the optics are terrible.
Sabahans can — and should — push Hajiji to:
Eject BN & PH from the cabinet
Replace them with Sabah parties or technocrats
Commit publicly to a Peninsular-free cabinet line-up moving forward
Sabahans have the moral high ground. Use it.
If the defecting independents join a stronger bloc (read: Warisan), a new majority can emerge.
If that happens: Hajiji tumbang. It’s that simple. Sabah voters don’t have to accept a government they didn’t vote for.
Warisan + independents + smaller Sabah parties could form a government that finally reflects the actual message of PRN17:
SABAH FIRST. FULL STOP.
No PKR parachutes. No BN operatives. No DAP leftovers. No imported political headaches.
Let’s be blunt: This government is wobbling on day two.
Once KL starts interfering (as they always do)… Once ambition bubbles up (as is inevitable)… Once internal sabotage begins (as it always does)…
Hajiji’s government becomes a countdown clock.
Hajiji Noor thought he could outsmart everyone. He thought Sabahans would shrug. He thought mixing GRS with BN and PH would stabilise his power.
But he forgot the most important lesson of PRN17:
Hajiji Noor had a golden opportunity. Sabahans handed him a mandate drenched in clarity.
But instead of using it to chart a new Sabah-first era, he chose old political habits:
old allies
old horse trading
old Peninsular influence
old power games
old bloat
old ego wars
If he doesn’t correct course immediately, his government will fall — and history will remember him as the man who took a victory… and turned it into a self-inflicted crisis within one day.
Sabah deserves better.
Sabah asked for better.
And if needed, Sabah will force better.
This cabinet is not the future Sabah voted for. If Hajiji insists on ignoring the rakyat, then the rakyat — especially Warisan supporters — must hold the political machete of accountability very close to his neck (politically, of course). Sabahans have options. Sabahans have leverage. Sabahans just changed Malaysian politics in one election.
They can change Sabah’s government again… anytime they want.