16-07-2025
Umno is now a local party in Sabah, says Ahmad Maslan
KOTA KINABALU: Umno should no longer be seen as a peninsula-based party as it has long-established local roots in Sabah, says Datuk Seri Ahmad Maslan ( pic ).
Ahmad, who is Umno's war room secretariat chief and a supreme council member, said the party has been present in Sabah for more than three decades and its leadership today is made up entirely of local Sabahans.
"Umno in Sabah is no longer a Malayan party. When a party has existed for 34 to 35 years in the state, it is no longer accurate to call it a 'Parti Malaya'.
"It is now both a local and a national party – that is the most appropriate way to describe Umno and Barisan Nasional in Sabah," he said during a dinner with Lahad Datu Umno division leaders on Tuesday (July 15) night.
His comments come amid growing sentiment in Sabah's political landscape that the state needs to empower local-based parties – similar to Sarawak – to gain stronger bargaining power with Putrajaya.
He also expressed confidence that Umno could reclaim all state seats under the Lahad Datu parliamentary constituency, as it had during its peak in Sabah.
In 2018, following its defeat in the 14th General Election, Umno announced that its Sabah chapter would be granted greater autonomy to independently manage its own affairs – including leadership appointments, candidate selection and political strategy – as part of efforts to rebuild support in the state.
The move, later formalised in Umno's constitution, aimed to strengthen the party's position in Sabah by aligning more closely with local sentiments and addressing growing calls for greater self-determination, similar to the approach taken by Sarawak-based parties.
On May 12, 2025, Sabah Umno chief Datuk Seri Bung Moktar Radin reaffirmed that Sabah Umno continues to hold this autonomy, particularly in candidate selection and state election strategy, despite the Barisan Nasional central leadership managing alliance negotiations at the national level.
On July 6, Ahmad said Umno is eyeing between 25 and 30 seats out of total 73 seats in the upcoming Sabah state election, emphasising that the party would focus on constituencies where it has a strong chance of winning rather than contesting widely without impact.