
Johor polls turn into personality contest as PH, BN work to sway voters
The final stretch of campaigning has largely revolved around a comparison of leadership styles and track records, particularly between Anwar and Onn Hafiz
Updated 39 minutes ago · Published on 06 Jul 2026 5:33PM
Both coalitions are effectively asking voters to assess their respective contributions to the state’s development. - July 6, 2026
by Alfian Z.M. Tahir
THE Johor state election campaign has increasingly taken on the shape of a personality-driven contest rather than one anchored in policy, with Pakatan Harapan (PH) and Barisan Nasional (BN) leaning heavily on their respective national and state figures to sway voters.
According to International Islamic University Malaysia associate professor Dr Syaza Shukri, the final stretch of campaigning has largely revolved around a comparison of leadership styles and track records, particularly between Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim and Johor Menteri Besar Datuk Onn Hafiz Ghazi.
She said PH’s strategy of bringing in Anwar reflects its need to reinforce the credibility of the federal government and translate that into state-level support.
“For PH, we can understand why they have to bring the big gun — the Prime Minister himself — because they are campaigning on the effectiveness of PH as the federal government,” she said.
On the other side, BN has focused its messaging on its role as the incumbent state administration, positioning itself as a continuity choice for Johor voters.
Both coalitions, she noted, are effectively asking voters to assess their respective contributions to the state’s development.
“In a way, this is a more mature campaign, but at times it still drifts into personal attacks,” Dr Syaza added.
However, she argued that the overall impact of such messaging remains limited, with no dominant scandal or compelling narrative emerging strong enough to significantly shift voter sentiment or turnout.
“The campaigning hasn’t been that ‘effective’ in the sense that there is no real scandal or big rhetoric that pushes people to come out and vote in large numbers,” she said.
She also pointed to sporadic attempts at sentiment-driven issues, including renewed debate over former prime minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, though she suggested it has not translated into meaningful electoral momentum.
“Even though I don’t see it truly moving the needle,” she said.
Dr Syaza further observed that Perikatan Nasional (PN) has played a comparatively subdued role in the campaign, describing its presence as limited and strategically constrained.
“They know their participation is really to spoil the vote. They can’t form the government unless in coalition,” she said, adding that internal differences between Bersatu and PAS have also weakened their coherence on the campaign trail.
According to her, PAS has shown openness to aligning with BN, while Bersatu has taken a more oppositional stance — a split that has left PN without a unified direction.
Overall, she said PH appears to be mounting the most active challenge, seeking to chip away at BN’s dominance, while BN itself is largely in a defensive posture to protect its existing ground.
“PH is really putting up a fight because they see there’s a chance to reduce BN’s seats, and BN also appears to be on the defensive,” she said.
As the campaign enters its final days, she suggests the contest remains tightly balanced, with personality politics dominating a race still short on breakthrough narratives that could decisively sway Johor voters. – July 6, 2026
by Alfian Z.M. Tahir
THE Johor state election campaign has increasingly taken on the shape of a personality-driven contest rather than one anchored in policy, with Pakatan Harapan (PH) and Barisan Nasional (BN) leaning heavily on their respective national and state figures to sway voters.
According to International Islamic University Malaysia associate professor Dr Syaza Shukri, the final stretch of campaigning has largely revolved around a comparison of leadership styles and track records, particularly between Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim and Johor Menteri Besar Datuk Onn Hafiz Ghazi.
She said PH’s strategy of bringing in Anwar reflects its need to reinforce the credibility of the federal government and translate that into state-level support.
“For PH, we can understand why they have to bring the big gun — the Prime Minister himself — because they are campaigning on the effectiveness of PH as the federal government,” she said.
On the other side, BN has focused its messaging on its role as the incumbent state administration, positioning itself as a continuity choice for Johor voters.
Both coalitions, she noted, are effectively asking voters to assess their respective contributions to the state’s development.
“In a way, this is a more mature campaign, but at times it still drifts into personal attacks,” Dr Syaza added.
However, she argued that the overall impact of such messaging remains limited, with no dominant scandal or compelling narrative emerging strong enough to significantly shift voter sentiment or turnout.
“The campaigning hasn’t been that ‘effective’ in the sense that there is no real scandal or big rhetoric that pushes people to come out and vote in large numbers,” she said.
She also pointed to sporadic attempts at sentiment-driven issues, including renewed debate over former prime minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, though she suggested it has not translated into meaningful electoral momentum.
“Even though I don’t see it truly moving the needle,” she said.
Dr Syaza further observed that Perikatan Nasional (PN) has played a comparatively subdued role in the campaign, describing its presence as limited and strategically constrained.
“They know their participation is really to spoil the vote. They can’t form the government unless in coalition,” she said, adding that internal differences between Bersatu and PAS have also weakened their coherence on the campaign trail.
According to her, PAS has shown openness to aligning with BN, while Bersatu has taken a more oppositional stance — a split that has left PN without a unified direction.
Overall, she said PH appears to be mounting the most active challenge, seeking to chip away at BN’s dominance, while BN itself is largely in a defensive posture to protect its existing ground.
“PH is really putting up a fight because they see there’s a chance to reduce BN’s seats, and BN also appears to be on the defensive,” she said.
As the campaign enters its final days, she suggests the contest remains tightly balanced, with personality politics dominating a race still short on breakthrough narratives that could decisively sway Johor voters. – July 6, 2026
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