Previous election The size of the Legislative Assembly was enlarged from 71 to 82 members in the
last state election. The incumbent Sarawak
Barisan Nasional coalition, led by
Adenan Satem, won 72 seats, allowing it to form a majority government. This included 11 members who were not affiliated with any of its component parties. The election was the first major election for the then newly-formed
Pakatan Harapan coalition, the successor to the
Pakatan Rakyat coalition. But like its predecessor, it was only an electoral alliance at that time. However, the component parties of the coalition, winning the remaining 10 seats, suffered a swing of 9.63 percentage points against it and an overall loss of 5 seats compared to the
2011 election. Between June and August 2016, the 11 partyless Barisan Nasional members either joined the
United Bumiputera Heritage Party, or left the coalition and joined the then United People's Party (now
Parti Sarawak Bersatu). The United People's Party however committed their support for the Barisan Nasional government.
Death of Adenan Satem On 11 January 2017,
Chief Minister Adenan Satem died from cardiac arrest, thus he was unable to complete his second term. This made him the first sitting Chief Minister of Sarawak to have died while in office.
Abang Johari took over the position two days later. A
by-election was held in Adenan's seat of
Tanjong Datu on 18 February, which was overwhelmingly retained by the Barisan Nasional coalition.
2018 federal election The
2018 federal election resulted in an unprecedented victory for the opposition Pakatan Harapan coalition. In response, the four component parties of Barisan Nasional in Sarawak left the coalition and together formed the
Gabungan Parti Sarawak coalition on 12 June 2018.
Malaysian political crisis A
political crisis began at the federal level in February 2020, resulting in the collapse of the Pakatan Harapan federal government and the establishment of a
Perikatan Nasional government. While Sarawak remained largely unaffected, the
People's Justice Party lost all of its representation in the Legislative Assembly by April 2020, with all six remaining Pakatan Harapan seats being held by the
Democratic Action Party. The
Malaysian United Indigenous Party saw its introduction in the state with the membership of
Ali Biju, the MLA for
Krian.
2020–21 events On 26 July 2020, the member for
Padungan, Wong King Wei, left the Democratic Action Party to sit as an
independent member. This resulted in
Parti Sarawak Bersatu overtaking Pakatan Harapan as the second largest grouping in the Legislative Assembly. PSB chairman
Wong Soon Koh took over as opposition leader on 9 November 2020 On 1 August 2020, the newly-formed political informal alliance Gabungan Anak Sarawak (GASAK) which includes parties of
Sarawak People's Aspiration Party (Aspirasi),
Sarawak Workers Party (SWP),
Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak Baru (PBDSB), with NGOs of Sarawak for Sarawakians (S4S) and Sarawak Independence Alliance (SIA) announced that GASAK will contest in all 82 seats in next state election, using Aspirasi's logo. The statement was later revised on 1 October 2020, with GASAK parties contesting 50 seats and the rest contested by an unaffiliated party, Sarawak People Awareness Party (SEDAR). SEDAR was planning to contest all 82 seats. Media reports indicated in July 2020 that the election will likely be held in November after the consideration of the federal and state budgets in October. It is expected that at least three candidates (GPS, PH and a minor party) will be fielded in all 82 constituencies. After the election schedule was announced, some nationalist parties such as
Pejuang, Barisan Nasional and
Bersatu stayed out of the election.
Parti Tenaga Rakyat Sarawak (TERAS), a local party whose candidates in the last election contested as BN Direct Members, did not contest citing lack of preparation.
PAS declared their intention to contest in the election as a warm-up to the
next General Election. Although the assembly was set to dissolve on 6 June, it was announced that the assembly would not dissolve until 1 August, due to the ongoing
2021 Malaysian state of emergency. == Electoral system ==