The end of PSRM (1990) The last socialist party to exist in Malaysia, Parti Sosialis Rakyat Malaysia (PSRM), reverted to its original name to
Parti Rakyat Malaysia in 1990 before merging with
Parti Keadilan Rakyat in 2003.
Formation of PSM (1990–1998) In 1991, several
grassroots based organisations working with the urban and rural poor in Malaysia formed an alliance. These included the Jawatankuasa Sokongan Peneroka Bandar led by Dr
Mohd Nasir Hashim, Alaigal led by Dr
Michael Jeyakumar Devaraj and Pusat Pembangunan Masyarakat, which was headed by
S. Arutchelvan. In 1994, the groups staged a massive Labour Day
demonstration at the heart of
Kuala Lumpur, surprising many people. The last major demonstration called by the working class in the capital city was in the 1970s. In 1995, these grassroots organisation who already had their strong support among the
plantation workers, the urban poor, and industrial workers mooted the idea for a political party to represent the aspirations of the poor and the marginalised. The election results in 1995 gave a sweeping win to the ruling
Barisan Nasional and hastened this process. After years of discussion and consolidations, it was finally agreed that a party with socialist ideology was needed to liberate the masses from their current conditions. With this in mind, the groups took more than two and the half years to draft the party's constitution, which was ready by the end of 1997. After further consultation with their electoral base, on 1 May 1998, the new party known as the Socialist Party of Malaysia officially submitted its application for registration. Former PSRM central committee member and ex-ISA detainee Mohd Nasir Hashim was named pro-tem party chairman during this time.
Legal status The Federal Government then rejected the application to register as a political party, alleging that PSM was a threat to national security. However, because the right to form a political party is guaranteed in the constitution, PSM took the government and the Home Minister to court for abusing their power. Although the
Court of Appeal dismissed the national security argument on 16 August 2006, it upheld a separate reason to deny the registration of the PSM as a political party. PSM then filed an appeal against the Court of Appeal's decision to the
Federal Court of Malaysia. However, on 17 June 2008, the Home Ministry approved PSM's application as a political party just before Federal Court proceedings started, ending a 10-year tussle.
1999 general election In 1999, the party decided to contest in
the year's general election. Since PSM was not registered, it had to contest under some other party's logo. In 1999, the candidates contested under a
Democratic Action Party ticket. The main intention was to popularise the party, while it lost the contest, Jeyakumar managed to reduce his opponent's majority by 10,000 votes.
2004 general election . After the 1999 election, PSM opened its service centre in Sungai Siput. The party claimed that DAP was not happy with this and demanded that Jeyakumar join DAP if he wished to stand again. He declined and sought a meeting with Keadilan leader Dr
Wan Azizah Wan Ismail. As a result PSM was able to contest under the logo of Parti Keadilan Nasional (now known as
Parti Keadilan Rakyat).
2008 general election Three PSM members contested in the
2008 general election under the PKR banner while another ran as an independent. Two of these candidates won PSM's first ever seats. Candidate Michael Jeyakumar Devaraj won PSM's first ever
federal parliamentary seat by defeating then president of
Malaysian Indian Congress and long-serving Minister of Works
Samy Vellu in Sungai Siput. At the same time, PSM president
Mohd Nasir Hashim won the Kota Damansara seat in the
Selangor state legislative assembly. Although
Arutchelvan Subramaniam lost, PSM's election campaigning resulted in an increase in membership in
Semenyih. The remaining member who contested Jelapang as an independent was M. Sarasvathy.
2013 general election The two PSM incumbents, Michael Jeyakumar Devaraj and Nasir Hashim, recontested their seats in the
2013 general election under Keadilan. Jeyakumar retained the PSM's
parliamentary seat of Sungai Siput, but PSM president Nasir lost the Kota Damansara state seat to a
United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) candidate. This came after a PAS member joined the contest to split the opposition vote. S. Arutchelvan and M. Sarasvathy also recontested the same seats, this time under the PSM ticket, and lost heavily.
2018 general election For the
2018 general election, PSM contested in five federal constituencies and 14 state constituencies. All PSM candidates for this general election competed under PSM name and logo, as opposed to the previous elections, meaning that its cooperation with parties like PKR and DAP came to an end . Unlike in previous elections, Nasir Hashim announced that he was not running in the 2018 election. PSM did not succeed in winning any seats this election and lost the
Sungai Siput parliamentary seat that it had held since 2008. Due in part to the decision to contest independently of the
Pakatan Harapan coalition, PSM suffered a heavy defeat with all candidates, including Dr Jeyakumar, losing their deposits.
2022 general election and 2023 state elections In the 2022 General elections, PSM took a back seat, with Dr Jeyakumar declining to run in Sungai Siput. On 15 July 2023, PSM and
Malaysian United Democratic Alliance (MUDA) announced a political alliance for the
2023 state elections. The elections were held in Selangor, Kelantan, Terengganu, Negeri Sembilan, Kedah and Penang on 12 August 2023, and the PSM/MUDA alliance attempted to position itself as the "third choice" for voters "who are unhappy and bored with the politicians now and want to protest." In July 2024, the party held its 26th annual congress, at which Sivaranjani Manickam was elected secretary-general replacing A Sivarajan. == Leadership ==