<p>Malaysia's prime minister and his government resigned Monday after just 17 months in office, throwing the country into fresh political turmoil as it battles a serious coronavirus outbreak.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin Yassin's tumultuous period in office came to an end after allies withdrew support and a last-ditch bid to cling to power failed, and he becomes the shortest serving premier in Malaysian history.</p>.<p>After a final cabinet meeting, the 74-year-old headed to the national palace to submit his resignation to the king.</p>.<p>Science Minister Khairy Jamaluddin confirmed on Instagram that the entire cabinet had quit.</p>.<p>"Thank you for the opportunity to, once again, serve the nation," he wrote.</p>.<p>Mohamad Redzuan Yusof, a minister in the prime minister's office, confirmed to AFP that Muhyiddin had tendered his resignation, and it had been accepted.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin was reportedly set to address the nation later Monday.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/muhyiddin-yassin-malaysias-shortest-serving-pm-1020292.html" target="_blank">Muhyiddin Yassin, Malaysia's shortest-serving PM</a></strong></p>.<p>There is no clear successor to Muhyiddin but an election looks unlikely as the country faces its worst Covid-19 wave yet and an economic downturn.</p>.<p>Rather, a period of political horse-trading is expected before a new coalition emerges that can command a majority in parliament.</p>.<p>"His replacement is anybody's guess," said Oh Ei Sun, an analyst at the Singapore Institute of International Affairs.</p>.<p>Malaysia's constitutional monarch formally appoints the premier, and it will be up to him to assess who has sufficient backing from MPs.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin came to power in March last year without an election at the head of a scandal-plagued coalition following the collapse of a two-year-old, reformist government led by nonagenarian political heavyweight Mahathir Mohamad.</p>.<p>But his government faced turmoil from day one -- his majority in parliament was in doubt, its legitimacy was constantly questioned, and he faced a constant challenge from opposition chief Anwar Ibrahim.</p>.<p>The demise of his government extends a period of political drama for the multi-ethnic nation of 32 million.</p>.<p>After independence from Britain in 1957, Malaysia was ruled for over six decades by a coalition dominated by the country's ethnic Malay Muslim majority.</p>.<p>But corruption scandals, unpopular race-based policies and increasingly authoritarian rule prompted weary voters to boot the coalition and its leader Najib Razak out of power at 2018 polls.</p>.<p>The victory of Mahathir's opposition alliance fuelled hopes for a new era, but it collapsed amid bitter infighting.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin, who had been a member of Mahathir's government but ended up plotting its downfall, hammered together a ramshackle coalition.</p>.<p>As well as questions over its legitimacy, it faced mounting criticism over its failure to keep the virus outbreak under control -- officials have now reported over 1.1 million cases and 12,000 deaths.</p>.<p>In January, Muhyiddin persuaded the king to declare Malaysia's first nationwide state of emergency for over half a century, ostensibly to fight the pandemic.</p>.<p>But parliament was also suspended for months, leading to criticism that Muhyiddin was using the crisis to avoid a no-confidence vote.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin's position finally became untenable after a group of once allied MPs withdrew support, depriving him of a parliamentary majority, and the king, Sultan Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah, turned against him.</p>.<p>He made his last bid to stay in power on Friday, appealing to opposition MPs to back him in a no-confidence vote -- but his offer was rejected.</p>
<p>Malaysia's prime minister and his government resigned Monday after just 17 months in office, throwing the country into fresh political turmoil as it battles a serious coronavirus outbreak.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin Yassin's tumultuous period in office came to an end after allies withdrew support and a last-ditch bid to cling to power failed, and he becomes the shortest serving premier in Malaysian history.</p>.<p>After a final cabinet meeting, the 74-year-old headed to the national palace to submit his resignation to the king.</p>.<p>Science Minister Khairy Jamaluddin confirmed on Instagram that the entire cabinet had quit.</p>.<p>"Thank you for the opportunity to, once again, serve the nation," he wrote.</p>.<p>Mohamad Redzuan Yusof, a minister in the prime minister's office, confirmed to AFP that Muhyiddin had tendered his resignation, and it had been accepted.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin was reportedly set to address the nation later Monday.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/muhyiddin-yassin-malaysias-shortest-serving-pm-1020292.html" target="_blank">Muhyiddin Yassin, Malaysia's shortest-serving PM</a></strong></p>.<p>There is no clear successor to Muhyiddin but an election looks unlikely as the country faces its worst Covid-19 wave yet and an economic downturn.</p>.<p>Rather, a period of political horse-trading is expected before a new coalition emerges that can command a majority in parliament.</p>.<p>"His replacement is anybody's guess," said Oh Ei Sun, an analyst at the Singapore Institute of International Affairs.</p>.<p>Malaysia's constitutional monarch formally appoints the premier, and it will be up to him to assess who has sufficient backing from MPs.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin came to power in March last year without an election at the head of a scandal-plagued coalition following the collapse of a two-year-old, reformist government led by nonagenarian political heavyweight Mahathir Mohamad.</p>.<p>But his government faced turmoil from day one -- his majority in parliament was in doubt, its legitimacy was constantly questioned, and he faced a constant challenge from opposition chief Anwar Ibrahim.</p>.<p>The demise of his government extends a period of political drama for the multi-ethnic nation of 32 million.</p>.<p>After independence from Britain in 1957, Malaysia was ruled for over six decades by a coalition dominated by the country's ethnic Malay Muslim majority.</p>.<p>But corruption scandals, unpopular race-based policies and increasingly authoritarian rule prompted weary voters to boot the coalition and its leader Najib Razak out of power at 2018 polls.</p>.<p>The victory of Mahathir's opposition alliance fuelled hopes for a new era, but it collapsed amid bitter infighting.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin, who had been a member of Mahathir's government but ended up plotting its downfall, hammered together a ramshackle coalition.</p>.<p>As well as questions over its legitimacy, it faced mounting criticism over its failure to keep the virus outbreak under control -- officials have now reported over 1.1 million cases and 12,000 deaths.</p>.<p>In January, Muhyiddin persuaded the king to declare Malaysia's first nationwide state of emergency for over half a century, ostensibly to fight the pandemic.</p>.<p>But parliament was also suspended for months, leading to criticism that Muhyiddin was using the crisis to avoid a no-confidence vote.</p>.<p>Muhyiddin's position finally became untenable after a group of once allied MPs withdrew support, depriving him of a parliamentary majority, and the king, Sultan Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah, turned against him.</p>.<p>He made his last bid to stay in power on Friday, appealing to opposition MPs to back him in a no-confidence vote -- but his offer was rejected.</p>