Dewan Rakyat

House of Representatives

Dewan Rakyat
ديوان رعيت
15th Parliament
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Leadership
Johari Abdul, PH-PKR
since 19 December 2022
Deputy Speaker I
Ramli Mohd Nor, BN-UMNO
since 19 December 2022
Deputy Speaker II
Alice Lau, PH-DAP
since 19 December 2022
Nizam Mydin Bacha Mydin
since 13 May 2020
Anwar Ibrahim, PH-PKR
since 24 November 2022
Deputy Prime Minister I
Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, BN-UMNO
since 3 December 2022
Deputy Prime Minister II
Fadillah Yusof, GPS-PBB
since 3 December 2022
Hamzah Zainudin, PN-BERSATU
since 10 December 2022
Structure
Seats222
Political groups
(As of 2 June 2024)

Government (153)

  PH (81)
  BN (30)
  GPS (23)
  GRS (6)
  WARISAN (3)
  KDM (1)
  PBM (1)
  Independent (8)

Opposition (69)

  PN (68)
  MUDA (1)
Committees
5
Length of term
Up to 5 years
Elections
First-past-the-post
Last election
19 November 2022
Next election
By 17 February 2028
Meeting place
Dewan Rakyat chamber
Malaysian Houses of Parliament,
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Website
Official website

The House of Representatives of Malaysia, officially Dewan Rakyat (lit.'People's Assembly') is the lower house of the bicameral Parliament, the federal legislature of Malaysia. The chamber and its powers are established by Article 44 of the Constitution of Malaysia. The Dewan Rakyat sits in the Houses of Parliament in Kuala Lumpur, along with the Dewan Negara, the upper house.

The Dewan Rakyat is a directly elected body consisting of 222 members known as Members of Parliament (MPs). Members are elected by first-past-the-post voting with one member from each federal constituency. Members hold their seats until the Dewan Rakyat is dissolved, the term of which is constitutionally limited to five years after an election. The number of seats each state or territory is entitled to is fixed by Article 46 of the Constitution.

While the concurrence of both chambers of Parliament is normally necessary for legislation to be enacted, the Dewan Rakyat holds significantly more power in practice; the Dewan Negara very rarely rejects bills that have been passed by the Dewan Rakyat and the Dewan Rakyat can bypass the Dewan Negara if it refuses to pass a specific law twice, with at least one year in between. The Cabinet is solely responsible to the Dewan Rakyat, and the prime minister only has to maintain the support of the lower house.