KUALA LUMPUR – Former Selangor state executive councillor Ronnie Liu Tian Khiew has stirred intense online debate after publicly drawing a sharp line between royal loyalty and the absolute supremacy of the federal constitution.
The Core Message: Constitution Over Decrees
In a candid social media statement, Liu urged all citizens to carefully study the Rukun Negara and the Federal Constitution, reminding the public that Malaysia operates strictly under a constitutional monarchy.
While reaffirming his personal loyalty to King and country, Liu explicitly stated that the monarch’s powers are strictly legally defined—principally limited to Malay customs, Islam, and specific constitutional roles like appointing Menteri Besars or dissolving state assemblies.
“We do not live in a system whereby the monarch can issue binding decrees which legislates all aspects of our lives,” Liu wrote. He emphasized that the power to legislate belongs solely to Parliament and State Assemblies, which comprise representatives elected by the rakyat.
Invoking the core tenets of the Rukun Negara—specifically Loyalty to King and Country, Supremacy of the Constitution, and the Rule of Law—Liu concluded with a firm stance: “Yes, I am loyal to King and Country, will abide the Rule of Law based on our Supreme Constitution. Not decrees.”
Local Impact: Testing the Boundaries of Political Discourse
Liu’s remarks land at a highly sensitive time in Malaysian politics, where the intersection of royal influence and governance is under constant public scrutiny. By openly separating royal decrees from statutory law, his statement tests the boundaries of local political discourse regarding the rulers’ traditional versus constitutional authority.
For the local socio-political landscape, this commentary is bound to polarise opinion. While constitutional purists and civil society groups may view his stance as a necessary reminder of parliamentary democracy, conservative factions may interpret it as a challenge to the traditional prestige and influence of the Malay Rulers.
Ultimately, it underscores an ongoing, delicate national conversation about where royal advisory influence ends and statutory legal authority begins. -MalayaDailyToday



























































