MALAYSIA’S ruling coalition has unveiled an ambitious socioeconomic blueprint for the upcoming Johor state election, pledging to deliver a quarter of a million high-income jobs and 80,000 affordable homes over five years in a bid to reverse the state’s chronic brain drain to neighbouring Singapore.
The Pakatan Harapan Johot state election manifesto, titled “Johor’s Hope for All” (Harapan Johor Untuk Semua), positions the coalition as an economically pragmatic alternative capable of modernising the southern state, framing its commitments as a measurable implementation framework rather than conventional political promises.
Speaking at the official launch in Joho Bharu today, PKR vice-president Dr Maszlee Malik rejected the notion that the platform relied on unrealistic popular appeals.
“The manifesto is not an election document, rather it is a roadmap to make Johor successful, Malay Mail quoted Maszlee saying, adding: “It also encompasses the hopes of all Johoreans, irrespective of background and age.”
Maszlee added that the coalition’s proposals were built upon extensive public feedback and policy research, intended to offer concrete benchmarks by which voters could hold the alliance accountable.
“We are not promising the moon and stars,” Maszlee said. “We are offering a deliverable blueprint.”
Central to the coalition's economic pitch is a strategy to retain local talent through the expansion of skilled employment opportunities, complemented by a dedicated “Balik Johor” (Return to Johor) scheme specifically designed to incentivise professionals working abroad and across the Causeway to return to the domestic workforce.
To address escalating living costs and the regional housing shortage, the document guarantees financial grants of up to RM8,000 for families purchasing their first home, alongside a massive state-backed construction target for low- and medium-cost residential units.
The social welfare component of the platform introduces an annual healthcare safety net providing up to RM100,000 in coverage for eligible low-income recipients, the establishment of 250 subsidised MADANI childcare centres at workplaces to boost female workforce participation, and a RM50 monthly public transport pass for students, senior citizens and disabled residents.
The alliance also proposed a universal RM1,000 savings endowment for every newborn child in the state, alongside a RM500 million dedicated youth fund to bankroll grassroots development initiatives and entrepreneurship.
On state governance, the platform outlines a plan to establish a specialised Johor Land Rights Tribunal, designed to provide a fast-tracked legal mechanism to resolve long-standing tenure, traditional village and leasehold disputes that have historically caused significant friction across rural and semi-urban constituencies.
The policy rollout was led by Pakatan Harapan’s state election director Datuk Seri Amirudin Shari, alongside senior regional leaders including Aminolhuda Hassan, Teo Nie Ching and Datuk Seri Dr Zaliha Mustafa, who jointly declared that the quantified targets within the blueprint would serve as a formal scorecard for the electorate. - July 3, 2026