Cabinet of Malaysia
Adapted from Wikipedia Β· Adventurer experience
The Cabinet of Malaysia is the executive branch of the Government of Malaysia. It is led by the Prime Minister and made up of ministers who work together to make important decisions for the country. These ministers are chosen from members of Parliament, the main law-making body in Malaysia.
According to Article 43 of the Federal Constitution, only people who are part of Parliament can become members of the Cabinet. The Yang di-Pertuan Agong, the King of Malaysia, formally appoints all ministers based on the Prime Ministerβs advice. This means the Prime Minister helps decide who joins the Cabinet.
The constitution was changed to allow someone who is a member of a State Legislative Assembly to stay in that role while also serving as a minister or deputy minister in the Cabinet. Ministers, except the Prime Minister, serve as long as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong agrees, but the King usually follows the Prime Ministerβs advice. This helps the government run smoothly.
Cabinet appointments
Members of the Cabinet must be part of either house of Parliament. Most ministers come from the lower house, called the Dewan Rakyat, but a few can be from the upper house, the Dewan Negara. The Prime Minister has to be a member of the Dewan Rakyat. Deputy Ministers and Parliamentary Secretaries help with work but are not part of the Cabinet. The Cabinet meets once a week, usually on Wednesday. When Parliament started having some live broadcasts, the Cabinet changed its meeting day to Friday. This allowed ministers to answer questions directly during Question Time in Parliament.
Cabinet composition
The Cabinet of Malaysia has ministers chosen by the Prime Minister. One important job is the Finance Minister, which the law says must exist. There is often a Deputy Prime Minister, but this is not always needed.
Each minister has a deputy to help with work, but deputies are not part of the Cabinet. There are also other helper jobs, but they are not always used. Before starting, everyone in these jobs promises to keep the Cabinet's talks private.
Functions of cabinet
The Cabinet of Malaysia helps guide the country by making important decisions. It makes plans for the nation's economy and growth, like special rules to help progress.
The Cabinet also manages the country's money. It decides how to collect taxes and other funds, and plans how to use these for development projects. It is a place to talk about and discuss issues that matter to the nation. The Cabinet can also suggest new laws or change old ones. These need approval from Parliament and the country's leader.
List of cabinets
Since 1957, Malaysia has had 23 cabinets led by nine Prime Ministers.
| No. | Name of cabinet | Head of cabinet | Period of office | Composition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rahman I | Tunku Abdul Rahman | 31 August 1957 β 19 August 1959 | 13 ministers |
| 2 | Rahman II | 22 August 1959 β 24 April 1964 | 16 ministers 6 assistant ministers | |
| 3 | Rahman III | 25 April 1964 β 1969 | 20 ministers 5 assistant ministers 4 parliamentary secretaries | |
| 4 | Rahman IV | 1969 β 21 December 1970 | 9 ministers | |
| 5 | Razak I | Abdul Razak Hussein | 22 December 1970 β 24 August 1974 | 22 ministers 7 deputy ministers 5 parliamentary secretaries |
| 6 | Razak II | 25 August 1974 β 14 January 1976 | 20 ministers 16 deputy ministers 9 parliamentary secretaries | |
| 7 | Hussein I | Hussein Onn | 15 January 1976 β 8 July 1978 | 22 ministers 20 deputy ministers 8 parliamentary secretaries |
| 8 | Hussein II | 9 July 1978 β 15 July 1981 | 23 ministers 22 deputy ministers 9 parliamentary secretaries | |
| 9 | Mahathir I | Mahathir Mohamad | 16 July 1981 β 21 April 1982 | 24 ministers 22 deputy ministers 10 parliamentary secretaries |
| 10 | Mahathir II | 22 April 1982 β 2 August 1986 | 24 ministers 29 deputy ministers 9 parliamentary secretaries | |
| 11 | Mahathir III | 11 August 1986 β 26 October 1990 | 24 ministers 31 deputy ministers 10 parliamentary secretaries | |
| 12 | Mahathir IV | 22 October 1990 β 3 May 1995 | 26 ministers 30 deputy ministers 14 parliamentary secretaries | |
| 13 | Mahathir V | 4 May 1995 β 14 December 1999 | 30 ministers 27 deputy ministers 14 parliamentary secretaries | |
| 14 | Mahathir VI | 15 December 1999 β 2 November 2003 | 30 ministers 28 deputy ministers 16 parliamentary secretaries | |
| 15 | Abdullah I | Abdullah Ahmad Badawi | 3 November 2003 β 26 March 2004 | 31 ministers 29 deputy ministers 16 parliamentary secretaries |
| 16 | Abdullah II | 27 March 2004 β 18 March 2008 | 34 ministers 39 deputy ministers 20 parliamentary secretaries | |
| 17 | Abdullah III | 19 March 2008 β 9 April 2009 | 32 ministers 38 deputy ministers | |
| 18 | Najib I | Najib Razak | 10 April 2009 β 15 May 2013 | 33 ministers 40 deputy ministers |
| 19 | Najib II | 16 May 2013 β 9 May 2018 | 38 ministers 34 deputy ministers | |
| 20 | Mahathir VII | Mahathir Mohamad | 10 May 2018 β 24 February 2020 | 28 ministers 27 deputy ministers |
| 21 | Muhyiddin | Muhyiddin Yassin | 1 March 2020 β 16 August 2021 | 32 ministers 38 deputy ministers |
| 22 | Ismail Sabri | Ismail Sabri Yaakob | 27 August 2021 β 24 November 2022 | 32 ministers 38 deputy ministers |
| 23 | Anwar | Anwar Ibrahim | 24 November 2022 β present | 31 ministers 29 deputy ministers |
Current Cabinet
Main article: Anwar Ibrahim cabinet
The current cabinet is led by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. It began after the 2022 General Election and replaced the earlier Ismail Sabri cabinet.
As of 17 December 2025, the members of the cabinet are listed here:
Inactive portfolios
Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security
- Ministry of Agriculture
- Ministry of Agriculture and Agro-based Industry
- Ministry of Agriculture and Co-operatives
- Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries
- Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industries
- Ministry of Agriculture and Lands
- Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development
Ministry of Communications
- Ministry of Communications
- Ministry of Communications and Multimedia
- Ministry of Communications, Telecommunications and Posts
- Ministry of Information
- Ministry of Information and Broadcasting
- Ministry of Information, Communications and Culture
- Ministry of Information, Communications, Arts and Culture
Ministry of Digital
- (N/A)
Ministry of Domestic Trade and Costs of Living
- Ministry of Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs
- Ministry of Domestic Trade, Co-operatives and Consumerism
Ministry of Economy
Ministry of Energy Transition and Water Transformation
- Ministry of Energy, Communications and Multimedia
- Ministry of Energy, Science, Technology, Environment and Climate Change
- Ministry of Energy, Technology and Research
- Ministry of Energy, Telecommunications and Posts
- Ministry of Energy, Water and Communications
- Ministry of Energy Transition and Public Utilities
Ministry of Entrepreneur Development and Co-operatives
- Ministry of Coordination of Public Corporations
- Ministry of Public Enterprises
- Ministry of Entrepreneur Development
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Ministry of Finance
- (N/A)
Ministry of Home Affairs
- Ministry of Home Affairs and Justice
- Ministry of Internal Security
- Ministry of Justice
- Ministry of Law
- Ministry of the Interior
Ministry of Human Resources
- Ministry of Labour
- Ministry of Labour and Manpower
- Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare
Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry
- Ministry of Commerce and Industry
- Ministry of International Trade and Industry
- Ministry of Trade and Industry
Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability
- Ministry of Environment and Water
- Ministry of Lands and Co-operatives Development
- Ministry of Lands and Mines
- Ministry of Lands Development
- Ministry of Lands and Regional Development
- Ministry of Natural Resources
- Ministry of Natural Resources, Environment and Climate Change
Ministry of Plantation Industries and Commodities
Ministry of Rural and Regional Development
- Ministry of National and Rural Development
- Ministry of Rural Development
- Ministry of Rural Economy Development
Ministry of Science and Technology
- Ministry of Science, Technology and Environment
- Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (Malaysia)
- Ministry of Technology, Research and Local Government
Ministry of Tourism
- Ministry of Arts, Culture and Heritage
- Ministry of Culture and Tourism
- Ministry of Culture, Arts and Tourism
- Ministry of National Unity and Community Development
- Ministry of National Unity, Culture, Arts and Heritage
- Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture
- Ministry of Tourism and Culture
Ministry of Local Government Development
- Ministry of Federal Territories
- Ministry of Federal Territories and Urban Wellbeing
- Ministry of Housing and Local Government
- Ministry of Housing and New Villages
- Ministry of Housing and Villages Development
- Ministry of Local Government and Environment
- Ministry of Local Government and Federal Territories
- Ministry of Local Government, Housing and Town Planning
- Ministry of Technology, Research and Coordination of New Villages
- Ministry of Territories
- Ministry of Urban Wellbeing, Housing and Local Government
- Ministry of Federal Territories
- Ministry of Federal Territories and Urban Wellbeing
Ministry of Women, Family and Community Development
- Ministry of General Welfare
- Ministry of National Unity
- Ministry of Social Welfare
- Ministry of Welfare Services
- Ministry of Women and Family Development
Ministry of Works
- Ministry of Works and Energy
- Ministry of Works and Public Amenities
- Ministry of Works and Transport
- Ministry of Works, Posts and Telecommunications
Ministry of Youth and Sports
Ministry of Health
Minister in the Prime Minister's Department
- Minister with Special Functions
- Minister with Special Functions for Foreign Affairs
- Minister without Portfolio
Others
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