Country: | Malaysia |
Sabah Chinese Association | |
Lang1: | Malay |
Name Lang1: | Persatuan Cina Sabah ڤرساتوان چينا سابه |
Lang2: | Chinese |
Name Lang2: | 沙巴華人公會 沙巴华人公会 Shābā huárén gōnghuì |
Abbreviation: | SCA |
Foundation: | October 1962 |
Founders: | Khoo Siak Chew, Peter Chin |
Merger: | United Party and Democratic Party |
Headquarters: | Kota Kinabalu, Sabah |
National: | Sabah Alliance (1962-1976) Barisan Nasional (1973-1975) |
The Sabah Chinese Association (Malay: Persatuan Cina Sabah, SCA) was a Chinese political party in the North Borneo and the Sabah state of Malaysia.
The party was established in October 1962 as Borneo Utara National Party, a merger of the United Party and the Democratic Party after encouragement from the Malayan Chinese Association.[1] [2] Both parties had been founded earlier in the year; the United Party by Khoo Siak Chew in Sandakan and the Democratic Party by Peter Chin in Jesselton.[2] It was later renamed the Sabah National Party, before becoming the Sabah Chinese Association in 1965 when it merged with a non-political organisation by the same name.[1] [2] [3]
SCA's Peter Lo Sui Yin was the second Chief Minister of Sabah from 1965 to 1967.[4] [5]
Following the merger, the new party contested the local elections in an alliance with the United Sabah National Organisation and the United Pasokmomogun Kadazan Organisation. It won five seats in the 1967 Sabah state election,[6] and three seats in the 1969 Malaysian general election, and retained all three in the 1974 Malaysian general election, in which it was part of the Barisan Nasional. However, it failed to win a seat in the 1976 Sabah state election, defeated by the Sabah People's United Front in every seat it contested;[7] following the defeat, it was later dissolved.[8]
Election | Leader | Votes | % | Seats | Status | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1964 | Peter Lo Sui Yin | Appointed by Legislative Assembly | ||||
1969 | Peter Lo Sui Yin | 24,699 | 1.03 | |||
1974 | Peter Lo Sui Yin |
Election | Seats | |
---|---|---|
1967 Sabah | ||
1971 Sabah | ||
1976 Sabah |