Nurul Izzah Anwar

Nurul Izzah Anwar
نور العزة أنور
Nurul Izzah in Dhaka, 2025
6th Deputy President of the
People's Justice Party
Assumed office
24 May 2025
PresidentAnwar Ibrahim
Preceded byRafizi Ramli
Vice President of the
People's Justice Party
In office
20 July 2022 – 24 May 2025
PresidentAnwar Ibrahim
In office
28 November 2010 – 17 December 2018
President
Chairperson of the Consideration of Bills Select Committee
In office
4 December 2018 – 18 July 2019
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byRamkarpal Singh
Parliamentary offices
Member of the Malaysian Parliament
for Permatang Pauh
In office
9 May 2018 – 19 November 2022
Preceded byWan Azizah Wan Ismail
Succeeded byMuhammad Fawwaz Mohamad Jan
Majority15,668 (2018)
Member of the Malaysian Parliament
for Lembah Pantai
In office
8 March 2008 – 9 May 2018
Preceded byShahrizat Abdul Jalil
Succeeded byFahmi Fadzil
Majority2,895 (2008)
1,847 (2013)
Personal details
Born (1980-11-19) 19 November 1980
PartyPeople's Justice Party (1998–present)
Spouses
Raja Ahmad Shahrir Iskandar
(m. 2003; div. 2015)
Yin Shao Loong
(m. 2022)
Children2
Parents
Alma materUniversiti Tenaga Nasional (BEng)
Johns Hopkins University (MA)
OccupationPolitician
Websitewww.nurulizzah.com
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Nurul Izzah binti Anwar (born 19 November 1980) is a Malaysian politician who served as the Member of Parliament for Permatang Pauh from 2018 to 2022. A member of the People's Justice Party and the eldest daughter of the 10th prime minister, Anwar Ibrahim, she also represented Lembah Pantai in the Parliament of Malaysia from 2008 to 2018.

Born in Kuala Lumpur into politician family of Anwar Ibrahim and Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, Nurul Izzah graduated from Johns Hopkins University in 2007 with a master's degree in international relations. She became publicly active in 1998 during her father Anwar's dismissal and imprisonment, participating in the Reformasi movement and co-founding the People's Justice Party in 1999. She entered parliament in 2008, winning the Lembah Pantai seat, and campaigned on multiracial inclusivity, government accountability, and social justice. In parliament, she advocated open government, equitable development, increased representation of women and youth, and policies based on need rather than ethnicity.

In 2010, two years after joining parliament, Nurul Izzah was elected as the PKR's youngest vice president. She retained her Lembah Pantai seat in the 2013 general election and was active in promoting political reform, transparency, and parliamentary oversight. She faced several detentions and investigations related to her activism, including under the Sedition Act, and engaged in advocacy on Sabah sovereignty and electoral matters. In 2018, she won the Permatang Pauh seat, served on parliamentary committees, and led initiatives such as the TVET Empowerment Committee and the Multidimensional Poverty Index report. She resigned as PKR vice-president in 2018 but was reappointed for the 2022–2025 term. After losing her parliamentary seat in 2022, she served as an adviser on economic and social policy and chaired the think tank Social & Economic Research Initiative. In 2025, she was elected deputy president of PKR, focusing on party unity and engagement with grassroots members.

Nurul Izzah has advocated for greater political participation by women and strengthened legal protections for women and families in Malaysia. She has engaged in civil rights and policy reform, including national prison reform, parliamentary reforms such as establishing a central authority for TVET, and introducing private member's bills on issues including hate crimes, the Sedition Act, the Petroleum Development Act, and media regulation. As MP for Permatang Pauh, she contributed to public health, women's vocational development, poverty studies, and recognition of technical and vocational skills. She has also supported Palestinian rights, calling for an end to the Israeli occupation and submitting protest notes to multiple embassies with parliamentary and civil society backing. Domestically, she has emphasised the need for locally rooted leadership in Sabah, accountability over the Freedom Flotilla incident, and careful review of corporal punishment in schools.