By Joe
Fernandez
It appears that ties between the Sabah
chapter of the Borneo-based State Reform Party (Star) and the Sabah Progressive
Party (Sapp) could be “much better” if not for the latter’s insistence on
contesting in 40 state seats and almost a third, about five to seven, of the
parliamentary seats in Sabah. The party reiterated this stand at its meet on
Sun in Kota Kinabalu.
Before
the 40/5-7 Sun announcement by Sapp, Star had been publicly toying with the
“goodwill gesture” of conceding two state seats -- Likas and Luyang -- and one (Tawau)
of the two parliamentary seats it (Sapp) won in 2008 as a member of the ruling
BN. Star itself had announced in mid-April that it would go for all 60 state
seats at stake in Sabah and 26 parliamentary seats including Labuan.


