Category: Politik

  • Police Making Enquiries On Reports Of GE2015 Candidates At 7th Month Festival Event

    Police Making Enquiries On Reports Of GE2015 Candidates At 7th Month Festival Event

    Police are making enquiries on reports of election candidates’ activities at Chinese Seventh Month Festival events, including interviews with several of these organisers.

    Last month, before the Writ of Election was issued, the police had cautioned that election campaigning activities are prohibited at such events. Speeches intended to canvass support for election candidates and/or political parties also cannot be made at these venues.

    The seventh month of the lunar calendar, during which the Seventh Month Festival (also called the Hungry Ghost Festival) takes place, will end on Sept 12 this year. Getai performances, including singing, are commonly held across Singapore during the festival.

    Over the past few days, questions were raised after several candidates were spotted attending separate Seventh Month Festival events.

    In a statement responding to media queries today (Sept 7), police said it has reminded such event organisers that there should be no election campaigning activities at their venues.

    “Action will be taken against event organisers found to have breached these conditions,” the police added.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Vote Wisely – PAP Is The Boring Dutiful Wife While Opposition Is The Sexy Vixen

    Vote Wisely – PAP Is The Boring Dutiful Wife While Opposition Is The Sexy Vixen

    At a local coffeeshop, I heard a most interesting analogy. The uncle compared the relationship between the PAP and the Opposition Parties as that of the dutiful wife and the vixen. Here goes:

    The PAP is akin to a middle aged wife of a self-made wealthy businessman. She toiled tirelessly, washing clothes, cooking, teaching the kids… Basically caring for household.

    Regardless of how well she runs the household, she would never have gotten the praises and adoration of her husband and children. When something goes wrong, it will usually be her fault… Too strict… Incompetent…u name it.

    But why would she be naggish and strict? Because the wife is there to walk life’s journey with the husband and she has a responsibility. She scolds because she is worried, she nags because her heart aches.

    The opposition is like the vixen who is prancing and waiting to replace the wife. All she needs to do, is to dress up, speak nice sweet things and gain the liking of people. Nothing more.

    Once the vixen gains her position, she has his money to spend. She doesn’t care if the kids or the family has a future! After all, she didn’t walk the journey from the start with the family, the kids are not hers!

    Why would this vixen be seemingly sweet and considerate? Because she has no responsibilities, and she doesn’t and wouldn’t appreciate how difficult and arduous the journey has been from rags to riches.

    To pick on bones and speak badly of the wife, is easy, who can’t? All that’s needed is to speak against, act prominently and go against the flow of logic…

    Choose wisely.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Malaysian Manicurist Earns Accountant’s Wage Thanks To Ringgit’s Plunge

    Malaysian Manicurist Earns Accountant’s Wage Thanks To Ringgit’s Plunge

    There was no way she could have secured a job that would pay her RM5,000 ($1,681) if she had remained in Sarawak.

    “Impossible,” said manicurist Betty Sii, 25.

    “My highest education is PMR (Malaysia’s version of the GCE O Levels). Nobody will offer that kind of money there,” she added.

    The impossible, however, became possible when the exchange rate slumped to a low of RM3.03 to the Singapore dollar last Tuesday.

    “I was definitely happy (about the exchange rate) when I saw the news,” she said.

    “It means that I am earning about RM6,000 now. That wouldn’t have been possible at home.”

    According to the latest salary guide by recruitment company Kelly Services, RM6,000 is the monthly pay of an accountant with a degree and three years of work experience.

    “If I were in Sarawak, I could only dream of a pay cheque like that,” she added.

    With her $2,000 salary, Miss Sii is able to pay her $600 room rent here and give her mother – who lives in her hometown of Miri in Sarawak – a monthly allowance of RM1,000.

    Meanwhile, the attractive exchange rate has pushed Miss Sii to seriously consider a bigger financial commitment – buying a three-bedroom house back home.

    She claims to have been contemplating the idea for quite some time.

    “The property that I’m looking at would cost me about RM200,000 but I should be able to afford it with my current salary,” she said.

    “If I get a house for myself now, it would be good for me in the future.

    “Anything can happen, so at least if I start now, then I’ll have something waiting for me if I had to move back,” she added.

    MEASLY PAY

    Before she moved to Singapore in April 2013, Miss Sii tried working in Malaysia for about five months, taking up a job as a salesgirl in a retail store.

    “My basic pay was RM800. There was commission too but the most I ever got for it was RM200,” she said.

    Earning a measly pay cheque made life feel completely different to what it is like now.

    She said: “It was tough to live with that kind of pay.

    “Even if things are cheaper there, it’s really hard to live on RM1,000.”

    While the exchange rate makes it cheaper for Miss Sii to support her mother, she is worried about how the bad economy will affect prices back home.

    She said: “It’s a good thing for me but this also means that things over there could start getting more expensive and that’s my only worry.

    “If it does start getting expensive, then eventually, the increased exchange rate will not mean as much to Malaysians working here.”

    Miss Sii’s 36-year-old sister is also based in Singapore. Her sister works as a facial therapist.

    “My brother is working in a publishing house in Sarawak while my sister and I are living and working here in Singapore.”

    Being able to travel back home only twice a year is tough on Miss Sii but the bigger picture is more important to her than anything else.

    “I get homesick and I miss my family but I always try my best to focus on why being here is good.

    “Me being homesick is not as important as my mum being able to live comfortably back home.

    “And that is reason enough for me to look past everything else.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Reform Party Unveils 12-Page Manifesto

    Reform Party Unveils 12-Page Manifesto

    The Reform Party on Monday (Sep 7) unveiled its party manifesto in Boon Lay Place, as the election period crosses the halfway mark.

    The 12-page document outlines the objectives of the party and covers a wide range of issues from healthcare and defense spending to economic policy.

    According to its manifesto, possible policy proposals include introducing a minimum wage, capping the number of foreign workers, reduce National Service (NS) to one year with a view of progressing to a professional army and introducing an old-age monthly pension of S$500 for all seniors above 65.

    On the timing of the release, Reform Party Secretary-General, Kenneth Jeyaretnam said: “We’ve had a manifesto since 2009, and an election manifesto in 2011. So we are relaunching it and bringing it up to date. Our flyers already incorporate our seven main pledges.”

    He also elaborated on the party’s NS proposal, saying it “imposes a heavy burden on male Singaporeans, particularly in comparison with foreign workers”.

    “The Government spends S$400 million on scholarships for foreigners who are then able to work here upon graduation without doing NS. This is grossly inequitable,” Mr Jeyaretnam said.

    “So what we want to do is reduce the burden on male Singaporeans and cut NS term to one year and expand a professional army. Now with modern technology, drones, robots, you don’t need so many boots on the ground.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Singapore’s Rulers Hope A Nudge To The Left Will Keep Voters Loyal

    Singapore’s Rulers Hope A Nudge To The Left Will Keep Voters Loyal

    At breakfast time one day last week, Singapore government minister K. Shanmugam dropped in to a bustling food court to greet voters, listen to their grumbles and urge them to back the People’s Action Party (PAP) in this Friday’s general election.

    There was a burst of applause from a table of tea-drinking men, old ladies looked up smilingly from bowls of noodle soup, and one of the sharpest complaints he heard was from a resident about pigeons roosting outside her house.

    A bedrock of support from communities like this guarantees that the PAP, which has ruled this city state since it won independence 50 years ago, will be returned to power this week.

    But Shanmugam, who is law and foreign minister, says the PAP can no longer take popular loyalty for granted: the party’s share of the vote dropped to 60.1 percent in the last election, in 2011, its lowest ever, and a swing of just a few thousand votes in some electoral districts this time could erode its overwhelming majority in the 89-seat parliament.

    To prevent that, the party has tweaked its policy playbook in ways that will shift the direction of a country whose meteoric rise from tropical backwater to haven of wealth was based on a no-nonsense model of growth at all costs.

    Under the iron-handed founding father of Singapore, the late Lee Kuan Yew, the idea of Western-style welfarism was scorned and people were mostly expected to stand on their own feet.

    NUDGE TO THE LEFT

    But years of galloping growth led to yawning wealth gaps and to resentment over an open door for foreign workers, overcrowded trains and expensive housing, forcing the PAP to respond with a nudge to the political left.

    “In the 80s, 90s to 2000s there was a lot of emphasis on the private sector,” Shanmugam said in an interview with Reuters. “From ’07 the rhetoric has shifted to a centre-left position.”

    Eugene Tan, a political analyst and associate professor at Singapore Management University, says this new strategy will have to stay as the PAP manages a more competitive political landscape and a population now less patient with paternalism and one-party rule.

    “The PAP will now have to deal with much stronger pressures for populist policies, such as higher taxes for a larger swathe of income-earners and nationalistic manpower policy as well as more social spending, which are very often the antithesis of the ruling party’s core policies for the past 50 years,” Tan said.

    Shanmugam rejects the idea that the PAP’s 2011 wobble triggered a reset of social policies and says Singapore was one of the world’s most welfarist countries way before then.

    But this year, the government has raised taxes on top earners to pay for a hefty increase in healthcare spending and a better safety net for the aged and low-paid workers, and just before calling the election Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong announced plans to make state housing more affordable.

    It has taken other steps since the last election that many see as rearguard action, such as cooling the property market – from which many have felt increasingly locked out – and stemming the tide of foreign workers.

    IMMIGRATION DILEMMA

    A nation of 5.5 million people with no natural resources, Singapore became a global hub for financial services and oil trading and a major electronics manufacturer thanks partly to a liberal immigration policy that provided plentiful cheap labour.

    Now, the government faces a backlash over immigrants who are blamed for taking jobs, fuelling inflation and depressing wages, but is in a bind because it needs them to underpin growth as the population greys and the workforce shrinks.

    Already it expects growth in coming years to be less than half the 8 percent average rate of Singapore’s first 50 years, and a tight labour market could make even that a challenge.

    Shanmugam accepts that making the argument for immigration is not going to be “an easy message” for voters.

    Immigration has been a hot topic among the overwhelmingly young people at raucous rallies of the opposition Workers Party which have been attended by tens of thousands.

    The PAP is hoping that a sense of patriotism inspired by this year’s golden jubilee and the death of Lee Kuan Yew in March will work in its favour on Friday. However, opinion polls are illegal and so no one is making confident predictions.

    Garry Rodan, a professor of politics and international studies at Australia’s Murdoch University, said the increased welfare and social redistribution since 2011 was necessary but had been too little for a major reversal of inequalities.

    “Singaporeans can reward these initial steps or ramp up the pressure on the government through their votes,” he said.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

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