Category: Singapuraku

  • 11 Reasons Why PAP Is Afraid Of GE2015

    11 Reasons Why PAP Is Afraid Of GE2015

    1. Resurgence of people’s voice

    Singaporeans, by and large, are very compliant and submissive to the leadership of the ruling party. They are ruled with a iron fist thus far and any dissent is being knocked down readily.

    However, the rise of social media plus numerous open public protest at speakers’ corner have provided hope that the people indeed now have rose up in defiance against the dictatorial ruling party.

    There is so much that they people can take and for the past few years we have seen a huge increase in activism – showcased publicly by the social media.

    2. Rise of alternative voice via social media

    We witnessed the rise of social media in GE 2011 as alternative sites took to the stage for the first time to combat against the government-controlled mass media.

    More alternative sites sprouted up after GE 2011 and by now we should have close to ten  alternative voices battling for the hearts and minds of the people.

    Many enjoy wide readership as people have forsook the propaganda mouthpiece of the major newspapers here.

    It is believed that GE 2015 will be deemed the people’s election as with the click of a mouse they can enter into the election fray virtually unknown influencing thousands if they are creative and enterprising.

    TRS was shut down recently by the government but there are at least ten other sites entering the closely-watched alternative cyberspace right now – all jostling for a piece of the action.

    3. More professionals joining the opposition camp

    More professionals are joining the opposition camp now than ever before and we saw professors like SDP’s Paul Tambyah and WP’s Daniel Goh joining the fever for this coming GE.

    I also heard a Cambridge-educated young female lawyer is joining WP team.

    Such distinguished field of opposition candidates gave hope to the voters that they are voting for someone who is both intelligent and capable and not one who wore slippers to the election department hoping for a miracle.

    Besides voting for a credible party, voters also look at the credentials of the candidates before parting with their votes.

    Credibility features highly on the mind of many voters here and those parties who could showcase the distinguished educational and professional portfolio of their candidates seem to have a better head start in the campaign.

    For change to happen, capable Singaporeans must rise up and sacrifice for a better Singapore as politics can be dirty and unscrupulous.

    Some may get hurt in the process but one must be ready to pay the price to be an agent for change.

    4. Lack of confidence in PAP camp

    The prematured resignation of transport minister Lui Tuck Yew plus the recent mass resignation of many PAP MPs do not augur well with the public as it is unprecedented for a minister to do that so close to the coming election.

    It spoke volume of the unsettling atmosphere residing right now with the ruling party who always enjoy much confidence weeks before any general election.

    Gone are the care-free relaxed ambience of the PAP before a general election and even the recent PM’s national day rally speech is punctuated with traditional rhetoria – nothing which can stir the hearts of the country to part their votes with the incumbent.

    It is also the first time the ruling party looks increasingly defensive in a election as it has to handle mass public dissatisfaction with the huge transport and over-population issues.

    5. Post-LKY election

    Its the first election which will not feature LKY at all and many have mention that his appearance at any ward during campaigning will influence at least 10% of the voters to its camp.

    His presence will be sorely missed by the incumbent as it struggles with many issues that are still unresolved after GE 2011.

    Many elderly voters may simply swing their votes to the opposition camp as the loyalty factor is not longer valid now as the former patriach is gone forever.

    6. Population white paper

    Grievances heard from the ground were mostly related to the population white paper and it is widely believed that swing voters will have that in mind when they take to the polls.

    Singaporeans are by nature very down-to-earth practical voters and bread and butter issues remain top-most on their mind.

    They can do away with some personal rights or even sacrifice some of their dignity but when their livelihood is being compromised it will make them reconsider their choices at the polls.

    The population white paper has affected all Singaporeans from the recent transport problems to job insecurity – stuff that most people feel passionately about.

    Years of draconian rule has hardened the people to accept a communist-like democratic system but if they could not put food on the table for the family, they will rebel with a swing vote to the opposition camp.

    7. Opposition unity

    There are glimpses of a opposition unity floundering especially with the Goh Meng Seng-led Vote for Change button.

    Its a campaign led by four other parties to vote for change in this coming election and though opposition giants WP and SDP are not in it, the sign of a united opposition front is promising.

    To counteract that, the ruling party has just issued a warning that opposition parties are not to participate in each other’s rally campaign for fear that this will breed more unity in the opposition camp.

    If the opposition parties will one day unite and form up a huge platform like Bersih to challenge the ruling party at the polls,  it is envisaged that the end will be in sight for PAP.

    The country is due for change but the opposition parties need to unite as one big force to challenge the incumbent.

    8. More uniformed people joining the ruling party

    More uniformed personnel are joining the ruling party and this does not augur well for the people.

    For example, the ex- army chief and asst commissioner have resigned to join politics and both are believed to be ministerial material.

    Army generals joining politics and later promoted to be ministers look like a norm in our politics these days but not many of them do well from the internal transfer.

    For example, ex-Admiral Lui Tuck Yew stepped down from politics after a horrendous experience helming transport and ex-army generals like Tan Chuan Jin and Chan Chun Sing were hammered by netizens for failing to speak wisely on sensitive issues like the cardboard collectors and foreign labour.

    Its still questionable how effective these unformed top-brass have been while they transitioned to politics from a regime-like environment.

    Long used to having people obeying their commands for a very long time, now they have to bend their body and even dirty their hands on the ground to serve the people.

    Its a steep learning curve for many of these paper generals and there do not have much time to adjust on the job.

    Even if they are promoted to ministerial level, they have to persuade gently rather than speaking as if everyone will listen to them – like those days in the army or police where dissent is not tolerated.

    Ministers like Lui Tuck Yew who could not adjust or tolerate much dissent both on and off line will simply pack their bag and left.

    It is hope that more private sector people will come in and serve as ministers as this lack of working experience in the outside world is hurting Singaporeans as policy-makers do not have a real feel of the problems on the ground.

    9. On-going movement around the world for change

    There is also this on-going movement around the world egging for change.

    People living in autocratic countries are all rising up together as one voice to go against dictatorship.

    Centuries-old monarchies like Egypt and Tunisia were overthrown by the people desperate for change in a very repressed society.

    Democratic societies in Europe have also voted for a change in government due mainly to the damaging immigration issue.

    Many have mentioned that Singapore is still alright as we have food to eat and a roof to live in.

    However, the current foreign influx has forced many Singaporeans to rethink if this country is truly meant for Singaporeans.

    Jobs were lost and more importantly our national identity is being diluted by the current influx.

    300,000 Singaporeans have emigrated and nobody aspires to return anytime soon – so long the ruling party is in power.

    10.  Growing pool of young anti-establishment voters

    Each year, more than 20,000 voters are eligible to vote as they turn 21 years old – all ready to vote for change.

    Many of our young adults are not used to the traditional draconian rule and it is believed that 70% of them will vote for the opposition.

    They want change and a better Singapore whereby one  is  free to express our opinion and not get knocked down every time you speak up against the establishment.

    With more pro-PAP elderly passing on with each election and a growing pool of young anti-establishment voters, it is only a matter of time before the incumbent gets knock off it’s 50-year-old power pedestal.

    11. Recent fall of European governments on anti-immigration sentiments

    Swiss voters in February 2014 approved a measure that tightens immigration quotas despite threats of penalties by the EU, though the vote was close. France’s anti-EU National Front party, which supports limits on immigration, won control of up to 15 municipalities in elections Sunday, more than tripling its previous high of four municipalities in the 1990s (source: USA Today March 31 2014).

    Such sentiment is also strong in other countries such as Sweden, the Netherlands and France, where France’s National Front is now supported by one in four voters in the country, recent polls show.

    Will the same thing happen in the coming election here?

    Many of the immigration-related problems face by Singapore are experienced by the European Union which is borderless.

    They face the same problem as us – over-crowding, job competition and weak integration.

    Immigration should be the main election topic in this coming election and the one who could argue well against the 6.9m population white paper will probably be able to swing more votes for his opposition team.

    Moreover, Singaporeans have never before unite so strongly against one policy and this time round, the ruling party has its work all cut out.

    Gilbert Goh

    Gilbert Goh runs Transitioning.org, a support site for unemployed Singaporeans. He is a Reform Party candidate for Ang Mo Kio GRC in GE2015.

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

  • Nor Lella Yakin NSP Bariskan Calon Yang Kuat

    Nor Lella Yakin NSP Bariskan Calon Yang Kuat

    CALON Parti Perpaduan Nasional (NSP) Nor Lella Mardiiiah Mohamed melahirkan keyakinan bahawa partinya telah menurunkan barisan calon terbaik bagi merebut GRC Tampines daripada pasukan Parti Tindakan Rakyat (PAP) dalam Pilihan Raya Umum (GE) 11 September ini.

    Bercakap kepada pemberita sejurus sesi pengisian borang dan penamaan calon di pusat penamaan calon di Sekolah Poi Ching semalam, Penolong Bendahari NSP berusia 41 tahun itu berkata keyakinan tersebut timbul daripada kepercayaan yang diberikan penduduk Tampines kepada parti itu semasa mereka mengadakan sesi bertemu penduduk Tampines.

    “Kali ini kami berasa lebih yakin, teguh dan mantap,” jelas beliau dengan membuat perbandingan mengenai keputusan terbaik yang diraih NSP ketika bertanding di GRC Tampines dalam GE 2011 yang menyaksikan parti tersebut meraih 42.78 undi.

    “Kalau penduduk (Tampines) berasa yakin kami dapat ke depan, mengapa kami tidak boleh berasa yakin?”

    Cik Nor Lella, yang sebelum ini bertanding di GRC Chua Chu Kang, menambah bahawa NSP, antara lain, akan mengetengahkan isu yang dihadapi warga tua yang menghadapi masalah mengeluarkan wang CPF mereka.

    “Inilah keluhan yang selalu kami dengar dalam sesi bertemu penduduk yang kami jalankan… (malangnya) suara mereka tidak kedengaran.

    “Kenapa mereka perlu mengeluh sedangkan warga tua Singapura telah lama menyumbang kepada negara?” ujar beliau lagi.

    Awal daripada itu, Pemangku Setiausaha Agung NSP Lim Tean dengan lantang berkata parti itu akan memperjuangkan isu seperti imigresen, pekerja asing, persaingan yang dihadapi pelajar warga Singapura untuk mendapatkan tempat di sekolah setempat dan isu warga tua yang menghadapi dilema menghabiskan usia senja di negara lain kerana menghadapi ketidakcukupan wang untuk terus hidup di tanah air sendiri.

    Perjuangan NSP itu mendapat sorakan gemuruh sekitar 70 penyokongnya yang mengibarkan bendera parti tersebut di pekarangan Sekolah Poi Ching sejurus tamat sesi penamaan calon.

    Sebelum itu, calon Parti Pekerja (WP) Png Eng Huat menggesa penyokongnya supaya terus memberi sokongan kepada parti itu di Hougang, yang dianggap kubu kuat WP, menerusi slogannya Memperkasa Masa Depan Anda.

    Beliau, yang berusia 53 tahun, dan penyandang kerusi SMC Hougang, menghadapi saingan calon baru PAP, Encik Lee Hong Chuan, 44 tahun.

    Encik Png meneruskan penguasaan WP di Hougang dengan memenangi kerusi SMC itu pada 2012.

    Sebelum ini SMC itu ‘dipegang’ setiausaha agung dan orang kuat WP, Encik Low Thia Khiang, dari 1991 hingga 2011.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • Low Thia Khiang: Towards A First World Parliament

    Low Thia Khiang: Towards A First World Parliament

    At the last General Election in 2011, I urged Singaporeans to vote Workers’ Party to move Singapore Towards a First World Parliament.

    I thank voters who have supported this call. We have seen the outcome of moving Towards a First World Parliament. Today, we have a more responsive government that is more sensitive to the needs and struggles of the people. The ruling party has also openly admitted that the Cabinet has shifted more to the left to be more focused on the livelihood concerns of ordinary Singaporeans.

    Some Singaporeans asked what the Workers’ Party has been doing in the last four years with the call Towards A First World Parliament. I present here“The Workers’ Party in Parliament, 2011-2015” for your information.

    The government has responded to the voters of Hougang, Aljunied and Punggol-East who returned 7 elected WP members to Parliament, which is 8% of the total of 87 elected members in Parliament.

    A Landmark Election 2015

    This election is a landmark election in a new era in Singapore, because your vote will set direction for the future of our nation.

    First, do you want to send a signal to the ruling party that the government should continue to be transparent, accountable and responsive to the needs of the people?

    Second, should you empower yourself to participate in the decision-making process to shape your own future and the future of your children and grandchildren in the next era of Singapore?

    Build a Balanced Parliament

    Parliament is the supreme representation of the People; it derives its legitimacy in making policy and laws for Singapore on your behalf via elected Members of Parliament. You have to decide whether having more ruling party MPs in Parliament resulting in an imbalanced Parliament is in the best interest of the future of Singapore and your children.

    More importantly, your vote is a signal to the ruling party that it cannot do what it deems fit without taking you seriously. It will signal to what extent the ruling party can deprive you of your power to participate in the policy-making process without consulting you, in the name of acting in your best interest.

    There are trade-offs to every policy. Singaporeans entrusted the ruling party to decide on the trade-offs in the last 50 years of nation building; will it continue to work well in the next 50 years? How many more trade-offs should Singaporeans tolerate?

    The talent pool Singapore has today and what is required for Singapore to succeed are vastly different from the past. Many talented Singaporeans today excel in their own fields and gain international recognition. The ruling party’s mindset of monopolising power to exercise control over almost every aspect of our society and to set direction for all endeavours is a hindrance to the continuing development of Singapore in achieving excellence to become an outstanding nation.

    People must be freed from the political net-trap where talented Singaporeans in management and the professions have to worry about political correctness in decision-making and the reaction of our political leaders. Our political leaders should serve the people, not be our political masters.

    To be creative and to be able to think out of the box, people should feel free to express themselves and debate issues within known limits as a multi-racial and multi-religious society. People must also feel secure and be assured of their rights against unreasonable and disproportionate actions from the government and our political leaders.

    We must build confident professional, business and people sectors to enable Singapore to continue progress in the next 50 years. This requires checking the power of the government and empowering the people via a more balanced Parliament representing the diversity of Singapore society.

    Why Vote Workers’ Party?

    The Workers’ Party (WP) is a Rational, Responsible and Respectable party with a long history and established track record.

    • WP has been offering Singaporeans a choice at every General Election since 1957. WP has been the voice of the people in Parliament since 1981.
    • WP engages the government in policy making in a rational manner, and it does not oppose for the sake of opposition. When the policy is clearly not in the interest of the nation and the people, WP engages the front bench in debate and opposes it. WP supports policies that are beneficial to the people and the nation.
    • WP articulates balanced views and takes into consideration our multi-racial, multi-religious and multi-lingual context as a society in our political discourse.
    • WP has managed Town Council well despite many challenges and hurdles along the way in managing a much bigger town from about 9,000 units at Hougang Town Council to over 70,000 units at Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council. Apart from a number of procedural and accounting lapses pointed out in the Auditor-General’s report, which by now have mostly been addressed, the other important aspects of town management such as cleanliness, lift breakdowns and maintenance are comparable to other Town Councils. WP now has more MPs experienced in Town Council management.

    Vote Workers’ Party – Empower Your Future

    Your vote is your power. To exercise the power of your vote, you need to have an alternative party deserving your support. I have put in my best efforts for over a decade to build The Workers’ Party to be your credible choice.

    Before 2011, the ruling party cruised along with policies that led to escalating cost of living, employment and retirement insecurity, and strained infrastructure due to runaway immigration. Your vote changed the course and led to U-turns; change for the better is only beginning. We need to continue the change by sending more Workers’ Party candidates into Parliament.

    You can empower yourself to make decisions for your own future.

    Vote Workers’ Party; use the power of your vote to empower your future.

    Message from Mr Low Thia Khiang
    Secretary-General
    The Workers’ Party

     

    Source: www.wp.sg

  • Calon SDP Janji Kemuka Isu-Isu Keprihatinan Penduduk

    Calon SDP Janji Kemuka Isu-Isu Keprihatinan Penduduk

    SEBAGAI penduduk kejiranan Marsiling Drive, calon Parti Demokratik Singapura (SDP), Cik Wong Souk Yee, merasakan bahawa beliau wajar mewakili penduduk GRC Marsiling-Yew Tee di Parlimen.

    Semasa ucapannya kepada penyokong SDP di pusat pencalonan Sekolah Rendah Yishun semalam, Cik Wong, 56 tahun, bekas tahanan politik, berkata:

    “Selaku penduduk Marsiling Drive, tentunya saya bersemangat ingin mewakili anda di sini dan berjuang demi hak anda.

    “Undilah SDP agar kami dapat mewakili anda di Parlimen. Saya dan rakan-rakan saya akan mengutarakan isu yang anda prihatin.

    “Kami ingin memperjuangkan suasana penuh ketelusan. Jadikan kami suara anda di Parlimen.”

    Cik Wong dan tiga lagi rakan sepasukannya – pakar psikologi, Encik John Tan, 54 tahun; Encik Bryan Lim, 38 tahun, yang memimpin unit operasi latar parti; dan bekas pengarah kolej Islam setempat, Encik Damanhuri Abas, 45 tahun – bersaing dengan pasukan Parti Tindakan Rakyat (PAP) di GRC yang baru dibentuk mengikut perubahan sempadan pilihan raya tahun ini.

    Pasukan PAP di GRC itu dipimpin bersama Speaker Parlimen, Cik Halimah Yacob, dan Menteri Kebudayaan, Masyarakat dan Belia, Encik Lawrence Wong.

    Di laman Facebook Encik Damanhuri, beliau yang ingin mengutarakan isu berhubung hak masyarakat minoriti, melahirkan rasa terharunya dengan kemesraan penduduk di Marsiling-Yew Tee yang ditemuinya.

    “Saya percaya banyak yang boleh dilakukan buat anda (penduduk Marsiling-Yew Tee), khususnya dalam menolong keluarga dalam membesarkan anak-anak kecil.

    “Saya adalah bapa lima anak. Justeru itu saya memahami kesukaran dan cabaran yang dihadapi ibu bapa, khususnya ibu atau bapa tunggal,” katanya.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • SingFirst Seeks To Make History In Tanjong Pagar GRC

    SingFirst Seeks To Make History In Tanjong Pagar GRC

    New opposition political party Singaporeans First (SingFirst) believe they have a fighting chance of overturning the People Action’s Party (PAP) in Tanjong Pagar Group Representation Constituency (GRC) in the upcoming general elections.

    SingFirst secretary-general Tan Jee Say and led psychiatrist Dr. Ang Yong Guan, 60, sales executive Melvyn Chiu Weng Hoe, 36, media consultant Fahmi Rais, 48, and market risk manager Chirag Desai, 38, to file nomination papers at Bendemeer Primary School on Tuesday morning. The latter three are first-time candidates.

    Tanjong Pagar has been uncontested in the past five elections since becoming a multi-seat constituency in 1991. It was helmed by former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew since 1955 until his passing earlier this year.

    PAP’s team will be led by minister Chan Chun Sing, 45, along with Senior Minister of State Indranee Rajah, 52, consultant surgeon Dr. Chia Shi-Lu, 43, assistant general manager at Temasek Cares Joan Pereira, 47 and former high-ranking police officer Melvin Yong, 45.

    There was a slight hiccup for SingFirst after it was pointed out that they had not filled in the name of the GRC in their forms, but it was swiftly resolved and Tan was bullish about SingFirst’s chances.

    “There is a heavy burden on us to create history and we will create history,” the 61-year-old declared.

    “We are optimistic; there is a lot of goodwill from residents who have met us… if you were to ask me, I would say [we have a] 50-50 chance of a breakthrough in this GRC.

    “We know it is tough, with the late Mr. Lee Kuan Yew’s influence, so it’s not easy but I think we have got a good chance. Residents want change… this is an election about the future, the election is not about the past. So those who glorify the late Lee Kuan Yew are barking up the wrong tree.”

    Tan, a former presidential candidate, said the issue of having too many foreign workers was one of their main concerns, stating it is a “national problem” that Singaporeans “cannot run away from” no matter where they are.

    Meanwhile, Chan asserted the PAP team was “feeling good” heading into a historic contest and said: “Tanjong Pagar [residents] know who have been working for them, and who’s only stepping in when the time is right.”

    Three-corner fight in Radin Mas

    Meanwhile, there will be a three-cornered fight at the Radin Mas Single Member Constituency (SMC) between PAP incumbent Sam Tan Chin Siong, 56, Reform Party’s Kumar Appavoo, 46 and independent candidate Han Hui Hui, 23.

    “I’m here today [and] we will fight; fight for our CPF, our public healthcare, our public housing,” Han, a blogger and social activist who has been outspoken about Central Provident Fund (CPF) issues, said.

    “Regardless of whether it’s a two or three-cornered fight, every candidate has to prove their worth to convince the residents,” said Tan.

    The newly re-constituted Jalan Besar GRC will see a straight fight between PAP and the Workers’ Party (WP).

    Minister Yaacob Ibrahim leads a four-member team along with Heng Chee How, Lily Neo and Denise Phua against a WP side helmed by L. Somasundaram and comprising Frieda Chan, Redzwan Hafidz, Adrian Sim.


    “We take every challenge seriously,” Yaacob promised. “At the end of the day, the opponent doesn’t matter for us. I think the real challenge is for us to demonstrate to our voters that we mean business; we are an experienced team and we can deliver what we have promised.”

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

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