Tag: Bernard Chan

  • Tin Pei Ling: Being A Mother Is Not A Weakness

    Tin Pei Ling: Being A Mother Is Not A Weakness

    PAP candidate Tin Pei Ling has refuted MacPherson rival Cheo Chai Chen’s comments that her new role as a mother is a weakness.

    In a Facebook post on Friday (Aug 4) morning, Ms Tin, 31, said that she disagreed with the National Solidarity Party (NSP) candidate.

    She said she is committed to MacPherson, and returned to work two weeks after delivery because she wanted to continue to serve.

    “I am confident that even as a mum I can continue to focus on my work in MacPherson,” she wrote.

    The Today newspaper reported Mr Cheo’s comments. The 64-year-old former Nee Soon Central MP had said: “The PAP’s Tin Pei Ling has been working very hard. But she has just given birth, so voters should let her go home and rest, and take care of her child.

    “In general, mothers love their children, so they spend a lot of time with them. If voters choose her, she might focus more on her child than on her voters. This is her weakness.”

    In her post, Ms Tin noted that women today are well educated and capable of contributing in the work place and society.

    “Many mums face pressures to choose between motherhood and career. They should not have to,” she said, adding that she thus wants to build a Singapore “in which more women can successfully manage family and work responsibilities at the same time”.

    At a walkabout on Friday, she said that the general election concerns the future of Singapore as well as, on a personal level for her, MacPherson.

    “MacPherson means a lot to me. I feel a sense of responsibility. But I understand that not all women have the kind of support that I may have at this moment,” she said.

    “It won’t be easy for women, especially working mothers, out there. This further strengthens my sense of mission in wanting to help women get the kind of support they need in order to multitask and fulfil their different roles,” she added.

    When asked about his comments on Ms Tin being a new mother on Friday, Mr Cheo said: “It was a joke. I did not mean it to be taken seriously.”

    Ms Tin is in a three-cornered fight for the single-seat ward with Mr Cheo and Mr Bernard Chen, 29, from the Workers’ Party.

    She gave birth to a son, Kee Hau, on Aug 5 – her first child with Law Ministry Permanent Secretary Ng How Yue.

    Defence minister Ng Eng Hen backed also Ms Tin with a Facebook post. The medical doctor noted that a short stint with the obstetrician and gynaecology department as a medical officer showed him how strong mothers are.

    He added that he had advised Ms Tin to do less house-to-house and market visits while still in confinement. Dr Ng also added: “Mothers are strong, very strong when motivated… Those who dare to challenge mothers – beware!”

    Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Grace Fu weighed in on the issue, saying she found Mr Cheo’s comments on Ms Tin “unjustified and outdated”.

    In a post on Facebook, she wrote: “The work of an MP is demanding but many women MPs have proven that they can be as effective as their male counterparts.

    “MOS Sim Ann, Ms Low Yen Ling, Dr Intan are exemplary of the modern Singaporean women who have done well managing the demands of public service, the political work of an MP and the mother of their children.

    She added that Mr Cheo’s comment that “voters should let her go home and rest” is a reminder that the work to change societal attitude is “far from done”.

    NSP’s Sembawang GRC candidate Kevryn Lim also gave her take on this issue.

    In a Facebook post on Friday, the 26-year-old single mother said: “We value all mothers and parents! I believe, Miss Tin, like all mothers and myself can also be a career woman of their own and manage their time respectively without neglecting anyone in the family.”

    In his comments on Thursday, Mr Cheo also took aim at the youth of his two opponents in MacPherson.

    In response, Ms Tin said on Facebook that youth should not be seen as a disadvantage. “It is good to encourage and enable youths to serve. It is good that young Singaporeans are paying attention and getting involved in the GE.

    “It shows that young Singaporeans are willing to stand up for their beliefs and work hard to achieve a better future for our country.”

    MacPherson resident Madam Susan Tan, 66, met Mr Cheo on his walkabout on Friday morning at Pipit Road. “I’ve seen him (Cheo) around before, I recognise him,” she said. “But government here by Ms Tin is very smooth and I don’t know if he can do the same.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Walid J. Abdullah: Respects To Tin Pei Ling But WP’s Bernard Chan Will Win Macpherson SMC

    Walid J. Abdullah: Respects To Tin Pei Ling But WP’s Bernard Chan Will Win Macpherson SMC

    Apart from my own GRC (East Coast), there are a few other wards that i believe would be worth paying attention to: Holland-Bukit Timah, Marsiling-Yew Tee, Marine Parade, and the SMCs of Fengshan, Potong Pasir, Hong Kah North, Mountbatten, and MacPherson.

    For MacPherson, it will be an interesting battle (i will ignore the NSP candidate because he will not be getting back his deposit). Tin Pei Ling, the parliamentarian with whom Singaporeans have a, shall we say ‘special’ relationship, will be contesting.

    To be honest, my respect for her has increased so much. In 2011, i was one of those who didn’t think much of her, after witnessing her campaign. But over the past 4 years, i think she has behaved in an extremely dignified manner, and the fact that she is contesting an SMC is a display of so much courage; even many of her more senior colleagues have never been through such a battle. Evidently, she is confident that she has done enough work on the ‘ground’ to be re-elected without riding on anyone’s coat-tails.

    I truly feel that she has transformed her reputation from a political joke to a serious parliamentarian. (Incidentally, the other person who was a bit of a joke during the 2011 hustings, Chan Chun Sing, has also impressed me in the past four years: so there may still be hope for the fist-pumper and mike-grabber.)

    Under normal circumstances then, i would be rooting for her.

    However…..

    Her opponent happens to be someone i know pretty well: a friend of 13 years, Chen Jiaxi Bernard. We went to JC together (Tampines JC, not some elitist school :p). He comes from a legtimately humble background (i know all politicians say that, but this is one that i can verify!).

    After JC, he did not enter university right away, but did not give up: he went to poly, then read history at NUS, and went on to do his Master’s at Oxford.

    But perhaps the most important thing to know about him is, he joined WP long ago. Way before 2011. And this matters in a huge way: it is easy to join a party when it is successful and then claim that ‘i have always wanted to serve the people’, but it is quite a different thing to join a party that did not seem like it was going to be a force to be reckoned with.

    It is something like this that serves as a far better gauge of sincerity than running from door-to-door on house visits (while being captured on video), taking selfies with residents, carrying random babies/cats/babies of cats, and posting statuses about how ‘people-ask-if-the-MPS-was-so-tiring-because-it-ended-at-2am-but-i-do-not-mind-it-at-all-since-what-matters-most-to-me-is-the-welfare-of-the-residents’.

    So, i shall throw my weight behind him and will be hoping for his victory.

    Either way, i think MacPherson residents will be in an desirable position.

     

    Source: Walid J. Abdullah

  • NSP: Workers’ Party Left Us With No Choice, We Had To Enter Into 3-Cornered Fight In MacPherson

    NSP: Workers’ Party Left Us With No Choice, We Had To Enter Into 3-Cornered Fight In MacPherson

    In the wake of a frantic few hours on Nomination Day, which saw three multi-cornered fights emerge in the General Election, the leaders of the National Solidarity Party came forward to say they were “the most active party promoting Opposition unity”.

    NSP candidate Cheo Chai Chen will face a three-cornered fight in MacPherson SMC, where he will come up against the People’s Action Party’s Tin Pei Ling, 31 – the incumbent after the ward was carved out of Marine Parade GRC – and the Workers’ Party’s Bernard Chen, 29.

    Said party Acting Secretary-General Lim Tean, at a press conference where the party’s Tampines GRC team was introduced: “I believe to a very large extent we have avoided multi-cornered fights but for MacPherson we had to do it. MacPherson used to be part of Marine Parade. We did very well in the last GE and we have already made a huge concession to WP there.”

    An NSP team featuring Ms Nicole Seah took 43.36 per cent of the vote against the PAP in 2011.

    “If WP wanted to avoid a three-cornered fight they should have allowed us to fight with PAP in MacPherson,” said Mr Lim.

    “That decision to contest in MacPherson was made a few weeks ago, and we’ve never departed from that decision. NSP has been the most active party promoting Opposition unity. We initiated talks to avoid three-cornered fights.”

    The decision to contest in the SMC led to fissures within the party, including the departure of then-Acting Secretary-General Hazel Poa. Mr Lim said that the lessons learnt over the past few weeks will make the party “stronger for the battle ahead”.

    “We are a democratic party and in a democratic party run on democratic principles you’re going to have a difference in opinions. I think that’s healthy,” said Mr Lim.

    “As for party members who have left, we cannot stop people from leaving – it’s their right to join any party they wish. And as for why we have been so quiet in the last couple of weeks, I think the media made a lot of the disunity and turmoil, so we decided that it’s best not to add to the frenzy, and instead regroup to prepare for the coming GE.”

    NSP President Sebastian Teo – part of the party’s Tampines GRC team that includes Mr Lim, Ms Nor Lella Mardiiah Mohamed, 41, Mr Fong Chin Leong, 46, and Mr Choong Hon Heng, 45 – said that if elected, the party did not think think it would face any problems running a Town Council in Tampines.

    Said Mr Teo: “It’s not that difficult to run a Town Council. I’m sure we have all that we need to put in place and to run a Town Council. It’s not difficult like the PAP say. You need capital, you need manpower. So I don’t understand – what’s so difficult about running a Town Council?”

    The NSP will face a People’s Action Party team led by Education Minister Heng Swee Keat at the polls on Sep 11.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • How Worker’s Party’s Bernard Chan Worked To The Top

    How Worker’s Party’s Bernard Chan Worked To The Top

    The Workers’ Party has unveiled grassroots organiser, political activist and recent Oxford graduate Bernard Chen as a candidate for the Sep 11 general elections in Singapore. In an interview conducted by Bryan Kwa in early July 2014, Bernard said he did not harbour intentions in being a Member of Parliament but that politics should be about selfless service and that the Singapore narrative should include the peoples’ history.

    This interview is republished with permission and edited to reflect accuracy in dates. The original interview can be viewed here.

    Bernard Chen is a walking contradiction in terms. He has spent close to a decade as a political activist and speaks like a wise statesman even though he is still in his twenties. Moreover, he has just graduated from the University of Oxford despite failing his GCE ‘A’ levels.

    Bernard, who is 29 this year, enrolled in Temasek Polytechnic after his National Service in 2006 for his “last ticket to university”. In 2013, he graduated with honours from the National University of Singapore with a Bachelor of Arts in History. He then went on to pursue a Masters’ degree in Global and Imperial History at the University of Oxford on a Tan Ean Kiam postgraduate scholarship in the humanities.

    On Grassroots Politics

    He joined The Workers’ Party (WP) when he was 21, as he believed that political competition is needed in Singapore and “it’s the most credible and responsible opposition party around”.

    “I wasn’t pissed off with something that compelled me to join the WP. And I don’t think we should wait for the chance for it, for the moment that you get disappointed with the government.”

    He feels that a culture of service “should permeate throughout society” so that Singapore will be “robust, dynamic and sustainable”.

    Bernard wishes to see the zeitgeist of the first generation of Singapore leaders — that is the willingness to sacrifice personal time and serve just for the sake of service — in today’s generation. He feels that there is a need to “cultivate” such a “mindset”.

    “Where is the public-spiritedness? Where is the ability to see things above and beyond themselves?” he asks.

    Bernard has been a legislative assistant since May 2010. It is a part-time job and he is paid a monthly stipend. His main focus is on the Meet-the-People sessions where he helps the Member of Parliament (MP) draft letters based on the constituents’ complaints.

    “It’s very down-to-earth, very ground work. You just have to be there, speak to people, and understand what their needs are,” he says.

    He started as the legislative assistant to Low Thia Khiang, who was the MP for Hougang and subsequently for Aljunied GRC. Since February 2012, he is the legislative assistant to the MP for Aljunied GRC, Muhamad Faisal.

    Bernard harbours no aspirations to be a minister or MP. Instead, he hopes that his story of a 21-year-old with “no job security, no educational security, no achievements to date” devoting his time to politics can inspire others to come forward to serve, and that “anybody can do it”.

    “You don’t have to wait until you are 50, you are super established, and you have a lot of money,” he says.

    He hopes that his “little act of service… can inspire more intelligent young Singaporeans to come forward” to be “politically-involved, whether it is WP or PAP”. PAP refers to the People’s Action Party, which is the ruling party of the day.

    Moreover, he wants Singaporeans to see that politics can be “responsible, constructive and beneficial”. He contends that politics needs not be adversarial and confrontational.

    Bernard thinks Singapore has the potential to have a “number one” political system, one where “national interest is above partisan interest”. He acknowledges that some see this as empty rhetoric but he thinks that Singapore “can actually” make this a reality.

    “We can. But it is difficult. It is challenging because the ball is not only in the court of the political parties, it is also in the court of the electorate,” he opines.

    “Singapore has always prided itself on our airport, shipyards, efficiency, of our standing in the corruption index or what forms of education index. Why can’t our politics be a shining example to the rest of the world?”

    Bernard Chen - Copy

    On Singapore Narrative

    Given his academic training as a historian, Bernard thinks the Singapore narrative is “quite problematic”. He cites the title of former prime minster Lee Kuan Yew’s memoir “My Singapore Story” as an example of a “problematic” phrasing of the narrative.

    “It serves a very political purpose to once and for all put the nail into the coffin saying that this is the narrative that we want to have,” he suggests. While he does not think it is wrong, he “thinks it is not fair, from the view of a historian”.

    “This is what people usually call the elite discourse. So people who wins power, gets it. So just as someone below should not totally dismiss the Singapore narrative, people on top should also not dismiss subaltern history or peoples’ history of Singapore.” Subaltern history refers to history told by people outside the hegemonic class. (See Singapore Memory Project below)

    “The study of history is never meant to be politicised. It’s meant to be enlightening, to bring light to grey areas, to bring light to areas that are totally dark. That’s history’s contribution. If I can shine a light into a corner, it may not be complete, but someone after me will shine another light to bring out the issue. That’s my contribution. My contribution is to shine the light, his contribution is to shine the light from a different perspective.”

    He posits historians should not “make moral value judgments” but “see where it’s lacking and try to fill it”. He points out that we lack a “comprehensive history of the PAP from a non-Lee Kuan Yew perspective”.

    This is significant. Tham Yuen-C writes in a commentary published in The Straits Times on February 16, 2014 that “a new narrative… forged together by the masses… reminds us that Singapore got to where it is today through the efforts of an entire generation”.

    Bernard continues, “Have we actually asked about the grassroots worker standing beside LKY when he first won Singapore from the government of the British? No. Is it valuable? Yes. What was he thinking? Where does he come from? What is the occupational make up of LKY’s first group of volunteers? It tells a lot about the kind of Singapore we have and how far we have come.”

    Fortunately, a step in this direction has been taken. During the National Day Rally, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong highlighted the contributions by Lee Kuan Yew’s former driver Rahmat Yusak, who drove the former prime minster around the island in the 1960s to rally support for the battle against the communist.

    His Singapore Dream

    For Bernard, an ideal Singaporean society is “one that Singaporeans are able to see things above and beyond themselves. A society that is fair and just”.

    “One that a person like me who is born into a working class family, whose father has a secondary three education, whose mother has a secondary four education, has never achieved anything much in life, can still ensure that their children can have a brighter future than they do.”

    At the heart of all his grassroots and political work is his wish to leave a stronger Singapore that is better than the one he inherited.

    “I inherited a good Singapore and it is a privilege to give back to what this country has given me. So for those who have been given much, I think much should be given back to the country by them,” he says.

    Singapore Memory Project

    The Singapore Memory Project (SMP) is a nationwide movement, created with the objective of documenting and collecting noteworthy memories associated with Singapore. Established in August 2011, the objective of the project is to gather five million personal memories and a significant amount of published materials on Singapore by 2015.

    One recent campaign by the SMP, titled A Tribute To Our Pioneer Generation, ran from February to June. It focused on preserving stories of the Pioneer Generation, where thoughts and reflections of nation builders such as hawkers, teachers and builders are collected and showcased to the public – thereby ensuring that the people’s history is included in the Singapore narrative.

    Featured photo: Courtesy of Bernard Chen for Bryan Kwa
    In-line photo: The Workers’ Party

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • MacPherson, Radin Mas And Bukit Batok SMCs To See 3-Cornered Fights

    MacPherson, Radin Mas And Bukit Batok SMCs To See 3-Cornered Fights

    The single-seat wards of MacPherson, Radin Mas and Bukit Batok will face three-cornered fights at the Sept 11 polls, two more than in the 2011 General Election.

    The Workers’ Party’s (WP) rookie candidate Bernard Chen, 29, a funeral services company executive, will go up against the PAP’s Ms Tin Pei Ling and the National Solidarity Party’s Mr Cheo Chai Chen in MacPherson, which was carved out of the Marine Parade GRC.

    In Radin Mas, PAP incumbent Sam Tan will face off against Mr Kumar Appavoo of the Reform Party and an independent candidate, blogger Han Hui Hui.

    Another independent, businessman Samir Salim Neji, 45, is contesting Bukit Batok against the Singapore Democratic Party’s Sadasivam Veriyah and the PAP’s David Ong.

    The other 10 single-seat wards and 16 group representation constituencies (GRCs) are seeing straight fights.

    At the 2011 polls, there was only one three-cornered fight – in Punggol East between the PAP’s Michael Palmer, the WP’s Ms Lee Li Lian and Mr Desmond Lim Bak Chuan of the Singapore Democratic Alliance.

    Mr Palmer won with 54.54 per cent of the vote, with Ms Lee garnering 41.01 per cent and Mr Lim losing his electoral deposit after scoring just 4.45 per cent.

    Mr Palmer later resigned after publicly admitting to an extramarital affair. Ms Lee won the subsequent by-election in 2013.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com