Tag: Daniel Goh

  • Workers’ Party’s Daniel Goh Speaks To Lianhe Zaobao

    Workers’ Party’s Daniel Goh Speaks To Lianhe Zaobao

    In case you can’t read Chinese, we’ve (amateurishly) translated this interview published today in the Chinese morning daily:

    “We do not view them as enemies,” said Dr Goh, revealing his attitude towards going up against the PAP. To him, as a credible party, the Workers’ Party’s goal is to push for constructive politics via debate and innovative ideas. He pointed that politics is not only about winning or losing, and it is not the Workers’ Party’s intention to stand simply in opposition to the ruling PAP.

    The night before, an anonymous letter has turned this Workers’ Party candidate into an overnight talking point. But, after spending an entire night answering queries from the media and denying the allegations of an affair, he did not cancel our scheduled interview yesterday, and met with us at a coffeeshop in Bedok North to discuss with us his thoughts on constructive politics.

    Dr Goh is an Associate Professor at the NUS Department of Sociology. For an academic sociologist to emerge among the candidates of the Opposition, this has made many curious. During the interview, Dr Goh approached many topics; at times with the perspective of a sociologist, at times offering ideas from the perspective of a legislator. He switched between both hats comfortably.

    Dr Goh said he did not view the PAP as enemies. Just that he believes that the PAP is a party that operates on a particular “thinking framework”. He believes that constructive politics is a kind of “game theory of ideas”, and not about “mutual criticism and obfuscation, nor about “finding candidates or putting together a team at the last minute”. He said: “That kind of talk is for the purpose of ‘winning’, to see who wins and who loses. That’s something I’m very much against.”

    Social “re-politicisation”? Not allowing Singapore to lose its advantage

    In GE2011, Mr Low Thia Khiang’s decision to switch from Hougang to Aljunied won him a GRC. By beating out PAP’s team including the then Foreign Minister George Yeo, the party’s victory was viewed by many as a “watershed” moment. Since then, Singapore politics had entered a “new normal”.

    To Dr Goh, this “new normal” or social “re-politicisation” will not cause Singapore to lose its advantage, or cause it to decline. He pointed out that the PAP’s warning that a two-party state would cause the country to stagnate and create friction, in fact, was a sign of its own fears. He said: “This type of thinking sometimes is a result of a kind of distrust towards citizens. To me, that’s very odd.”

    Dr Goh joined the Workers’ Party as a volunteer in GE2011. In talking about the elections back then, he said that Mr Low’s decision to contest in Aljunied was to send a strong message to voters for them to consider: did they really believe that Singapore needed an Opposition? At the time, perhaps voters took a long-term view and believed that a party in power for so long would ultimately fail due to corruption. So that’s how they made their decision, Dr Goh suggested.

    Dr Goh said that even if the Workers’ Party had failed, it would have allowed voters to imagine the possibility of a different future. To him, this was the greater symbolism that GE2015 held.

    In this election, Dr Goh may be fielded in East Coast, or go at it alone in Fengshan. But in all honesty, he said, when he started helping out, or even after he joined the WP as a member in 2003, he had never thought of becoming a candidate. He had joined purely with the desire to help the party become more professional and improve its internal processes.

    He described his decision to stand in the election as the result of feeling some kind of “spiritual calling” after GE2011. He also viewed it as a kind of “national service”. He said the biggest difference between a politician and an academic was that a politician, in a way, is more like a “future academic” – someone who has to look at the future and consider different scenarios.

    Dr Goh is married and has one son. Yesterday, during the interview, he did not speak much about the poison pen letter. But he had strong criticism for “gutter politics”, and said that on the journey to improving Singapore political culture, the development of the Parliament and media was very important.

    Daniel Goh makes police report about poison pen letter

    Dr Goh has denied the contents of the letter, calling it “baseless allegations”. Yesterday, he posted on Facebook to say that he had made a police report in his neighbourhood police station. Last evening, he posted yet another note, saying that a Zaobao reporter had been in touch to say that he had a limited amount of time to refute the letter’s allegations, or else the paper would run the story.

    He said: “In my communication with the Zaobao journalist last night, I was given till a certain time to refute the poison pen letter or the story will have to go to print. The story went online some time before the time given to me. This forced my hand to respond to the baseless allegations and rumours.

    “Once I made the public statement to refute the allegations, the other media outlets reported the statement, and thus the rumours.“

    He said in the same post: “Our media system is broken, but I trust we have good journalists in it from my interactions so far. We should debate and discuss how to fix it.”

    Zaobao responds

    Regarding the letter, Workers’ Party Central Executive Council member Png Eng Huat told Zaobao: “I think, we welcome anyone who wants to scrutinise our candidates. If you have any evidence, come and talk to us. Because over the Internet, over email, social media, these are all anonymous. If you have any evidence, please come and tell us.”

    Responding to Dr Goh’s Facebook post, Zaobao editor Goh Sin Teck said: “Regarding Dr Goh’s Facebook post, we wish to clarify, in fact, that night we tried to reach him more than once to get his response to this matter. The first time he responded was that night, August 27, around 10 pm. Our reporter had a deeper conversation with him to try and find out the truth. Our reporter told him, in order to meet the off-stone time, if he had any additional comments, he would need to contact us before 11.20pm.

    “But because there was a miscommunication, Zaobao Online, based on his first communication, uploaded the story before 11.20pm. We realised this oversight later, which was why at 11.15pm when we received his last communication, we immediately published his rebuttal. We also published his response on the print version of Zaobao on August 28.

    We wish to thank Dr Goh for not cancelling our scheduled interview, and for believing that in this incident, we did not act with any malice or ill feeling.”

     

    Source: http://themiddleground.sg

  • Daniel Goh Lodges Police Report Over ‘Poison Pen Letter’

    Daniel Goh Lodges Police Report Over ‘Poison Pen Letter’

    Workers’ Party (WP) candidate Daniel Goh has lodged a police report over the “poison pen letter” that was sent to media on Thursday night (Aug 28).

    The e-mail had alleged that Mr Goh, 42, a sociologist, had an affair with one of his ex-students at the National University of Singapore (NUS).

    In a Facebook post uploaded Friday morning, Mr Goh said he lodged the report at Serangoon Neighbourhood Police Centre.

    Hello everyone, again, I just lodged a police report on the poison pen letter at Serangoon NPC, a short walk down from…

    Posted by Daniel Goh 吴佩松 on Thursday, 27 August 2015

    Mr Goh, who is married, had already refuted the allegations in a post on Facebook on Thursday night.

    In the earlier post, he “question(ed) the timing of the poison pen letter coming immediately after the candidate introduction”.

    In a text message on Thursday night, Dr Goh told The New Paper that his wife had told him that such an incident was “bound to happen”, and called it “gutter politics”.

    Dr Goh and his 39-year-old wife have a three-year-old son.

    In his latest post, he thanked his supporters for rallying around him.

    “I am not a singular person anymore, never was, but now I stand on your giant shoulders; you all give me spiritual strength,” he wrote.

    “Let’s move on to the issues at hand.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Daniel Goh: WP Candidates Don’t Need To be Introduced In Coffeshops Because The Heartland Is Our Everyday Reality

    Daniel Goh: WP Candidates Don’t Need To be Introduced In Coffeshops Because The Heartland Is Our Everyday Reality

    A reporter asked the introduced candidates what we thought of the PAP introducing their candidates in coffeeshops and other heartland venues while WP was doing this at the party HQ. Dylan and Choong Yong answered, but before I could, an AFP reporter abruptly interjected with a question he thought was more important, and Redzwan and I didn’t answer the question.

    No matter, but the question left me thinking. My answer would have been, with a bit of extra hindsight time, “So what? I live in heartland spaces every day; I get introduced as a candidate at the HQ because it is a special event. My normal reality is the heartland, the heartland is not a special event for me. My life is the heartland, the heartland is not my symbolic gesture.”

    So this is what I did after the press conference. Choong Yong generously gave me a lift back and went to the coffee shop across from my HDB block to work. I went back, said hello to my neighbour who was doing some DIY work in the corridor, changed to tee-shirt and berms, played a game of Zingo! with my son, and shared what happened with the wife. My mum was on her way back from work, and I know my son would want to do gardening with grandma to maintain the potted plants outside, so I took the chance to head to the bank at Nex mall to get a cashier’s order for the election deposit.

    Along the way at the void deck I said hello and spoke briefly to the “guardian angel” uncle who sits at the stone table in the mornings and evenings to watch the crowds. At the traffic lights, two schoolboys were playing catching around me, and I glared at one of them because he almost crashed into me with his cup of soft drink. In Nex, I politely declined promoters trying to sell me something and negotiated some kan cheong aunties at the escalators. Got my cashier’s order, and while walking back through the bus interchange I saw my phone notifications had went crazy due to the buzz about my candidate introduction on social media.

    But the irony is no one recognised me in the heartland, because I fade into it with my unclely tee-shirt and berms. And there is nothing special about the heartland, just the banality of everyday life which we cherish for its persistence. I rarely take selfies but I thought I should just do one to register a moment. It would have been extremely uncomfortable for me if I was introduced as a candidate at the coffeeshop or some other heartland spaces, because it would be symbolic tokenism that appropriates our living space for my own political profit.

     

    Source: Daniel Goh 吴佩松

  • Workers’ Party’s Daniel Goh Denies Extra-Marital Affair With Former Student

    Workers’ Party’s Daniel Goh Denies Extra-Marital Affair With Former Student

    Workers’ Party (WP) potential candidate, National University of Singapore sociologist Daniel Goh, has denied allegations that he had an extra-marital affair with a former student.

    Several press in Singapore have received a letter on Thursday night from a “Max Chan” who alleged that Dr Daniel Goh had an affair in 2008 with a post-graduate student from NUS.

    In the e-mail that was also sent to Workers’ Party secretary-general Low Thia Khiang and chairman Sylvia Lim, the writer questioned Dr Goh’s character and morals. He also claimed that the woman’s boyfriend, whom he referred to only as J, had found out about the alleged affair through her phone messages.

    Dr Goh said he was advising the female student in her master’s thesis from 2007 to 2009. After she graduated, the student left Singapore to get a PhD.

    Dr Goh was introduced as the WP’s potential candidate on Wednesday. He has been seen walking the ground in East Coast and is expected to stand as WP’s candidate in East Coast GRC

    He is married to a full-time time housewife, 39. They have a three-year-old son.

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Daniel Goh: I Have Always Been Professional, Allegations Are Baseless

    Daniel Goh: I Have Always Been Professional, Allegations Are Baseless

    Hello everyone, thank you for your amazing support thus far. Thanks for encouraging me to stand strong. Someone wrote a poison pen letter to WP and to the media to smear me with the allegation that I had an affair with a former student of mine whom I supervised for her thesis. And the media is going to run the story online and in print. The timing is sensational.

    I categorically refute the baseless allegations and I question the timing of the poison pen letter coming immediately after the candidate introduction. I have been in the public eye, involved with WP, for over two years, and if the intention is to alert the party to alleged moral failings, it would have been done earlier and directly to the party leaders. I have always maintained a professional relationship with my students. This is very hurtful and unfair to my family.

     

    Source: Daniel Goh 吴佩松