Tag: ELD

  • Abdul Salim Harun: Can’t Singaporeans Have Differing Views From PAP?

    Abdul Salim Harun: Can’t Singaporeans Have Differing Views From PAP?

    Fixing the Opposition, Fixing the activists. They do it fast in a lightning speed. Harassments, threats, fear… That’s how they treat the people now…

    But when it comes to the Whites, they sweep everything under the carpet. Police reports made, it take ages for them to react, or they will just sleep on it.

    The sad state of the rotting country we are living in today. But there’s no other way since 70% approved of their despicable and dirty tactics… In cahoot with the Big Bullies just because of differences in views and opinions.

    “To build a DEMOCRATIC society, based on JUSTICE and EQUALITY…”, the pledge taken by the White HYPOCRITES. FALSE promises, to the blinded Sheeps by the wolves in disguise!

     

    Source: Abdul Salim Harun

  • Gilbert Goh: Official Complaint To UN – Unfair General Election Ethics In Singapore 2015

    Gilbert Goh: Official Complaint To UN – Unfair General Election Ethics In Singapore 2015

    To:

    United Nations Bangkok

    12th Floor, United Nations Building,
    Rajdamnern Nok Avenue, Pranakorn
    Bangkok 10200, Thailand

    Dear Sir/Mdm,

    I want to formally lodge a complaint to the United Nations for our country’s recently-held general election.

    For the record, I also stood for general election twice – Tampines GRC in 2011 and Ang Mo Kio GRC this year.

    For the recent election, the ruling party PAP won by a landslide majority percentage of 70% – a huge increase of 10% over the previous GE 2011 result of 60%.

    Many opposition parties suffered from bad losses – right down to the unprecedented 20s percentile mark.

    My fear is that if the following unfair unethical practices are to go unchecked, it will be the accepted norm and we may see a one-party rule for a very long time – something which many Singaporeans are uncomfortable with.

    Many are willing to accept the mandate of the majority but if the ruling party won it unfairly then the international community such as the United nations needs to step in so that future elections can be conducted ethically and above board.

    We hope that independent assessors be sent in by the UN so that the population is ensured of a fair and ethical election from now on.

    Moreover, Singapore is a  internationally-renowned economic powerhouse with a huge multi-national presence but it is seriously lacking in democratic rights and freedom of speech.

    Those who spoke out against the authorities were frequently questioned by the police with some facing lawsuits and jail sentence.

    I have listed down the following unfair unethical ways in which our government has won the recent election:-

    1. Injection of new citizen voters

    New citizens were injected yearly so that they can usher in to vote for the ruling party out of loyalty.

    They were mostly hailed from third world countries such as Philippines, Malaysia, China, India and Indonesia and know no other party besides PAP.

    An average of 25,000 new voters are added in annually since 2006 and by this election, more than 200,000 new citizens are eligible to vote – mostly for the first-time.

    Though we acknowledged that voters are swayed by the SG 50 jubilee celebration and the death of patriach Lee Kuan Yew to vote for the ruling party, new voters from third world countries will be the new force to be reckoned with.

    New-citizen voters is the main reason why our government allows in so many foreigners on the pretext of economic expansion but behind there lies a more sinister motive to stay in power forever as they are loyal to the ruling party.

    We urge the government to consider that new citizens can only vote after staying with us for 5 years and beyond so their votes can never be manipulated at the onset to help the ruling party.

    2. Boundary changes

    Boundary changes is the norm of every election but for this recent election it is more pressing as the ruling party faces some unresolvable national issues such as transportation and over-crowding.

    It’s share of the crucial majority votes have been slipping since two elections ago.

    For this election, boundary changes is also more critical as it allows the government to flood certain opposition-held wards with new citizen voters. It is almost a sure-win way to ensure that they can hold on to their own constituencies and yet able to possibly remove a opposition-held ward or reduce its winning margin.

    WP’s Aljunied GRC is one such ward as it saw the winning margin reduced from a five-figure majority victory in 2011 to a narrow 1900 votes (50.95). There is a 3.7% swing against the opposition giant.

    In 2011, Aljunied had 143,000 voters whereas for the recent election it has 148,000 voters – an increase of almost 5000 voters.

    In 2015, it polled 70,000 votes against the 2011 election’s 72,000 causing it to slip 3.7% to 50.9% of majority votes or 12,000 winning votes in 2011 to the current 1900 votes after counting in the PAP’s share of the votes.

    The PAP’s share of the votes, on the other hand, jumped from 59,000 to 67,000 – probably a combination of new citizen voters (5000)  and swing voters (3000).

    There is thus this fear that WP may not be able to hold on to Aljunied GRC in 2020 when the ruling party pours in more loyal new citizen votes with all things remaining equal.

    The government roughly knows whether certain precinct is pro-government or pro-opposition according to the polling station and this is public knowledge by now.

    By removing or adding certain precinct from a constituency, it can ensure that the area has a majority of government voters with the awful unfair boundary change that comes with every election.

    We urge that any boundary changes in future be effected in consultation with the opposition to ensure that the playing field is levelled.

    3. Demarcation of PA from PAP

    The heavily-funded People’s Association (PA) is the arm and leg of the ruling party and its reach into the masses is one main reason why it won so handsomely.

    It is also unfair as PA is a statutory board which is supposed to be non-partisan but its activities is all along very pro-PAP.

    It has a yearly funding of $500 million and its budget is going to be ballooned to $1 billion soon. Its accounting practice is also suspect and is one of the many statutory board that is flagged by our Auditor-General’s office for malpractices.

    This is unfair to the opposition as the government is using our tax payer money to fuel it’s own campaign by using unethical means.

    Moreover, the chairman of PA is none other than the Prime Minister himself.

    We urge that the PA be disbanded or distance itself from the ruling party in everything that it does to ensure that the playing field is levelled.

    4. Election Department falls under the Prime Minister Office (PMO)

    The Election Department now falls under the jurisdiction of the Prime Minister Office (PMO).

    This is most unfair as it gives the ruling party a huge advantage especially when the ED can influence significant boundary changes and when it can call for a election after consulting the PM giving little time for the opposition to prepare it’s ground.

    We urge that the ED will be independent of the PMO so that it is impartial and just.

    5. Control of mainsteam media during election

    Our press rankings have been slipping down yearly with the latest rating at a historic low of 153 out of 180, according to Paris-based watchdog Reporters Without Borders.

    The government has controlled our press and TV so that it can influence the masses especially during the crucial general election. Information is mostly slanted to benefit the ruling party and this press behaviour is not unlike that of communist bloc countries like China or Russia.

    Propaganda messages were played and re-played again during the recent election so that the large middle ground is influenced to vote for the ruling party.

    We urge that the government frees up our mainstream media so that the population has a balanced access to information on a impartial basis.

    Let the public decide what kind of government they want without improper propaganda through unfair means.

    Conclusion

    I am willing to speak with the United Nations personally on all the above mentioned matters so that our country can have a fair and ethical election in GE 2020.

    We also welcome independent assessors into our country for the next general election to ensure that the best political party wins – on its own merits!

    Thanks & Warmest Regards,

    Gilbert Goh

     

    Source: www.transitioning.org

  • Art Fazil: Really Lah Your Vote Is Secret! Really Really Secret!

    Art Fazil: Really Lah Your Vote Is Secret! Really Really Secret!

    Your Vote Is Secret. Is it?

    1. In GE 2011 I volunteered to be the counting agent for SDP. I was assigned to Woodgrove Primary School Counting Centre.

    2. I did so not because I was an SDP member but I volunteered because they needed people to help to observe the counting.

    3. The job to count the votes are done by counting officers. They are mostly civil service people who kena arrow to do the job.

    4. The job as counting agent was to observe that each ballot paper was accounted for i.e. that every single ballot paper with the correctly marked space are all accounted for. In this case, it was for the SDP. The PAP counting agent would do the same.

    5. I also learned the process of how voting is conducted and to see if it really was a secret as it has always been said.

    6. This is what happened to your ballot papers:

    7. You come to the registration centre with your IC

    8. The polling agent will then check your name/IC number against the ballot paper.

    9. Your ballot paper has a serial number BUT not your IC number.

    10. Repeat: Your ballot paper has a serial number BUT not your IC number.

    11. The serial number is necessary so that the political parties do not go and suka-suka print extra ballot paper for themselves.

    12. Even your 4D tickets got serial number.

    13. Once it all tallies, the ballot paper is given to you. You then walk to the counter with the partitions to mark X on the political party of your choice. Once completed you fold it in half.

    14. You then walk to the ballot box and put the ballot paper into the box.

    15. After voting time is over, all the ballot boxes will be brought to the counting centre.

    16. The police will escort all ballot boxes from various polling stations to the counting centre.

    17. They will then begin to pour all the ballot papers onto the tables for counting.

    18. The counting process is like this- they manually sort out which X was marked against which party’s logo. It’s that primitive.

    19. Each party gets a pile each on the table. If there are two parties, there will be two piles.

    20. We can see the ballot papers and we can check which ballot paper was marked X to which party.

    21. So sometimes, if a ballot paper is not clearly marked, each party’s
    counting agent can argue if the X was clearly for his party or if it was a spoilt vote.

    22. So please do not spoil your vote. Its leceh for the counting agents to argue on a half-fuck scrawl by a zombie kampung pisang.

    23. Repeat : Please do not spoil your vote. The politicians, MPs or ministers don’t get to see your scrawl. if you want to protest against the government, please vote the other party, not the picture with the lightning.

    24. Ok once the counting is done, and we know who won the election, all the ballot papers, both the pro-PAP and Opposition will be put inside boxes.

    25. No one has the time to look through each ballot paper individually to see who voted for who. It would be almost midnight by then and everyone especially the polling agents, counting officers and counting agents would be tired as hell.

    26. So please do not imagine that someone is out there to check your ballot papers and to see if you had voted for a monkey or a rat’s ass. You are not that important.

    27. Once the ballot papers are put in the boxes, the boxes would in turn be sealed.

    28. This whole process is meticulously done and is observed by both party members.

    29. The representative of each party will then sign on the seal of the boxes.

    30. This ensures that no one can open these boxes at any time, not the PAP, the government, the Opposition, not King Kong, not even Ah Kong LKY. These boxes are then stored for 6 months in a vault where no one can open unless there is a court order. It only happens if a political party is not happy with the results and wants a recount.

    31. This, thankfully has never happened in Singapore since elections began.

    32. After 6 months, the boxes are then taken out of the safety vault. I said the boxes- not the ballot papers! Faham? Kapisch? Eh Hiao, Bo?

    33. Each representative of the political parties will then check each box to ensure no seal on the boxes have been tampered with. That means no one came in the middle of the night to open the sealed boxes to check individual ballot papers of your auntie or my uncle and if they had voted for the Opposition.

    34. Once all the representatives are satisfied that there was no tampering of the sealed boxes, they will then destroy the boxes in the furnace. Poof!

    35. That is the end of the life of your ballot paper.

    36. The moral of the story is no one can check on who you voted for. Your vote is absolutely secret. No shit about that.

    37. The only way for people to know who you voted for is if you put it up on your Facebook status.

    38. Repeat: Your vote is secret.

    39. Now go tell your mother, aunties and grannies about this.

    40. I know so cause I was a counting agent in GE2011.

    Yours Truly,

    Art Fazil

    The End.

     

    Source: Rilek Brader

  • Jeanette Chong-Aruldoss: ELD Should State Legal Basis Allowing Lee Hsien Loong’s Poster In Costituency I’m Contesting

    Jeanette Chong-Aruldoss: ELD Should State Legal Basis Allowing Lee Hsien Loong’s Poster In Costituency I’m Contesting

    In between my walkabouts, I took some time to write this letter to the Returning Officer seeking accountability on several issues:

    1) I want to know exactly what legal basis permits Mr Lee Hsien Loong to put up posters in the constituency I’m contesting in. I don’t think the ELD’s vague clarification about “past practice” is satisfactory, given the clear wording of the relevant legislation and poster and banner permits;

    2) There is a poster and banner quota given to all candidates. Does Mr Lee’s poster, even if it falls within the letter and spirit of the legislation and permit, count towards the PAP candidate’s poster and banner quota in the constituency?;

    3) Why does the ELD permit giant billboards of the PAP candidate under the pretext of SG 50 billboards during election period, given that SG 50 has concluded 3 weeks ago and these billboards are being sponsored by taxpayers’ monies?

    Let me be clear: I’m CONFIDENT of going toe to toe with Biow Chuan despite this uneven playing field. I am also CONFIDENT of dealing with Lee Hsien Loong’s record on the national stage. After all, the role of an MP must be to hold the Government accountable. I’ve been tireless on the ground and am not afraid to raise national issues. This issue is a matter of principle I feel strongly needs to be accounted for. It potentially impacts other constituencies across the country, although I only have standing to write in as the candidate for Mountbatten. I hope for a clear and satisfactory answer from the ELD. I also hope Biow Chuan will fight this election on an even playing field.

     

    Source: Jeanette For Mountbatten

  • Kevryn Lim: ELD Confirmed All Parties Allowed To Put Posters Of Candidates Around Singapore

    Kevryn Lim: ELD Confirmed All Parties Allowed To Put Posters Of Candidates Around Singapore

    Is PM Lee contesting in all 16GRCs and 13SMCs this General Election? Is he running for the Presidential Election or General Election, as the MP of Ang Mo Kio GRC?

    We have enquired with Election Department today at 2.25pm and they said this is allowed as PM Lee is representing the party. They have also confirmed that any political party is allowed to do the same for their party as long as you represent your party.

    Therefore, in conclusion, all parties are allowed to put their posters around Singapore not necessarily limited to the constituency you are contesting in.

    – The above information is confirmed by the Election Department.

     

    Source: Kevryn Lim – 林彤臻