Tag: Elections

  • Top 10 Electoral Battles To Watch

    Top 10 Electoral Battles To Watch

    It is election season in Singapore. GE2015 is finally here and it is the most keenly contested election since 1965, with 181 candidates from 9 political parties and 2 independents going for all 89 seats in Parliament. No more walkovers and “instant MPs” whom we didn’t vote for!

    There will a total of 13 Single-Member Constituencies (SMCs) and 16 GRCs in GE2015, up from the current 12 SMCs and 15 GRCs. That’s a total of 29 contests to watch. Which will be the most keenly contested or interesting ones to watch? Get ready your popcorn. Here is list of the top 10 battles,adjusted from my previous list, after taking into account the development on Nomination Day where all the contesting candidates in each wards are disclosed.

    First off, I believe the National Solidarity Party (NSP), will no longer be a serious contender after all the flip-flopping and “pattern more than badminton” moves that the party has been up to over a span of just a few weeks leading up to Nomination Day. They also lost most of their strongest candidates from GE2011 like Hazel Poa and Nicole Seah.

    Oh, and most of the election trolls like that Uber driver, the “Parrot Man”, the crying tuition teacher and even the supposed candidate backed by the king of online troll, SMRT Ltd (Feedback) – all did not make it. 

    Surprisingly, Han Hui Hui made it, resulting in a three-cornered fight in Radin Mas SMC. Nonetheless, Radin Mas is still not in the revised top ten as it is likely the incumbent PAP will win by a wide margin, given the two much weaker opposition candidates are going to split votes from each other.

    Here’s the revised top ten list:

    1.

    East Coast GRC

    Incumbents: PAP’s Lim Swee Say, Senior Lee Yi Shyan, Mohamad Maliki Osman and Jessica Tan

    Challengers: WP’s Gerald Giam, Daniel Goh, Leon Perera and Mohamed Fairoz Shariff

    Without a doubt, this will be the hottest contest to watch for GE2015. The strongest opposition party, with 7 MPs and 1 Non-Constituency MP (NCMP) in parliament, is set for a rematch in East Coast GRC where they narrowly lost to the People’s Action Party (PAP). It was the narrowest win for a GRC for the ruling party, with just 54.8% of valid votes. For the WP, Gerald Giam from the losing team in East Coast GRC managed to snatch a seat in parliament as a NCMP for being one of the best-performing losers.

    Giam is leading the WP team for this second showdown. Will he be second time lucky? The incumbents seem pretty confident of defending their turf as much has been done by the team on the ground in recent years.

    “Someone was joking to me that because we have undergone so many changes in Bedok Town Centre, some of (the Opposition candidates) who come here once every five years might get lost, so we might need to provide free tour guide services to show them around,” shared Lee Yi Shyan in a media interview.

    2.

    Aljunied GRC

    Incumbents: WP’s Low Thia Khiang, Sylvia Lim, Chen Show Mao, Pritam Singh and Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap

    Challengers: PAP’s Yeo Guat Kwang, Victor Lye, Chua Eng Leong, K. Muralidharan Pillai and Shamsul Kamar

    This is the only GRC currently helmed by an opposition party. The WP’s top guns are all in this GRC, including WP’s secretary-general, Low Thia Khiang, and WP’s chairman, Slyvia Lim.

    The PAP is unwilling to send any current bigwigs to contest in Aljunied GRC.Instead, they chose to field a ‘suicide squad’ of political unknowns, led by four-term labour MP Yeo Guat Kwang, mentored by former PAP chairman and Cabinet Minister Lim Boon Heng.

    WP’s Achilles heel are the controversies over town council funds and the way the WP is running the town council. By fielding a team of grassroot leaders, the PAP may be capitalising on this issue to bring down the WP. Do not dismiss the ‘suicide squad’ just yet as they may be the underdogs necessary to win over the hearts of Aljunied voters. Not too sure how Lim Boon Heng will be of help though.

    3.

    Potong Pasir SMC

    Incumbent: PAP’s Sitoh Yih Pin

    Challenger: SPP’s Lina Chiam

    This was the longest held opposition ward in Singapore for 27 years, helmed by popular opposition figure, Chiam See Tong, 80, Secretary-General of the Singapore People’s Party (SPP), until the PAP won back the SMC in 2011.

    In GE2011, the wife of Chiam See Tong, Lina Chiam, lost the SMC to twice-unsuccessful challenger Sitoh Yih Pin of the PAP by a mere 114 votes in a close 7973-7859 vote count. Since then, Sitoh has been hard at work, slowly winning the ground with his sincerity.

    Lina Chiam has also been shoring up her experience in parliament, speaking on a wide variety of issues, fielding the most questions among all the MPs, NMPs and NCMPs.

    Both take their jobs very seriously. The two are now set for a rematch.

    A third independent candidate, lawyer Tan Lam Siong had expressed interest to contest in the SMC but had pulled out at the last minute, choosing instead to lend his support to Mrs Chiam.

    This will be a very close fight. It really could swing either way.

    4. 

    Tanjong Pagar GRC

    Incumbent: PAP’s Chan Chun Sing, Chia Shi-Lu, Indranee Rajah, Joan Pereira, Melvin Yong

    Challenger: SingFirst’s Tan Jee Say, Ang Yong Guan, Chirag Desai, Fahmi Rais, Melvyn Chiu

    The voters in Tanjong Pagar GRC has never voted before since the GRC was first set up as it was helmed by Singapore’s founding prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew, who passed away earlier this year.

    It would be extremely foolhardy to go against Lee, who has a god-like status in the hearts and minds of most Singaporeans, regardless if they are supportive of him or not.

    Nonetheless, the GRC is now helmed by newbie minister, Chan Chun Sing, Minister in Prime Minister’s Office and the Secretary-General of the National Trade Union Congress.

    A new political party, Singaporeans First (SingFirst), helmed by Tan Jee Say, will be contesting the GRC. Tan is an investment adviser and former civil servant. He was a principal private secretary to former Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong.

    The electoral at Tanjong Pagar GRC is largely untested as they have not voted for ages. As such, it will be interesting to observe how they vote.

    5. 

    Holland-Bukit Timah GRC

    Incumbent: PAP’s Vivian Balakrishnan, Christopher de Souza, Liang Eng Hwa, Sim Ann

    Challenger: SDP’s Chee Soon Juan, Chong Wai Fung, Paul Tambyah, Sidek Mallek

    The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) fielded their best team in this GRC. Dr Paul Ananth Tambyah, 50, Professor of the National University Hospital at the Department of Medicine is a strong candidate to watch from the SDP. Another interesting figure to watch will be Dr Chee Soon Juan, the controversial secretary-general of the party who was recently discharged from bankruptcy and is contesting in together with Dr Tambyah in the same GRC.

    Holland-Bukit Timah GRC is led by Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Dr Vivian Balakrishnan.

    The SDP garnered a respectable 39.9% of valid votes, their best result for GE2011. Would they be able to up their vote shares this election? Or will the PAP be able to garner a wider vote share and win with an even bigger margin, given all the policy changes since 2011?

     6.

    Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC

    Incumbent: PAP’s Ng Eng Hen, Josephine Teo, Chong Kee Hiong, Chee Hong Tat, Saktiandi Supaat

    Challenger: SPP’s Benjamin Pwee, Hamim Aliyas, Law Kim Hwee, Abdillah Zamzuri, Bryan Long

    The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), led by Benjamin Pwee, fielded a joint team together with Chiam See Tong’s SPP, with two of their members quitting DPP to join SPP. Pwee contested in the GRC in 2011 together with Chiam under the SPP before he splintered off to join the DPP. They have since reunited.

    The PAP is fielding a strong team at the GRC, helmed by Defence Minister, Dr Ng Eng Hen and Senior Minister of State for Transport and Finance, Josephine Teo.

    They will be joined by three new faces – Chee Hong Tat, former Second Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Trade and Industry; Chong Kee Hiong, CEO, OUE Hospitality Trust; and Saktiandi Supaat, Head of Foreign Exchange Research, Maybank.

    The PAP won with 56.93% of valid votes in GE2011. Would they be able to improve their winning margin? Or will the SPP be able to make further inroads to capture the GRC?

    7.

    Macpherson SMC

    Incumbent: PAP’s Ms Tin Pei Ling

    Challengers: WP’s Mr Bernard Chen and NSP’s Mr Cheo Chai Chen

    This is a new SMC carved out from Marine Parade GRC and will see a three-cornered fight between the incumbent PAP’s candidate and a candidate each from WP and NSP.

    Tin was extremely unpopular in 2011 and almost cost PAP to lose Marine Parade GRC which was helmed by former Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong. She has since worked hard on the ground and in parliament. Her public image has improved and she seems to enjoy strong support in her constituency.

    Bernard Chen is a long-time WP supporter and party member. He slowly rise through the ranks with his hard work and determination.

    Cheo Chai Chen is a has-been, one-term MP when he contested and won a seat under the then-SDP led by Chiam See Tong. Many see him as a vote-spoiler for the opposition. It is unlikely he will draw much vote and I am of the opinion that he will get less than 1% of valid votes, losing his deposit.

    Taking Cheo out of the equation, the battle is mainly between PAP and WP; Tin Pei Ling and Bernard Chen. For Tin, it will be sweet validation to all her critics if she can win this on her own, showing that her hard work paid off.

    8. 

    Marine Parade GRC

    Incumbent: PAP’s Goh Chok Tong, Edwin Tong, Fatimah Lateef, Seah Kian Peng, Tan Chuan-Jin

    Challenger: WP’s Yee Jenn Jong, Dylan Ng, Terence Tan, Firuz Khan, He Ting Tu

    Versus a weak opposition party, the NSP, who had just one strong candidate in their team, fresh face, Nicole Seah, then 23, the much stronger PAP team was only able to win with a small margin of 56.65% of valid votes in 2011.

    For the coming election, the PAP team will see competition from a stronger opposition party, the WP. Plus Yee Jenn Jong nearly won in Joo Chiat SMC which has since been absorbed into Marine Parade. He is leading the WP team.

    With Goh Chok Tong stepping down from the cabinet, the anchor minister for Marine Parade GRC is now Minister for Social and Family Development, Tan Chuan-Jin.

    Would Tan be able to win back vote shares? Or would WP claw away more votes?

    9.

    Fengshan SMC

    Candidates: PAP’s Ms Cheryl Chan and WP’s Mr Dennis Tan

    This is a new SMC carved out from East Coast GRC, which many speculated as a move to protect East Coast GRC as Fengshan had allegedly polled poorly for the ruling party in GE2011. The anchor minister for East Coast GRC, Lim Swee Say, however, has dismissed this as untrue.

    In any case, expect a keen contest between PAP and WP with a small winning margin.

    Long-time grassroots volunteer Cheryl Chan is the first new PAP candidate to be fielded in a new SMC in nearly three decades, since the GRC system was introduced in 1988.

    10.

    Ang Mo Kio GRC

    Incumbent: Lee Hsien Loong, Ang Hin Kee, Darryl David, Gan Thiam Poh, Intan Azura Mokhtar, Koh Poh Koon

    Challenger: Reform Party’s M. Ravi, Gilbert Goh, Jesse Loo, Osman Sulaiman, Roy Ngerng, Siva Chandran

    This GRC is helmed by none other than the current Prime Minister of Singapore, Lee Hsien Loong. It is interesting how this GRC has consistently been contested since GE2006 when the WP fielded a young, untested ‘suicide squad’ led by Yaw Shin Leong, then the leader of the WP’s Youth Wing.

    The PAP won with 66.14% of valid votes, lower than than the national average.

    In GE2011, the PAP won with a wider margin of 69.33% of valid votes, against a motley crue of candidates, assembled last minute by the Reform Party.

    The Reform Party is back again. This time with lawyer, M Ravi leading the team, featuring a roster of Hong Lim Park regulars like activist and blogger, Roy Ngerng as well as frequent rally organiser, Gilbert Goh.

    Ngerng started his sociopolitical blog, The Heart Truths, in 2012. He was found guilty in October 2014 of defaming Lee Hsien Loong in a blog post. Goh is famous for the multiple ‘Say No to 6.9 million’ protests which he organised in Hong Lim Park.

    All of them seem to have an axe to grind with Lee Hsien Loong.

    While it is highly unlikely for the Reform Party to capture Ang Mo Kio GRC, it will still be extremely interesting to watch the group go about harassing Lee Hsien Loong at political rallies, cornering him with tough questions.

    Get your popcorn ready!

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • GE2015: Who’s Contesting Where?

    GE2015: Who’s Contesting Where?

    For the first time since Independence, all seats are contested at the General Election. Nine parties are set to vie for 89 seats in 13 SMCs and 16 GRCs. Here’s a quick look at the contenders across the board.

    Party Total seats GRCs SMCs Total electoral divisions
    PAP 89 16 13 29
    WP 28 5 5 10
    NSP 12 2 2 4
    SDP 11 2 3 5
    RP 11 2 1 3
    SingFirst 10 2 0 2
    SDA 6 1 0 1
    SPP 8 1 3 4
    PPP 4 1 0 1
    Independents 2 0 2 2
    SMCs Candidates
    Bukit Batok David Ong (PAP) Sadasivam Veriyah (SDP)
    Samir Salim Neji (Independent)
    Bukit Panjang Teo Ho Pin (PAP) Khung Wai Yeen (SDP)
    Fengshan Cheryl Chan (PAP) Dennis Tan (WP)
    Hong Kah North Amy Khor (PAP) Ravi Philemon (SPP)
    Hougang Png Eng Huat (WP) Lee Hong Chuang (PAP)
    MacPherson Tin Pei Ling (PAP) Bernard Chen (WP)
    Cheo Chai Chen (NSP)
    Mountbatten Lim Biow Chuan (PAP) Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss (SPP)
    Pioneer Cedric Foo (PAP) Elvin Ong (NSP)
    Potong Pasir Sitoh Yih Pin (PAP) Lina Chiam (SPP)
    Punggol East Lee Li Lian (WP) Charles Chong (PAP)
    Radin Mas Sam Tan (PAP) Kumar Appavoo (RP)
    Han Hui Hui (Independent)
    Sengkang West Lam Pin Min (PAP) Koh Choong Yong (WP)
    Yuhua Grace Fu (PAP) Jaslyn Go (SDP)

     

    4-Member GRCs Candidates
    Chua Chu Kang Gan Kim Yong (PAP)
    Zaqy Mohamad
    Low Yen Ling
    Yee Chia Hsing
    Goh Meng Seng (PPP)
    Low Wai Choo
    Lee Tze Shih
    Syafarin Sarif
    East Coast Lim Swee Say (PAP)
    Lee Yi Shyan
    Maliki Osman
    Jessica Tan
    Gerald Giam (WP)
    Daniel Goh
    Fairoz Shariff
    Leon Perera
    Holland-Bukit Timah Vivian Balakrishnan (PAP)
    Sim Ann
    Christopher de Souza
    Liang Eng Hwa
    Chee Soon Juan (SDP)
    Paul Tambyah
    Sidek Mallek
    Chong Wai Fung
    Jalan Besar Yaacob Ibrahim (PAP)
    Heng Chee How
    Denise Phua
    Lily Neo
    L. Somasundaram (WP)
    Frieda Chan
    Redzwan Hafidz
    Adrian Sim
    Marsiling-Yew Tee Lawrence Wong (PAP)
    Halimah Yacob
    Ong Teng Koon
    Alex Yam
    Bryan Lim (SDP)
    Damanhuri Abas
    John Tan
    Wong Souk Yee
    West Coast Lim Hng Kiang (PAP)
    S Iswaran
    Foo Mee Har
    Patrick Tay
    Kenneth Jeyaretnam (RP)
    Andy Zhu
    Noraini Yunus
    Darren Soh

     

    5-Member GRCs Candidates
    Aljunied Low Thia Khiang (WP)
    Sylvia Lim
    Chen Show Mao
    Pritam Singh
    Faisal Manap
    Yeo Guat Kwang (PAP)
    K. Muralidharan Pillai
    Victor Lye
    Chua Eng Leong
    Shamsul Kamar
    Bishan-Toa Payoh Ng Eng Hen (PAP)
    Josephine Teo
    Chee Hong Tat
    Saktiandi Supaat
    Chong Kee Hiong
    Benjamin Pwee (SPP)
    Hamim Aliyas
    Law Kim Hwee
    Abdillah Zamzuri
    Bryan Long
    Jurong Tharman Shanmugaratnam (PAP)
    Desmond Lee
    Ang Wei Neng
    Rahayu Mahzam
    Tan Wu Meng
    Tan Peng Ann (SingFirst)
    Wong Soon Hong
    David Foo Ming Jin
    Sukdeu Singh
    Wong Chee Wai
    Marine Parade Tan Chuan-Jin (PAP)
    Goh Chok Tong
    Seah Kian Peng
    Fatimah Lateef
    Edwin Tong
    Yee Jenn Jong (WP)
    Terence Tan
    Firuz Khan
    He Ting Ru
    Dylan Ng
    Nee Soon K Shanmugam (PAP)
    Louis Ng
    Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim
    Lee Bee Wah
    Henry Kwek
    Kenneth Foo (WP)
    Cheryl Denise Loh
    Luke Koh
    Ron Tan
    Gurmit Singh
    Sembawang Khaw Boon Wan (PAP)
    Vikram Nair
    Lim Wee Kiak
    Ong Ye Kung
    Amrin Amin
    Spencer Ng (NSP)
    Eugene Yeo
    Kevryn Lim
    Yadzeth Haris
    Abdul Rasheed
    Tampines Heng Swee Keat (PAP)
    Masagos Zulkifli
    Baey Yam Keng
    Desmond Choo
    Cheng Li Hui
    Sebastian Teo (NSP)
    Lim Tean
    Reno Fong
    Nor Lella Mardiiiah Mohamed
    Choong Hon Heng
    Tanjong Pagar Chan Chun Sing (PAP)
    Indranee Rajah
    Chia Shi-Lu
    Joan Pereira
    Melvin Yong
    Tan Jee Say (SingFirst)
    Ang Yong Guan
    Chirag Desai
    Melvyn Chiu Weng Hoe
    Fahmi Rais

     

    6-Member GRCs Candidates
    Ang Mo Kio Lee Hsien Loong (PAP)
    Ang Hin Kee
    Intan Azura Mokhtar
    Gan Thiam Poh
    Koh Poh Koon
    Darryl David
    M. Ravi (RP)
    Roy Ngerng
    Osman Sulaiman
    Gilbert Goh
    Siva Chandran
    Jesse Loo
    Pasir-Ris Punggol Teo Chee Hean (PAP)
    Teo Ser Luck
    Janil Puthucheary
    Zainal Sapari
    Ng Chee Meng
    Sun Xueling
    Desmond Lim (SDA)
    Harminder Pal Singh
    Ong Teik Seng
    Abu Mohamed
    Sunny Wong
    Arthero Lim
     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com
     

     

     

     

     

  • Singaporeans, Don’t Spoil Your Votes, Choose Wisely!

    Singaporeans, Don’t Spoil Your Votes, Choose Wisely!

    As the various political parties and candidates prepare for their election campaigns, I hope they will focus on issues which are close to the hearts of Singaporeans.

    For example, Singaporeans are extremely worried about the rising cost of living, job opportunities, the affordability of public housing and the influx of foreigners who compete with them for jobs and a decent salary.

    I hope the candidates will not engage in personal attacks on other candidates, but instead, raise quality issues and policies that they will champion if they are elected into Parliament.

    I appeal to my fellow Singaporeans not to spoil their votes but to exercise their rights and responsibility by choosing the most qualified and suitable candidate.

    Muhammad Dzul Azhan Haji Sahban

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Nomination Day: What To Expect

    Nomination Day: What To Expect

    When the clock chimes 10 tomorrow morning, on Nomination Day, the nine nomination centres islandwide will be open to candidates’ supporters and the public.

    But before that, most candidates and their entourages would have gathered elsewhere for pep talks and final checks of forms.

    For members of the People’s Action Party, these meeting points are usually their branch office. Opposition party members typically gather at their party headquarters.

    Some smaller parties and independent candidates, however, may meet up outside their respective nomination centres.

    Police have advised people to arrive at the centres only after 10am.

    The critical hour begins at 11am.

    • NOMINATION CENTRES

      Bukit Panjang SMC and Holland-Bukit Timah GRC

    • Assumption Pathway School, 30, Cashew Road

      Jalan Besar and Tanjong Pagar GRCs, Radin Mas SMC

    • Bendemeer Primary School, 91, Bendemeer Road

      Chua Chu Kang GRC, Hong Kah North and Pioneer SMC

    • Chua Chu Kang Primary School, 20, Choa Chu Kang Avenue 2

      East Coast GRC, Fengshan SMC, Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC, Punggol East SMC

    • Fengshan Primary School, 307, Bedok North Road

      Bukit Batok and Yuhua SMCs, Jurong and West Coast GRC

    • Keming Primary School, 90, Bukit Batok East Avenue 6

      MacPherson SMC, Marine Parade GRC, Mountbatten and Potong Pasir SMCs

    • Kong Hwa School, 350, Guillemard Road

      Hougang SMC and Tampines GRC

    • Poi Ching School, 21, Tampines Street 71

      Aljunied, Ang Mo Kio and Bishan-Toa Payoh GRCs and Sengkang West SMC

    • Raffles Institution, 1, Raffles Institution Lane

      Marsiling-Yew Tee, Nee Soon and Sembawang GRCs

    • Yishun Primary School, 500, Yishun Ring Road

    Candidates have one hour, from 11am to noon, to file their papers at the correct nomination centre.

    The administrative requirements they have to meet are strict.

    Nomination forms must be complete and submitted in duplicate by the candidates in person.

    These forms are: the nomination form, the political donation certificate, and the certificate issued by the Malay Community Committee or the Indian and Other Minority Communities Committee, if the candidates are to contest in a GRC.

    Candidates must be accompanied by a proposer, a seconder and at least four assentors.

    These individuals must be registered voters from the constituency that the candidates are contesting and have to be present when the nomination is filed.

    This is the stage where teams have tripped up or had close shaves.

    In 2011, a group of independents planning to contest Tanjong Pagar GRC turned up at around 11.30am at their nomination centre, but were disqualified after filing their nomination forms late.

    In the 2001 General Election, a Workers’ Party team was disqualified from contesting when its nomination papers were found to be incomplete, as it had not filled in a blank for the name of the ward it wanted to contest: Aljunied GRC.

    If candidates fill in their forms incorrectly, they must correct the problems flagged by the Elections Department – by noon.

    Objections to the nomination papers can be made in writing between 11am and 12.30pm by any rival candidate for the same constituency or any of the proposers, seconders or assentors.

    Each candidate must also fork out his or her election deposit of $14,500. This can be in cash, bank draft or cheque.

    If there is no contest in a constituency, the assistant returning officers at each centre will declare a walkover for that division.

    If there is a contest, the candidates’ names will be put up on a notice board at the centre.

    Candidates can also apply for permits to hold election meetings and vehicle processions in the areas they are contesting.

    The meetings can be held indoors or outdoors for eight days, from Sept 2 to 9, between 7am and 10pm.

    Candidates can use perambulating vehicles fitted with loudspeakers between 2pm and 10pm tomorrow, and between 7am and 10pm for the remainder of the campaign.

    Outdoor meetings, which can be held in stadiums, open fields and open spaces, must take place at the space specified in the permit.

    The list of outdoor rally sites will be released at the end of nomination proceedings tomorrow.

    Permit applications for meetings have to be made before 2.30pm the day before a scheduled meeting, except for those on Sept 2, for which the Police Elections Permits Office in the Police Cantonment Complex will accept applications until 4pm on Sept 1.

    Drones or Unmanned Aerial Vehicles are banned at nomination centres, rally sites and assembly centres. Police have also said that non-citizens, bankrupts, persons who have been associated with criminal activity as well as primary and secondary students cannot take part in any election activity.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • PAP – Same Old, Same Old

    PAP – Same Old, Same Old

    The Elections Department (ELD) is tweaking the rules again, raising maximum spending limit from $3.50 to $4.00 per voter, tilting the “level playing” field to political parties with deeper pockets. Other changes include new ballot papers featuring candidates’ mugshots “to help the elderly identify the candidates”. Since we only get to see these guys face to face once in fifty five years, we won’t know the purity of their hearts from a brief encounter. What they should include is an accompanying short quote reflective of their true colours:


    “If you’re lazy and work less, you’ll have less Medisave” – Khaw Boon Wan

     

     

     

     

     


    “Without foreign workers, Singapore is likely to become a ‘garbage city’. Cleanliness is a character thing. It shows who you really are.” – Goh Chok Tong on Tokyo has no rubbish even though the Japanese capital has no rubbish bins in public places

     

     

     

     


    “A manpower policy that advocates hiring “Singaporeans first” will not benefit the economy in the long term” – Senior Minister of State for Manpower Amy Khor

     

     

     

     

     


    “We (also) need to reflect, are we the way they described?” – Baey Yam Keng on Sun Xu’s “more dogs than humans in Singapore”

     

     

     

     

     


    “However, it may not be wise to call for the tradeoffs to be tilted further to an extent that it dissuades good people from coming forward in future” – Grace Fu on ministerial pay cut

     

     

     

     


    “Some cardboard collectors treat it (collection of cardboards) as a form of exercise and activity rather than being cooped up at home” – Tan Chuan Jin

     

     

     

     

     


    “Well, everybody has a car, we have two — my wife drives one, I drive one. We are both professionals, we need to travel” – Koh Poh Koon on car ownership

     

     

     

     

     


    “…I regret making the decision because, in the end, the baby continued to be in intensive care, and KKH now runs up a total bill of more than $300,000…”- Lim Hng Kiang on regretting the decision to save a baby’s life.

     

     

     

     


    “If we spent 387 million dollars, will we get value from that expenditure? In my mind, the answer… is yes.” – Vivian Balakrishnan on YOG budget blowout

     

     

     

     


    “Whether a participant perished or survived depended on where he or she happened to be at the time.” Heng Swee Kiat on why 12 year olds died on Mt Kinabalu

     

     

     

    Tattler

    * The writer blogs at singaporedesk.blogspot.com.

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

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