Tag: Elections

  • ISA Arrests ‘Point To Need To Tighten Immigration’

    ISA Arrests ‘Point To Need To Tighten Immigration’

    The recent detention of eight radicalised Bangladeshis here under the Internal Security Act (ISA) points to the need to tighten the Republic’s immigration policy, Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) chief Chee Soon Juan said on Wednesday (May 4) morning.

    Speaking to reporters after a walkabout in Bukit Batok, where he is vying to become the ward’s Member of Parliament, Dr Chee called on the Government to deal with the problem at its “root cause” by preventing more of such radical elements, which endanger Singapore society, from entering the Republic’s shores.

    He was responding to questions from reporters about the Bangladeshis’ detention under the ISA, which he had spoken against previously on human rights grounds.

    On Tuesday, the Home Affairs Ministry revealed that the eight Bangladeshi workers had formed a terror cell here aimed at bringing their homeland under Islamic State’s self-declared caliphate. It is the second reported case involving radicalised individuals from the Bangladeshi community here.

    Responding, Dr Chee did not mention the SDP’s stance on the ISA, but said the Government has been “lax” in its immigration policy by taking in large numbers of foreigners. “You let in hundreds of thousands, millions … there must be people there who are not properly vetted,” he said.

    The Government must “get it at the root cause” and prevent such situations “even before they come in”, he said, adding that if he was elected, he would raise questions on the vetting process with Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam.

    Asked about Dr Chee’s comments, Mr Shanmugam, who was speaking to reporters about the detentions on Wednesday afternoon, said they showed “a lack of understanding of the problem”.

    “So what does Dr Chee suggest? That we say no to all foreign workers? Or we say no to all foreign workers who are Muslim? I think (you) should clarify that. There are tens of thousands of Bangladeshi workers in Singapore, several tens of thousands. They are in our construction sector, working for our town councils, large numbers as cleaners … So what do we do? Send them all back? Who is going to do their jobs?” said Mr Shanmugam.

    “After (the attacks in) Paris, after Jakarta, after all these arrests, they still say abolish the ISA and that all of these are immigration issues … these are serious matters, security issues that require careful consideration and proper thought … We should stop taking cheap political shots and political opportunism.”

    When further queried about its stand on the ISA, SDP central executive committee member Paul Tambyah reiterated the need to address the “root of the problem” and the Government’s “unfettered immigration policy”.

    Meanwhile, the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) corrected Dr Chee’s interpretation of employment data during his rally on Tuesday, calling it “alarmist”.

    Dr Chee had said only 100 jobs were created for locals last year. The MOM said the figures he referred to — local employment — did not refer to the total number of new jobs taken by locals.

    Local employment refers to the difference between total number of locals entering jobs and those leaving jobs, for example owing to retirement. They also pointed out that the difference was 700 last year, not 100.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Walid J. Abdullah: Character Applies For Both The Whites And The Reds

    Walid J. Abdullah: Character Applies For Both The Whites And The Reds

    Suddenly, there has been a burst of morality permeating Singapore society. You hear high and mighty proclamations about the importance of ‘character’ by ordinary Singaporeans. ‘Character is most important’; ‘without character one cannot serve as an MP’; ‘one’s character must be assessed to see if one is fit for public office’ etc.

    Undoubtedly, what Dr Chee did about 15 years ago (yes, 15 years, not days or even months) has left a sour taste in many people’s mouths, mine included. I grew up harbouring resentment towards him, because i felt he hindered the growth of the opposition, through that rash act. No doubt, the media made a meal out of it, but the fact remains that he provided the material for them.

    But what truly irks me, and makes me sick to my stomach, is the inconsistency. And double standards. These people who are taking the moral high ground, where were you when, just a while ago, a sitting Member of Parliament was suggesting we fence off foreign workers? Never mind keeping silent; some of these moral policemen (and policewomen) were actually justifying the said MP’s comments!

    Was that statement not reflective of ‘character’? Compare that to Dr Chee chasing former PM Goh: which act is more dangerous to Singapore society? Why was there no angst from these people?

    Now, i am not talking about the supporters of the ruling party who chide Dr Chee, but expressed disappointment at the ‘fencing’ remarks as well. These people, are perfectly entitled to question Chee’s ‘character’. What i cannot stand is those who practise selective outrage; when the politicians they support make mistakes, they keep quiet, or worse, try to make excuses.

    But when it comes to others, they immediately become more Catholic than the Pope, and more Islamic than the Prophet.

    Source: Walid J. Abdullah

  • Likely Bukit Batok Candidates Work The Ground

    Likely Bukit Batok Candidates Work The Ground

    A day after the writ for the Bukit Batok by-election was issued, the two men vying to represent the constituency — barring any last-minute surprises come Nomination Day — were out and about on Thursday (April 21), pressing palms and knocking on doors.

    Lawyer Murali Pillai, 48, the People’s Action Party’s (PAP) pick to defend the ward in the May 7 polls, visited the homes of residents and went on walkabouts around the constituency, away from the media glare.

    His Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) opponent, Dr Chee Soon Juan, 53, was also seen pounding the pavements. Speaking to the media at the Bukit Batok MRT Station in the morning, the SDP chief reiterated that, if elected, his party would inject “transparency and accountability” in the running of the town council.

    Apart from the “hardware”  in the single-member constituency (SMC), the party will also look into making a “real tangible difference” to the “heartware” — residents’ quality of life, he stressed.

    On what distinguished him from Mr Murali, Dr Chee had just two words: “PAP, SDP”. Noting that poverty issues have been “ongoing”, he asked how Mr Murali could make a difference in Parliament on this problem, since he would be another PAP MP in the House.

    The “crucial difference”, Dr Chee said, is that he would continue pressing the Government to ensure it is “sensitised to … the plight of Singaporeans”.

    He added that while his team has achieved “quantity” in its outreach — it has covered the whole constituency — the party now wants to reach out in a “qualitative” way, by explaining to voters why it is important to send another Opposition voice into Parliament.

    On its Facebook page on Thursday, the SDP also posted a new video on the Bukit Batok by-election, as part of a drive that, it said, is  “motivated, driven and funded by you, the people”. It called for support and “all the help that we can get”.

    The SDP will hold a press conference on Friday to announce details of its social programmes for Bukit Batok residents.

    At the Singapore Elections Department (ELD) headquarters at Prinsep Link on Thursday, only one independent hopeful turned up to collect the nomination papers. Neither representatives from the PAP nor the SDP were seen.

    Soft copies of the forms can also be downloaded from the ELD website. Nomination Day has been set for April 27.

    Private taxi driver Shirwin Eu, who arrived at the ELD about 3.20pm to collect the forms, told reporters that he would “most likely” run in the by-election. It was called after incumbent Member of Parliament David Ong resigned over an alleged extramarital affair.

    In the 2015 General Election, Mr Eu, 32, had attempted to contest the Bukit Panjang SMC, but was disqualified after he failed to garner the required signatures to support his candidacy on Nomination Day.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Do Singaporeans Really Vote Along Racial Lines?

    Do Singaporeans Really Vote Along Racial Lines?

    Would you simply believe someone’s questionable claims without concrete proof?

    For more than three decades, the People’s Action Party (PAP) government in Singapore has been peddling the notion that many Singaporeans vote along racial lines and that this has the potential to trigger a lack of minority representation in Parliament.

    This argument forms the basis of the Group Representation Constituency (GRC) electoral scheme the PAP devised in the 1980s. But have Singaporeans ever wondered how the island’s ruling party arrive at its conclusion about racial bias at the polls?

    Instead of simply accepting the PAP’s theory as gospel truth, Singaporeans should be asking their government to prove its claims.

    Relying on only anecdotal evidence of a supposed problem to devise policy solutions is hardly sound policymaking, and certainly not the kind that would serve Singapore’s national interest.

    This issue is not about whether one is pro-PAP or not. Neither is this about whether one is pro- or anti-affirmative action for the Republic’s political arena.

    Most importantly, the issue is about whether the PAP’s claims are backed up by facts. If the basis for the GRC scheme is invalid, it raises some uneasy questions.

    Have Singaporeans been believing in a myth? Are GRCs a response to unfounded fears? Should the GRC system be abolished if there is no real basis for keeping it?

    The most effective, and perhaps only, way of testing the PAP’s voting-bias theory is to observe how Singaporeans vote, by examining election statistical data from every general election since 1959, the year Singapore became a self-governing state.

    Voting Along Racial Lines – What It Really Means

    Before examining evidence that either confirms or disproves the PAP’s theory of voting bias, let’s see what this theory really means.

    For instance, it could mean that even a lifelong PAP supporter would switch his vote to the opposition if the racial profiles of candidates in his constituency necessitate his doing so.

    In other words, simply because of a candidate’s ethnicity, voters would actually abandon their loyalty to a political party and switch their votes to another party which they may not trust, without regard to the political views or strengths/weaknesses of competing candidates.

    Racially motivated voting could also mean a person would spoil his vote because he neither wants to vote for a minority nor for any candidate from a political party he does not believe is leading Singapore in the right direction.

    But since spoilt votes have always formed a miniscule portion of all votes cast in Singaporean elections, we can conclude that such invalid votes have no significant impact on minority representation in Parliament.

    Empirical Evidence

    Over the past three decades, many have argued against the GRC scheme, pointing out incidents of gerrymandering. But Singaporeans should first seek the answer to this question: Is it true that most Singaporeans vote along racial lines?

    Using all election statistical data since 1959, this article provides empirical evidence confirming the veracity of these two statements.

    1) The assertion that Singaporeans vote along racial lines is fiction.

    2) The assertion that Singaporeans vote along political lines is fact.

    Unsolved Mysteries

    The path towards the GRC electoral system began in July 1982 when the then Singaporean prime minister, the late Lee Kuan Yew, initially discussed with his right-hand man, Goh Chok Tong, the possibility of ensuring a minimum level of minority representation in Parliament.

    At that time, Lee was worried about more Singaporeans choosing their member of parliament (MP) based on race. Lee felt this would lead to a lack of diversity in Parliament.

    But GE1980, the last general election before Singapore’s ruling politicians began the journey towards introducing their GRC scheme, produced 18 minority MPs, who filled 24 percent of all seats in parliament.

    Herein lies the mystery: Given 24 percent minority representation and with minorities forming approximately 22 percent of Singapore’s population in 1982, how did the Lee Kuan Yew administration arrive at its conclusion on Singaporeans’ voting behavior?

    During GE1984, the last general election before the PAP government legalized its GRC scheme in 1988, minority candidates won 31.6 percent of multiracial electoral contests, the highest percentage since Singapore’s independence in 1965.

    Here’s another mystery: Against a backdrop of empirical evidence demonstrating that minority candidates were not racially disadvantaged, why did the PAP implement the GRC system?

    Talk about being kiasu. The PAP has clearly displayed this typical Singaporean trait through its excessive worries about what it perceives as Singaporeans’ racially motivated voting behavior and seizing the opportunity for affirmative action its unfounded fears have created.

    If you think the GRC system is an invalid government policy devised to fight a non-existent problem, you will very likely find many others who think likewise.

    Did PAP Misread Singapore’s Pre-GRC Election Data?

    Table A: Numerical data from pre-GRC elections (1959 – 1984)

     

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    Year of general election Proportion of minority representation in parliament Number of minority MPs Total number of MPs Number of multiracial electoral contests Number of minority victories Proportion of minority victories
    1959 35.29% 18 51 28 16 57.14%
    1963 31.37% 16 51 20 13 68.42%

    Singapore became an independent country in 1965

    1968 29.31% 17 58 4 1 25.00%
    1972 24.62% 16 65 20 3 15.00%
    1976 24.64% 17 69 20 6 30.00%
    1980 24.00% 18 75 15 4 26.67%
    1984 20.25% 16 79 19 6 31.58%

    There was a downward trend in the proportion of minority representation from 1959 to 1984. Could this trend (see Table A, Column 1) have pushed the PAP to hit the panic button? If it had, it would have meant an overly simplistic approach to policymaking – formulating policies based on conclusions drawn from only one election statistic.

    A national election is a highly complex process that requires a careful analysis of statistical data if one is to draw valid conclusions on voter behavior.

    No one should rush into any judgment that an electoral victory by a candidate from Singapore’s ethnic Chinese majority over a minority must be due to voters’ racial bias.

    For instance, during GE1959, 64 percent of valid votes by Pasir Panjang residents were split among three defeated minority candidates, while the PAP’s Tee Kim Leng obtained 36 percent (see image below). Clearly, there was no unfair disadvantage attributable to race.

    Pic1

    From 1959 (when the PAP first assumed power) until 1984, there were 77 victories by Chinese candidates in multiracial electoral contests. Seventy three of those wins went to the PAP. If Singapore’s ruling party insists that racial bias exists among many voters, it should clarify which of its candidates did not win on merit but through voters’ racialism.

    Another important statistic involves minorities defeating Chinese candidates. There were 49 such victories, or 38.9 percent of all 126 pre-GRC multiracial electoral contests, evidence that a candidate’s ethnicity plays little or no part in a voter’s decision at the polls.

    The PAP won 117 of those 126 multiracial tilts, proving that whenever voters were asked to make a choice between candidates of different races, they almost always chose the PAP and did so regardless of ethnicity. This is known as voting along political lines.

    Why the Downward Trend in Minority Representation?

    The preference of most Singaporean voters for the PAP, whatever its candidate’s race, has resulted in this phenomenon – a near-perfect correlation between the proportion of minority representation in parliament and the proportion of minority candidates on the PAP slate. This phenomenon is the reason for the drop in minority representation from 1959 to 1984.

    TABLE B

    Year of general election Proportion of minority candidates in PAP slate Proportion of minority representation in Parliament Number of minority PAP candidates Number of minority MPs in Parliament Total number of MPs in Parliament
    1959 33.33% 35.29% 17 18 51
    1963 33.33% 31.37% 17 16 51
    1968 29.31% 29.31% 17 17 58
    1972 24.62% 24.62% 16 16 65
    1976 24.64% 24.64% 17 17 69
    1980 24.00% 24.00% 18 18 75
    1984 18.99% 20.25% 15 16 79

    Table B shows that the lower the proportion of minorities in the PAP slate of candidates, the smaller the proportion of minority representation in parliament.

    Back in the 1980s, the PAP government should have noticed this trend before jumping to a vastly different conclusion about voter behavior and changing the law to accommodate its GRC scheme.

    The almost 100 percent correlation is not surprising. This is exactly what one would expect when voters choose their parliamentary representative based on political affiliation, not race, in a situation where one party enjoys overwhelming dominance.

    Elections Under the GRC System

    The pre-GRC trend of Singaporeans voting along political lines continued after GRCs became a fixture on Singapore’s political landscape. Almost every elected seat since 1988 has been filled by a PAP parliamentarian – 562 out of a total of 585.

    Just like during the pre-GRC era, the proportion of minority representation under the GRC system is almost wholly dependent on the proportion of minority candidates on the PAP slate.

    This period saw 28 GRC battles involving an unequal number of minority candidates between the two competing parties. If voters were racially biased, they would choose the party with fewer minority candidates, but there were as many as eight victories (28.57 percent) for the party fielding more minorities.

    One of those eight wins is a good example of why race is not an issue in Singaporean politics requiring affirmative action such as the GRC scheme.

    If the PAP theory of racial bias among voters was valid, why did Aljunied residents vote for a party fielding more minority candidates (see image below), especially since they (Pritam Singh and Muhamad Faisal) had no previous parliamentary experience, unlike their opponent Zainul Abidin Rasheed?

    Pic2

    One may argue that the 2011 Workers’ Party victory in Aljunied does not necessarily mean racial bias didn’t exist. Rather, this argument might go, there was just too much voter dissatisfaction with the ruling party at that time, causing the tide to turn against the PAP.

    But if so, then it means that Aljunied residents’ political concerns trumped any racial bias they might have had, meaning that any racialism among voters was not able to sway the outcome of an election contest.

    Multiracial Single-Seat Contests During the GRC Era

    Not every minority MP entered parliament through a GRC.

    Even when the PAP decided to have one of its minority candidates contest in a single-seat constituency, voters still sent that candidate into parliament instead of picking the opposing candidate from the ethnic Chinese majority (see image below). This clearly demonstrates that race plays no significant part in voters’ decisions.

    Pic3

    Of course, there were 28 single-seat victories by Chinese candidates against their minority opponents. But one can easily argue that those results simply reflect the clout that the PAP enjoys in Singapore’s political arena. If the PAP disagrees with that argument, it should reveal to Singaporeans which of its 28 victories had nothing to do with merit.

    From whichever angle you look at the Republic’s election data, it’s impossible to arrive at any convincing conclusion that Singaporeans vote along racial lines.

    So Many Questions, But No Satisfactory Answers

    The PAP says it fears inadequate minority representation in parliament, but what is adequate? If “adequate” means proportional parliamentary representation based on Singapore’s demographics, should there also be affirmative action to bring about “adequate” minority presence in the country’s employment, educational and sporting sectors?

    If it is deemed impractical or unnecessary to expect every Singaporean corporation, school or sports team to adhere to a racial quota, why should the GRC scheme be allowed to continue, especially when the very problem the scheme was created to overcome does not even exist?

    Michael Y.P. Ang is an independent Singaporean journalist. In 1999, he was among the core group of journalists who helped launch Channel NewsAsia, where he covered sport, entertainment, crime, and the 2001 Singapore General Election. He comments on Singapore’s sporting issues, often through a sociopolitical angle, on his Facebook page Michael Ang Sports.

     

    Source: http://thediplomat.com

  • Daniel Goh: I Will Do My Best In Term As NCMP

    Daniel Goh: I Will Do My Best In Term As NCMP

    Dear everyone, thank you for the congratulatory well wishes. Media partners, sorry I can’t take interviews tonight, am out with family for pre-New Year festivities. It is my privilege to be elected as NCMP and to serve my country in Parliament.

    I don’t think I can sleep tonight; I know this is a grave responsibility and I will give it my best in the coming years. I love Singapore and want this nation to last for our children, to be a “shining red dot”, as our PM puts it, for generations to come.

    To my fellow Chinese Singaporeans, a Happy New Year ahead, may the Year of the Monkey bring your family abundant vitality and good health!

     

    Source: Daniel Goh 吴佩松

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