Tag: GE2015

  • Elections About Singapore’s Future Not About Petty Squabbles Between Parties

    Elections About Singapore’s Future Not About Petty Squabbles Between Parties

    These few days I have seen many election posters being defaced by childish individuals, who might think that if they draw on a candidates’ face or make fun of their names they would lose them a few votes and hopefully cause them to lose the election. Such immature behavior is happening on both sides of the divide, with opposition supporters defacing many People’s Action Party (PAP) posters and PAP supporters responding in kind.

    This needs to stop right now.

    Singapore is a country for ALL of us. We may not always agree on the way to go forward. Some might think having zero foreigner growth is good, others might feel that a complete halt would paralyze the economy. Both are not wrong, but the question is how do we reach a suitable compromise? Do we try and force the other party to swallow our views and demoralize them by drawing on their election posters? Is that truly the way to bring peace, prosperity and progress for our nation?

    Always remember that this is our home and that fellow Singaporeans, regardless of blue, orange, yellow, or white political banner, are your countrymen. If we cannot even come together to discuss our future, I think we as a country and people are doomed.

    Gurmit
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Goh Meng Seng – The Ah Beng Politician

    Goh Meng Seng – The Ah Beng Politician

    Goh Meng Seng describes himself as a “street fighter”. SIX-SIX.COM caught up with the 15-year opposition politician to find out just what drives him to carry on.

    Not every politician might be flattered to be called an “Ah Beng politician,” but People’s Power Party (PPP) Secretary-General Goh Meng Seng, sees no shame in this moniker.

    “I’m still a street fighter to the core. I’m a hands-on man,” he says, highlighting his commitment to speaking to everyday Singaporeans like the Ah Ma and the Beer Uncle.

    According to him, the incumbent People’s Action Party (PAP) has lost touch with these folks due to the high salaries they earn as Ministers. There should not be such incentives to join public service, he thinks.

    If you were to go by what Goh says, this apparent materialism is akin to a malaise that has infected not just Parliament but society.

    People have lost values, he says, with severity. “We have to talk about bread and butter issues, livelihood and cost of jobs, but what about morals?”

    “Morals” and “values” are buzzwords that pop up whenever he talks about his foray into politics.

    All in the family

    Politics is “in his blood,” says Goh Meng Seng. As a boy, he would read the newspapers with his father.

    “Whenever he spotted something wrong, he will scold the government.”

    This exercise with his father sensitised him to social injustices. It seems the interest in current affairs has not just rubbed off on him but his daughter too.

    Speaking about politics at the dinner table is not rude in the Goh family and is in fact encouraged. “She likes current affairs like her father,” he says with a tinge of pride.

    However, while his daughter is quite aware about local politics, she studies in Hong Kong. Goh says he sent her there to prevent her from being “indoctrinated” by Singapore’s political system.

    Nevertheless, he gets her to travel to Singapore every now and then so that she would not lose touch with her country.

    On one of those trips back this year, his daughter had expressed scepticism over the National Day songs played repeatedly during this year’s SG50 celebrations to mark Singapore’s Golden Jubilee.

    “Papa, why do they keep repeating these songs. It’s like brainwashing,” Goh says, imitating his daughter’s tone.

    His daughter lives with his wife in Hong Kong. When asked if his political career affected his family, Goh says that his family understands.

    “I think I am blessed. I cannot sustain my political career without the support from my family.”

    The noble economist

    Goh is a Chinese-educated student who graduated with an Honours Degree in economics. His perspective on politics is informed by this background.

    He says the sacrifice one has to make for public service is rooted in Chinese values. He feels that in order for those in power to stay honest, they should serve only two terms in office before stepping down — a seeming jibe at Singapore’s Prime Ministers who have stayed longer in office than that.

    Goh considers himself a democratic socialist and uses economics jargon to explain his political goals. On the topic of maids in Singapore whose rights have been violated, he says the difficulty they face is due to the “asymmetric positioning” between them and their employers.

    He acknowledges, though, that social justice and economics do not always go hand in hand. A balance must be struck somehow, he says.

    When he is pressed about what specific policies he would like to implement to tackle such issues, he seems to dodge the questions at first, though later, he says the difficulty opposition politicians face when proposing alternative policies is the lack of figures by the government on current policies.

    On the hardship he has faced championing issues for the underdog, Goh says being a politician “is a painful process”. He then pauses for a perceptible moment before saying the “ROI (Return of Investment) is actually negative”.

    He says, though, that it’s bo pien — not a matter of choice — that he carries on in politics.

    “There are a lot of people around me who encourage me to carry on because they feel I am already in it with a certain political capital. It’s not easy to groom people (for politics) in the Singapore context.”
    *This article was corrected after Goh Meng Seng’s party affiliation was wrongly reported. We apologise for the error.

     

    Source: www.six-six.com

  • Three Assisting In Police Investigations On Defaced Election Posters

    Three Assisting In Police Investigations On Defaced Election Posters

    Three men aged between 20 and 36-years-old are assisting the police investigations into cases of the defaced election posters, the police said today (Sept 6) in response to media queries.

    It is an offence for any person to alter, remove, destroy, obliterate or deface any election posters or banners under the Parliamentary Elections Act. The punishment for such an offence is a fine not exceeding S$1,000 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months.

    Last Wednesday, a Sengkang East resident alerted TODAY that at least six posters put up along Sengkang East Way by the People’s Action Party (PAP) were found torn. It appeared to be the first instance of mischief in this year’s General Election.

    Photos: Reader pictures from Mr Xu Rong Fu

    According to Mr Xu Rong Fu, 41, a policeman was seen at the scene that morning and the damaged posters were replaced by around noon.

    In response to TODAY’s queries, Minister of State for Trade and Industry Teo Ser Luck, who is part of the PAP team contesting in the Pasir Ris-Punggol Group Representative Constituency (GRC), confirmed earlier that the damaged posters — which were within his Punggol Central ward — had been replaced.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Tharman Shanmugaratnam: Nothing Is Free

    Tharman Shanmugaratnam: Nothing Is Free

    Free healthcare and education? Not without heavily taxing the middle income, said Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam yesterday.

    DPM Tharman, who was a guest speaker at the People’s Action Party (PAP) rally at Petir Road, said that providing free, or close-to-free, social services would pass a huge burden to the middle-class citizens as their taxes would have to be raised to finance such a policy.

    Earlier, the Singapore Democratic Party had said that it would also push for a “fair universal health insurance scheme” by raising the Government’s portion of the country’s healthcare expenditure from 30 per cent to 70 per cent.

    DPM Tharman said: “When you think of free healthcare or close-to-free… social services that we all like the idea of, you must realise it is not free. The average citizen is paying, and paying for it big time,” he said.

    The same outcome would arise if the Government were to give out cash benefits – a proposal that some opposition parties have suggested, he added.

    “There is no way, no way of giving something to everyone, whether it is everyone getting $300 when they get older or every child getting $300.

    “There is no way of achieving it without raising taxes on the middle income group. I’ve been studying this for years (from)… countries around the world,” he said.

    The Reform Party had promised to give every Singaporean below 16 a $300 monthly child benefit and to introduce a $3 billion a year pension scheme that will give $500 a month to seniors older than 65.

    Singaporeans First also proposed a monthly $300 allowance for children and the elderly, and subsidised healthcare, transport and childcare fees.

    Finally, DPM Tharman said the PAP, if re-elected as the Government, would not look to raise taxes after the general election.

    He said such scaremongering tactics from the opposition were “just cheap”.

    “We have been upfront and I said it in this year’s budget very clearly: We have raised the revenues we need for the next five years.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Real Estate Agents Feature Prominently Among Opposition Candidates

    Real Estate Agents Feature Prominently Among Opposition Candidates

    Has the tepid property market created a new impetus for real estate agents to enter politics?

    Property agents have emerged as a noticeable group among the candidates this general election, and all are on opposition party tickets.

    At least seven agents and one legal counsel of a real estate agency are contesting, with four hailing from one single agency, PropNex.

    Two are contesting Sembawang group representation constituency (GRC), going up against National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan, the very person in charge of housing and the property sector.

    But these agents, who have mostly been inactive in closing sales in the past year, told The Business Times that issues other than housing have been on their minds as well, such as income inequality, the use of Central Provident Fund (CPF) money and the influx of foreign talent.

    Mr Andy Zhu, 32, an agent from Vestor Realty who is standing in West Coast GRC under the Reform Party, said he hopes to focus on the elderly and healthcare. He also believes that CPF money should be returned to Singaporeans at the age of 55, without the need for the minimum sum.

    Mr Eugene Yeo, 39, associate director at Real Estate Alliance, said it is “purely coincidental” that this many property agents are standing for election – not because property transactions have come down.

    Still, the National Solidarity Party (NSP) candidate hopes to flag housing issues in Parliament if he is elected.

    He said: “Being in the election is not a cheap affair, it is pretty costly. It is not because the property market is bad that agents want to have an MP’s (Member of Parliament) salary.”

    Mr Yadzeth Hairis, who is also standing on the NSP ticket in Sembawang GRC, told BT that though he is a registered agent with Dennis Wee Realty, he has been focusing on his development business in Indonesia under PT Cass Villa.

    Another NSP candidate, Mr Choong Hon Heng, 45, who runs a one-man agency, DCA Management, is contesting Tampines GRC.

    FLIP-FLOP POLICIES

    The People’s Power Party candidate in Chua Chu Kang GRC, Mr Augustine Lee, 42, said he has a beef with what he sees as policy flip-flopping.

    Said the property agent with PropNex: “At one time, they loosen up the policies to make property prices so high. Now, they use cooling measures to revise it back. That’s very bad planning and quite disruptive.

    “Property can be a mother of all problems because it affects everyone. You have to buy or rent – everyone needs the physical space, so that is a cost to everyone and these costs translate into prices in goods and services.”

    He added that he hopes the Government will look further into reducing land prices and review HDB’s role as a developer.

    Two of his PropNex colleagues – head of legal Gurmit Singh and property agent Ron Tan – are Workers’ Party (WP) candidates in Nee Soon GRC. The WP did not respond to BT’s questions.

    PropNex agent Darren Soh, 46, who is also a taxi driver, is standing in West Coast GRC with Mr Zhu under the Reform Party. He could not be reached for a comment.

    PropNex key executive officer Lim Yong Hock, when asked to comment on his staff and agents’ involvement in politics, pointed out that besides those standing for election with opposition parties, there are others active in the People’s Action Party.

    The agency has made its position clear to full-time staff and commissioned agents, he said.

    “The fact that our agents or staff are standing for election doesn’t mean that the company supports the party they stand for,” he said.

    “We support them as long as they do not bring disrepute to the industry.”

    He noted that the three PropNex agents have not closed a single deal this year, but that in the industry generally, one in three agents is inactive.

    Mr Lee said that real estate agents bring to the table a sharpened ability to connect with the ground, having themselves come from all walks of life and having to be “creative and communicative” to close deals.

    “Good agents will always think for the best of their clients. They are quite independent in thinking and because of that, they tend to have different opinions,” he said.

    Take the trend of condominium units getting smaller and smaller, for instance. “We feel sad for ourselves and our clients.”

    The full version of this story first appeared in The Business Times’ weekend edition on Sept 5.


    FROM PROPNEX: Mr Ron Tan (above) is contesting Nee Soon GRC for Workers’ Party

    FROM PROPNEX: Mr Gurmit Singh (above) is contesting Nee Soon GRC for Workers’ Party

    FROM PROPNEX: Mr Darren Soh (above) is standing in West Coast GRC under Reform Party.

    FROM PROPNEX: Mr Augustine Lee (above) is contesting Chua Chu Kang GRC under People’s Power Party.

    FROM VESTOR REALTY: Mr Andy Zhu is standing in West Coast GRC under Reform Party.

    FROM REAL ESTATE ALLIANCE: Mr Eugene Yeo is contesting Sembawang GRC under National Solidarity Party

    FROM DCA MANAGEMENT: Mr Choong Hon Heng is contesting Tampines GRC under National Solidarity Party.

    FROM DENNIS WEE REALTY: Mr Yadzeth Hairis is standing in Sembawang GRC under National Solidarity Party

     

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg