Tag: GE2015

  • Xiaxue’s Running In Next GE And These Are Her Campaign Promises

    Xiaxue’s Running In Next GE And These Are Her Campaign Promises

    Next GE I’m gonna be running! When I rule, I promise:

    – National minimum wage of $10,000 per month, for everyone! Why stop at $1,250? Cleaning aunties very poor thing, let’s change their lives!

    – No such thing as COE. Free car for everyone with a license. Surely driving is a birth right.

    – My Government will consist of people who are somehow very smart but also at the same time willing to dedicate their lives to building Singapore with a meagre salary of $3,000 a month. What do you mean if they so talented like they are doctors and lawyers why they don’t work for private sector instead of low paying govt job? Because love for country lah! And a lot of such passionate and super smart people exist! It doesn’t mean it will attract crazy power-hungry and corrupted people to the job. No such thing.

    – Free houses for everyone! Not HDBs with their shrinking sizes please… Everyone can have nice landed houses or condos.

    – No more foreigners! Existing ones will be sent to etiquette classes so as not to offend Singaporeans. They will not be allowed in the main island after 8pm and will reside in Pulau Hantu.

    – MRT will never break down ever again! Yes! I can promise that! And fares will go back to 1998 pricing, never to increase!

    – Medical care will be free for all! Everyone can go stay at the biggest suite at Mt E Novena when they sick, your government takes care of you.

    – Everyone will be given a gold bar on their birthday.

    – All schools will be elite schools, because our children deserve the best. Oh and free university education! Why must pay? Government should pay to educate citizens.

    – No more NS!

    Sounds good hor? If not enough money to fulfil any of these I will just tax the rich more or take from reserves. Why cannot?

    VOTE FOR ME!!

     

    Source: Xiaxue

  • PAP’s Marine Parade GRC Candidate Sprints To Garner Votes

    PAP’s Marine Parade GRC Candidate Sprints To Garner Votes

    PAP’s Marine Parade candidate Tan Chuan-Jin came up with an unusual method to garner votes in an estate in Lorong Melayu yesterday (Sep 3).

    The former SAF Brigadier General put his fitness to full use by sprinting from house to house in estate that is part of Marine Parade GRC, the area he is contesting in.

    The Straits Times posted a video of him sprinting along the road before heading to a home to meet members of the public.

    In a Facebook post, he explained why he chose to do this:

    “I am spending most of the day covering as much as I can just to touch base with residents again. My normal routine is twice a week house visits and will spend time chatting with residents…Hence, it takes me longer to cover my estates and blocks, but I find it more meaningful that way.

    “Running in between units has become my most regular form of exercise! Helps to not let residents wait for too long as well. But as always, good to catch up with friends. I should weigh myself before an after and track my number of steps!

    “My activists and volunteers are also helping to distribute manifestos, cards etc and am very thankful for them delivering these personally to residents if they are at home. Jiayou! Hope for your support! (Let’s see how this pair of shoe performs! Maju Lah!)”

     

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com

  • GE2015: I Am A Malay Voter

    GE2015: I Am A Malay Voter

    I am a Malay/Muslim and will be voting in the upcoming General Elections in Singapore.

    Who do I vote for. What am I voting for. What exactly is it in for me?

    I spoke to my parents, my friends, my cousins, even the Malay barber under the void deck where I just had my hair cut.

    This used to be Singapore’s land they say but now the Malays are being discriminated left, right and centre …

    geylang-serai-malay-kampong-1960

    (Source: iRememberSG)

    Mendaki? MUIS? Yaacoob Ibrahim? . . . Ahhhh no point.

    They won’t even help their own kind and are just government puppets. How many times have we heard stories of the poor Malay student being turned down by MENDAKI for help or of the needy and broken family being denied MUIS financial disbursements?

    There is always that somebody’s friend saying that it is a fact that they are being discriminated because they are Malay.

    “Tak boleh kasi chance dengan Cina, Mesti jaga diri sendiri” they remarked. (translated: Cannot give face to the Chinese, we must look after our own)

    It was a horror story that Malay children of my generation grew up listening to – that it is tough to be Malay in Singapore.

    The stereotype was further enforced when national figures  year on year shows that the Malay community form the largest percentage of broken families and are living in rental flats. (Even the PM admitted that they are a group to be concerned about in his latest NDP rally).

    Why are the Malays lagging despite article 152 of the constitution:

    (2)    The Government shall exercise its functions in such manner as to recognise the special position of the Malays, who are the indigenous people of Singapore, and accordingly it shall be the responsibility of the Government to protect, safeguard, support, foster and promote their political, educational, religious, economic, social and cultural interests and the Malay language.’

    Who do I vote for. What am I voting for. What exactly is it in for me and more importantly my community.

    Will voting the opposition empower the Malays and increase their standard of living?

    I closed my eyes and touched my heart in silence and  searched for the answer…..

    I want my community to be given opportunities to progress and improve their lives.

    I want my community to have equal access to education, healthcare, housing and employment as with the other races

    I want my community to be able to practice Islam without fear or prejudice and to be able to perform our religious obligation with relative ease.

    I want my community to be able to contribute to the Singapore story and be a part of its success.

    I want a minister that stand up for our rights and represent the concerns of the common Makcik and Pakcik in parliament – without reservation.

    I want a Minister that speaks good Malay because that Minister is going to be the role model that I ask my child to look up to.

    Minutes passed, I steadied my breath, opened my eyes and looked around me.

    For a race that comprises only 13% of Singapore’s population, we have 70 well maintained mosques with quality teachers, programmes and support services.

    img3

    (Iman.edu.sg)

    We have grants and subsidies that are set aside for only our community that others do not enjoy, such as the Mosque Building Fund; ensuring that we are able to continue and perform our religious obligations with ease (and not rely solely on donations and auctions to buy land and build a mosque).

    Yes, Malays currently form the majority of broken families and stay in rental flats but there are now more programmes than ever to help us ‘get out of the poverty cycle’ – if we but find out about them and play our part instead of listening to hearsays. (ST:Many poor Malays do not seek social aid)

    We have Malay pilots, lawyers, doctors and top civil servants. (Speaker of Parliament, i.e. Head of Legislature is Mdm Halimah Yacob)

    Even those that came from Madrasahs were given the same opportunity to succeed as their peers who chose the secular programmes.

    Read: NUS medical school takes in first Madrasah students

    Read: Former Madrasah student wins Berita Harian inspiring young achiever award.

    We are a community that not only receives but also gives back to society – the Yusof Ishak Fund is  managed by the Malay community and helps deserving citizens (of all races) with their professorship.

    We have access to housing and health care; the same standard with other races. In fact, there is a racial quota for housing to ensure that there will always be space for Malay families in every the estate.

    It is time for my community to break away from the stereotypes that we have reinforced on ourselves over the years.

    We have to stop the delusion and feel self-entitled to success and protection just because “Singapore was Tanah Melayu” (Singapore was a Malay land and we the indigenous people) in the constitution.

    We have just as many opportunities as the other races to succeed in Singapore.

    SkillsFuture, Housing Grants and Education were extended to us the same way it was extended to all the other races – if we could but make it count and use it to achieve progress.

    I know that despite the best efforts to level the playing field, there still exist discrimination in Singapore. The “tudung issue” is a prime example of that discrimination . … But still . . . it does not explain why we cannot progress.

    Come September 11, the Malays in Singapore shall vote. 

    Some people will always be more equal than us but just like my parents before me, I vote for a government that allows me to be the best I could be as a Muslim and as a Singaporean, regardless of my race and my background.

     

    Source: https://thoughtsofrealsingaporeans.wordpress.com

  • Calon PAP Jurong GRC Rahayu Mahzam Beri Jaminan Teruskan Kerja Keras Halimah Yacob

    Calon PAP Jurong GRC Rahayu Mahzam Beri Jaminan Teruskan Kerja Keras Halimah Yacob

    Calon Melayu PAP di GRC Jurong, Rahayu Mahzam memberi jaminan kepada para penduduk bahawa beliau akan meneruskan kerja keras yang sudah diusahakan oleh Cik Halimah Yacob di kawasan undi tersebut.

    Sepanjang empat hari lalu, Cik Rahayu Mahzam berkempen di kawasan Bukit Batok East, yang sebelum ini di bawah jagaan Speaker Parlimen, Halimah Yacob.

    Pagi tadi, Cik Rahayu bertemu dengan para penduduk di tiga kedai kopi di Toh Guan Road.

    Menurut Cik Rahayu, antara keprihatinan yang diutarakan oleh penduduk di kawasan undi ini, ialah infrastruktur dan kewangan.

    “Saya ingin lihat bagaimana kita boleh cuba dapatkan satu jaringan masyarakat yang lebih peduli, sebab dalam kalangan penduduk di Bukit Batok East, ada yang mungkin lebih bernasib baik dan mungkin yang tidak. ^Dan juga ada di kalangan mereka, belia yang saya rasa boleh dilibatkan dalam kerja kemasyarakatan jadi mereka semua dapat saling membantu,” kata Cik Rahayu.

    Cik Rahayu sudah melakukan lawatan bertemu penduduk di Bukit Batok East Ave 4, Burgundy Crescent dan Jalan Selanting.

    Menurutnya, rata-rata penduduk menyambut beliau dengan baik, hasil rekod prestasi Cik Halimah.

    “Puan Halimah telah melakukan kerja yang amat keras di sini jadi ramai penduduk yang gembira dengan apa yang telah dilakukan oleh parti ini. Apa yang mungkin menjadi satu cabaran adalah mereka risau tentang sama ada keadaan ini akan berterusan.

    “Dan ini adalah sesuatu yang saya harus usahakan untuk pastikan mereka rasa yang saya boleh lakukan apa yang Puan Halimah telah lakukan dan membina atas apa segala projek yang telah beliau buat di sini,” ujar Cik Rahayu.

    Cik Rahayu berkata, sepanjang kempen ini, calon-calon Melayu PAP yang lebih berpengalaman banyak membimbing calon-calon baru, dengan berkongsi perangsang dan nasihat.

    Menurutnya, walaupun kadangkala timbul isu atau komen-komen tertentu,mereka saling mengingatkan satu sama lain supaya fokus kepada objektif utama iaitu membantu masyarakat.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Reform Party – Definitely Not Anti-Foreigner. Serious.

    Reform Party – Definitely Not Anti-Foreigner. Serious.

    IT IS perhaps to be expected that when Mr Gilbert Goh gets up on stage, he would hold forth about foreigners in Singapore. This is the man whose claim to fame is the organisation of the protest against the unpopular White Paper on Population in 2013. Tonight, he was on the stage as a candidate for the Reform Party, contesting in Ang Mo Kio GRC.

    “We have foreigners snatching jobs away from Singaporeans,” he said and continued in like vein for some time. He claimed that there were thousands of foreigners with fake degrees and credentials taking up jobs here and that free trade agreements (he didn’t name which) allowed foreigners to enter “obstructed”, with 400,000 now residing here. He warned that Singaporeans will be replaced by new citizens who would “vote PAP”.

    His rally speech resounded with some people in the crowd at Yio Chu Kang stadium, who responded with “kick them out” when he mentioned foreigners. He also took a swipe at Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, suggesting that he had sold out his country, and how he had difficulty campaigning in Ang Mo Kio GRC because one in two people he spoke to on the ground were foreigners.

    The presence of foreigners has been a lightning rod in recent years, and is arguably responsible for the swing against the PAP in GE2011. The publication of the White Paper with its 6.9 million projected population figure for 2030, exacerbated matters. The PAP acknowledged that infrastructural developments had had not kept pace with foreign inflows and plans were rolled out to improve the housing and public transport system. More drastically, the inflow of foreign workers as well as those granted permanent residency status was tightened and rules put in place to require that companies see to hiring Singaporeans first before recruiting foreigners.

    But the moves seem to have been lost on segments of the population who insist that their jobs, particularly those in the vulnerable professionals, managers and executives category, were being taken away by foreigners.

    Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has in recent time, including at his National Day rally, talked about finding a balance between having foreigners fill much needed job places while ensuring that Singaporeans were protected in the job market. On Thursday, Manpower Minister Lim Swee Say went to great lengths to talk about Singapore’s foreign worker policy, pledging to maintain the Singapore to foreigner ratio at two to one. He noted that the numbers look much better if the foreigners employed in the construction industry were left out. Then it would be one foreigner to three Singaporeans. He also refuted opposition claims that GE2011 and the presence of Opposition MPs in Parliament had been responsible for the shift. The policy change, he said, was announced by Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam in 2010. He reminded the rally crowd that a freeze on foreign workers would affect the operations of small- and medium-sized businesses which would have to close down if they could not get enough manpower and, in the process, let go of Singaporeans too.

    That the foreign worker and immigration issue still rankles with Singaporeans is evident in the manifestos of all the opposition political parties. Some examples:

    The Workers’ Party proposes to “limit foreign workforce growth by holding steady the current level of foreign workforce numbers.” “Our approach involves keeping the non-resident population constant at around 1.5-1.6 million as long as we achieve the 1 per cent resident workforce growth target. This allows for a temporary addition of foreign workers to make up for shortfalls if we are not able to achieve the 1 per cent target.” It says its approach will result in a “projected population of 5.8 million in 2030…in contrast to the PAP’s projection of 6.9 million, of which 3.8 million, or just 55 per cent are citizens.”

    The Singapore Democratic Party wants a “merit-based system” that assesses “the skills and competencies of foreigners wanting to work here, and allow in only those whose are genuinely qualified”. It wants all Employment Pass and S Pass applicants with university degrees and diplomas earned outside Singapore to be subject to mandatory Educational Credential Assessments.

    The National Solidarity Party is vague in its 2015 manifesto on the issue beyond saying that “there must be quotas imposed on foreign PMETs seeking employment in Singapore.” In its paper on population two years ago, it called for a pause in the growth in foreign workforce until productivity grows at more than 1.5 per cent and public infrastructure has been expanded” as well as a uniform quota of 33 per cent for S Pass and Employment Pass holders.

    Singaporeans First said it will “restructure the economy by making it much less dependent on cheap low-skilled foreign labour as it depresses our wage levels, lowers overall productivity, sustains low skill industries and adds to over-crowding”. “We will review the need to give very favourable foreign worker quotas to certain industries that are highly dependent on foreign workers.”

    The issue of foreigners has been raised in various forms at opposition rallies over the three nights of hustings. WP’s Terence Tan described the White Paper as “just wrong” while fellow member Gurmit Singh wants the G to follow the Australian way of getting employers to justify their need for foreign staff. SingFirst has been leading the charge right from the get-go at its introduction of candidates before Nomination Day. In its party political broadcast, it said “the influx of foreign workers has broken families, taken away jobs and space from Singaporeans.”

    Even much smaller parties, like the Singapore People’s Party, have landed on the issue. It wants the minimum qualifying salary of Employment Pass holders to be raised from the current $3,300 a month. “At the current rate, even insurance firms can employ agents on the employment pass”.

    But of course, everyone said they were not “anti-foreigner” or “anti-immigration”.

    Just anti-G.

     

    Source: http://themiddleground.sg