Tag: GE2015

  • Cambridge-Educated Lawyer He Ting Ru Didn’t Believe That She’ll Join Workers’ Party

    Cambridge-Educated Lawyer He Ting Ru Didn’t Believe That She’ll Join Workers’ Party

    Ten years ago, if anyone told you the Workers’ Party would one fine day be attracting lawyers, young professionals and even an academic to join their ranks, you would have wondered, “What’s a worker’s party?” and “Is it like a Zouk thing?”.

    Now, take a look around you in 2015.

    Besides noticing how much things have changed since those days when social media was Friendster and democracy meant one opposition member in parliament, it’s hard to overlook the fact that the Workers’ Party has gotten big enough it is producing its own gravity and sucking in some potentially bright stars.

    And here’s one of them: He Ting Ru, 32, a Cambridge-educated lawyer who looks set to contest in this coming general election after being spotted on walkabouts with the party recently.

     

    Back in Singapore since 2011 after an overseas stint studying and working, she witnessed the General Election that year first-hand and like many others felt a tingle down her spine.

    But unlike many others, she decided the time is ripe to get involved with the WP by volunteering with them.

     

    Mothership.sg caught up with He to talk about whether she knows what’s she is getting herself into four years on since GE2011, how she never got to meet Chen Show Mao for the first time after standing around for two hours, and also, the sport kendo, plus, her eight cats.

     

    1. First things first, the most important question: Did you know that people on online forums say you look like Rui En?

    Ting Ru: No, actually, but I’m very flattered. However I do believe that as with anyone you meet, judge them based on the strength of character, not on their surface or outward appearance.

     

    2. So, do you think you look like Rui En?

    Ting Ru: I’m not quite sure I really see the similarity myself! Eventually I hope people can see me for who I am and what I stand for, as well as my efforts to effect some kind of positive change.

    Photo by Lim Weixiang for Mothership.sg
    Photo by Lim Weixiang for Mothership.sg

    3. Okay great. For the benefit of our readers who can’t listen to you answer these questions: Why do you lapse into a British-sounding accent?

    Ting Ru: I spent almost 10 years in England after my junior college years. I studied in Cambridge for my undergraduate degree. I then moved to London for law school and trained as a lawyer with Clifford Chance. I qualified as an English solicitor and worked with the same firm in London and Frankfurt, Germany before coming home.

     

    4. So you are those really smart kind who went overseas on a scholarship?

    Ting Ru: No… I was from Raffles Junior College, and there was the question about whether to apply for ‘S’ papers to qualify for scholarships.

    My dad was adamant about me not applying for a scholarship, though, because he said he was able to save up enough for me to study wherever I gained acceptance to.

    He strongly believes scholarships should be for people whose parents may not be able to afford to pay for their children to go to top universities even though they gained entrance to these places.

     

    5. With all that time spent there, can you still speak Mandarin?

    Ting Ru: I’ve spent the last four years doing Meet-the-People Sessions, so I have to be conversant in Mandarin. I’m comfortable with that and I’m pleased to say that the residents understand me.

     

    6. Now tell us why does it seem like more young people like yourself, be it professionals or captains of industry, are joining the Workers’ Party?

    Ting Ru: I can’t speak for all young people, but based on the people I’ve spoken to, they have expressed an interest in what the Workers’ Party is doing.

    Some of them are very supportive and a lot of them are interested to listen to what our party has to say and it is not just because they are sympathetic.

    In 2011, people actually did sit up and notice Chen Show Mao. It was a point of interest for me that someone who was obviously very successful in his professional career would actually feel that he believed enough in what the WP had to offer and what the future of Singapore should be in order to be able to stand up as a candidate and serve as a MP.

    But what I would like to see is people from a diverse range of backgrounds who would listen to what we have to say and support us and work with us.

     

    An energetic start to the #sg50 festivities! While out and about in Geylang Serai today, one of the shop owners…

    Posted by He Ting Ru on Friday, August 7, 2015

     

    7. Did you have to explain to your friends and family why you decided to join the WP?

    Ting Ru: Of course people are curious but I say to them that, ultimately, I believe each one of us has a role to play and I’m just very fortunate to be able to volunteer and work with the WP to do the work I’ve done in four years.

    Some of my professional background has been very helpful, too — I volunteered for a few years in a free legal clinic in a very deprived and dangerous area while I was in London and worked with the residents there, some of whom are refugees. That training made me quite well-equipped.

     

    8. Besides real work, what are the other things you do to spend time?

    Source: He Ting Ru's Facebook page
    Source: He Ting Ru’s Facebook page

    Ting Ru: I enjoy cycling and walking. While I was in university, I discovered team sports and played football as well as rowed in the college women’s team.

    I also practise kendo, but I’m still very much a beginner, having only done it for roughly a year.

    (Why Kendo and not normal fencing?)

    What I found interesting is the philosophy of kendo. A lot of it can be carried into everyday life.

     

    9. How do you see kendo playing a part in the upcoming election?

    Ting Ru: One thing I find very important about kendo is the absolute respect you must have for your opponent, so if you look at the kendo rules, you will see that you are not allowed to cheer when you win a fight.

    (That sucks.)

    Ting Ru: No, listen, let me finish! You have to acknowledge the fact your opponent has spent the same amount of effort and same amount of training work as you have, and you are not allowed to crow over your victory.

    And I think this amount of respect is unfortunately lacking in Singapore politics. I do believe, also, that the country as a whole benefits when the public sphere, the political sphere, is a lot more respectful.

    We are not here to create trouble or oppose for the sake of it. There’s a lot of common purpose in that respect for the good of Singapore.

    Photo by Lim Weixiang for Mothership.sg
    Photo by Lim Weixiang for Mothership.sg

    10. We heard Chen Show Mao made you wait more than two hours the first time you went to meet him. What happened there?

    Ting Ru: I came back to Singapore in 2011 just before the general election. What really struck me at that time was that Singaporeans seemed really very, very interested about politics, they were obviously very patriotic and cared deeply about what would happen to Singapore.

    I paid attention to the rallies and listened to what the people had to say. When WP won Aljunied GRC, like a lot of Singaporeans, I was very pleased and very glad that there’s been a natural development of our democratic process.

    At the same time I realised, they probably needed a lot more resources and help going from one seat to six in parliament, so I thought, hey, why not let’s help out with the WP. I didn’t think of it as a political statement or a career, I just wanted to use my skills to help residents.

    So, I wrote in to the WP right after the election and I suppose, as the party at that time was completely swamped, I didn’t get a response. I then decided to make a trip down to the nearest Meet-the-People Session, which happened to be Mr Chen’s at Paya Lebar.

    It was chaotic at the time and the whole system was just getting set up and there were a lot of non-residents who turned up at the MPS with Show Mao, but I went with the intention of wanting to volunteer. And I decided to stay behind to wait to speak to him.

    At that time the person in charge thought I was a fan girl who wanted to meet Show Mao, so he ignored me and told me to wait. And I stood there for about two and a half hours just observing what was going on. And after that, the WP rep realised I was still there and talked to me about case law, and I told him about my legal background — he was convinced, and I even managed to see my first case that night.

    Come to think of it, I never actually did talk to Show Mao that evening. It didn’t really bother me…

    (That’s what you say now. Heh heh heh.)

    [Laughter all around]

     

    11. Why did you look for Chen Show Mao initially then?

    Ting Ru: I saw that he had a similar background to me, we were working overseas and we did law. But I guess it was (chiefly) because his MPS was the closest to my house.

     

    12. How would you have reacted 10 or 15 years ago, if someone told you then that one day you would join the Workers’ Party?

    Ting Ru: I wouldn’t have believed you. I think I mentioned before I never saw myself to be a person who is involved in politics. It was not something I set out to do even when I started volunteering. But over the years, I’ve worked with some very dedicated and sincere people who are very good at what they do.

    Together we do actually make a difference in the lives of residents and advance Singapore’s political and democratic system.

     

    13. We hear you have eight cats (this is the actual purpose of our interview with you). How did you come to have so many!

    Ting Ru: My family likes cats so we adopted some. Initially, the thinking was that a cat would help keep the rats at bay. But we found out that’s not true.

    So all those years ago we went to the SPCA and adopted a ginger as a kitten. Since then we’ve always had a cat, and a total of about 12 or 13 cats have passed through our household.

    Of the current eight, one was from SPCA, after my previous cat died, the second one was rescued as a palm-sized stray. There was a pair of cats that found their way into our house and before we could get them sterilised they had three kittens. We wanted to give them away but thought better of it, and never managed to re-home them so they’re still with us (embarrassed laugh). And my mum found a white longhair in a drain a few streets away, who remained there for more than two months (he was definitely abandoned), so we also took him in, and he is still here.

    (Your house sounds like a halfway house for cats.)

    Photo courtesy of He Ting Ru
    Photo courtesy of He Ting Ru

    It’s not a halfway house! They just tend to not go (laughs). We didn’t start out as a multi-cat household, but we ended up becoming one.

    14. And we ask this question to every person we’re interviewing for this GE — if you were a Singapore hawker food dish, which would you be and why?

    Hainanese pork chop. Firstly because my dad’s Hainanese, and food is very important to Hainanese. It’s yummy, but also because I believe the dish was created using both Western and Asian influences, and for someone like me who has lived in both Asian and Western countries it’s quite an apt description, hopefully it’s the best of many worlds but uniquely local.

    (Got chilli?)

    It’s curry — Hainanese curry! I’ll bring you to the one at Tiong Bahru, my grandfather used to go there and it’s very authentic.

     

    Source: http://mothership.sg

  • Charles Chong To Contest Punggol East SMC For PAP

    Charles Chong To Contest Punggol East SMC For PAP

    The People’s Action Party’s (PAP) Charles Chong will be contesting in Punggol East SMC in the upcoming General Election. The party made the announcement in a press release this morning (Aug 27).

    The veteran politician was first elected to Parliament in 1988 and has served six terms as an MP. He was also chairman of Pasir Ris and Pasir Ris-Punggol Town Councils from 1997 to 2006. He had managed parts of Punggol East when he was an MP in Pasir Ris-Punggol Group Representation Constituency from 2001 to 2011. He was then fielded in Joo Chiat SMC during the 2011 GE, where he narrowly defeated Workers’ Party’s Yee Jenn Jong.

    Joo Chiat SMC has now been taken into Marine Parade GRC following the 2015 electoral boundaries review.

    Mr Chong held a meet-the-people session (MPS) in the Punggol East ward earlier this month. He’d said then: “The first thing is to make sure, if we are in charge of this area, that the town council accounts are in order, so we can do the work that we need to do and perhaps also get the Government to restore its grants. Now, it is holding back the grants because the accounts are not right.”

    “I know that when we handed over this section, it was in relatively good shape. So, now we’re not quite sure whether the money used here has been diverted somewhere to help out maybe in Hougang or in Aljunied,” he added.

    The Punggol East seat is currently held by the Workers’ Party’s Lee Li Lian, who won the 2013 by-election with 54.5 per cent of the vote.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Maliki Osman Unveiled As Part Of PAP Team Contesting East Coast GRC

    Maliki Osman Unveiled As Part Of PAP Team Contesting East Coast GRC

    The People’s Action Party (PAP) on Thursday (Aug 27) officially announced its lineup for East Coast Group Representation Constituency (GRC) for the General Election (GE).

    Incumbent PAP members Lim Swee Say, Lee Yi Shyan, Maliki Osman and Jessica Tan were unveiled as the party’s slate for the GRC, which has been downsized from a five- to four-member constituency for the polls on Sep 11.

    The fifth incumbent, former Minister for Transport Raymond Lim, had earlier announced that he would be retiring from politics to spend more time with his family, having been an MP since 2001. His Fengshan ward has also been carved out as a single seat.

    “The redrawing of the boundaries will not break our bond. Fengshan will always be part of the East Coast GRC,” said Mr Lim.

    In 2011, the PAP team which contested East Coast GRC at the GE won 54.83 per cent of the vote against a Workers’ Party (WP) team led by Gerald Giam and Png Eng Huat. It was the closest GRC victory for the PAP, and resulted in Mr Giam earning a seat in Parliament as a Non-Constituency MP.

    WP has already declared it will once again contest East Coast GRC this year.

    The four PAP candidates for East Coast GRC are:

    Mr Lim Swee Say, 61, Minister for Manpower

    Mr Lim served as MP for Tanjong Pagar GRC from 1997 to 2001, Holland-Bukit Panjang GRC from 2001 to 2006, and Holland-Bukit Timah GRC from 2006 to 2011 before moving to East Coast GRC. He was a Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office from 2004 to 2015. Mr Lim was also the Secretary-General of the National Trades Union Congress from 2007 to 2015.

    “East Coast is about mass personalisation,” said Mr Lim. “How to do it? Week after week we go out and visit our residents as part of our deep engagement. We go house to house, door to door, to understand the profile of our residents, to come out with a Community For All Ages approach.”

    Mr Lee Yi Shyan, 53, Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry and National Development

    Mr Lee has served as an MP for East Coast GRC since 2006. Prior to entering politics, he worked at the Ministry of Defence and the Economic Development Board, among others. Mr Lee is also the president of the Singapore Badminton Association.

    Dr Maliki Osman, 50, Minister of State for Defence and National Development

    Dr Maliki served as an MP for Sembawang GRC from 2001 to 2011 before switching to East Coast GRC. He is also the Mayor of the South East District of Singapore. Dr Maliki was an assistant professor at the National University of Singapore’s Department of Social Work and Psychology from 1998 to 2004.

    Ms Jessica Tan, 49, managing director of Microsoft Singapore

    Ms Tan has served as an MP for East Coast GRC since 2006. She is also the chairperson of East Coast Town Council and chairperson of the Government Parliamentary Committee (GPC) for Finance and Trade & Industry.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • SingFirst’s Ang Yong Guan: Stepping Out Of The Grassroots

    SingFirst’s Ang Yong Guan: Stepping Out Of The Grassroots

    By Biddy Low

    Dr Ang Yong Guan is an animated man with a personable demeanour.

    As he gets more impassioned with his words, his hands gesticulate more fervently, earnestly punctuating the points he holds dear.

    We met up with the chairman of SingFirst for a chat, after a recent forum held by the party, which dealt with issues such as the Central Provident Fund (CPF).

    Dr Ang had served as the chairman of the Punggol Community Club Management Committee some years ago, assisting a PAP MP for more than 15 years – until he decided to step into politics around 2003 because he felt, in his words, “something was not quite right.”

    “They were heading in the wrong direction,” he said, referring to the government.

    He now wants to pave the way for others to step forth to serve in politics, and to remove the climate of fear which he says still prevails here.

    Dr Ang served as a psychiatrist with the Singapore Armed Forces for 17 years from 1986 to 2003 and retired from the SAF as a Colonel, holding the appointment as the head of Psychological Medicine Branch (currently known as Psychological Care Centre) at the Military Medicine Institute, HQMC.

    Apart from his impressive credentials in the military, Dr Ang was also the president of the Singapore Psychiatric Association (1997-1998); chairman of the Chapter of Psychiatrists, Academy of Medicine (2001- 2003); founder/chairman of Action Group for Mental Illness (since 2004); member of National Council on Problem Gambling (since 2005); and member of the Clinical Advisory Committee for Chronic Disease Management Programme (since 2009).

    Dr Ang was awarded the Public Service Medal in 1995 for community work, and the Public Administration Medal in 1996 for military services.

    He is currently in private practice at Paragon Medical.

    In the video below, we speak to Dr Ang – who contested in the last elections under the Singapore Democratic Party’s banner – on his views about the CPF and the government’s foreign labour policy, his personal ethos that led him into opposition politics and whether his party’s name carries xenophobic connotations.

     

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • Goh Chok Tong: Opposition Parties Come And Go Like Nomads

    Goh Chok Tong: Opposition Parties Come And Go Like Nomads

    Emeritus Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong has urged Singaporeans to give the currentGOVERNMENT a good mandate and not be distracted by the Opposition.

    The former Prime Minister (PM) was speaking on Wednesday (Aug 26) at the unveiling of the People’s Action Party (PAP) slate for Marine ParadeGROUP Representation Constituency (GRC), which is expected to face a challenge from the Worker’s Party (WP).

    Commenting on the WP, Mr Goh said there was a “certain arrogance” about the opposition party. He addressed a wide range of topics during the introduction.

    Here is a selection of hisQUOTES:

    GE IS “MANDATE” FOR PM LEE’S GOVT

    “I’ve travelled all over the world as PM. I know the impact of politics on people’s lives … I came to the conclusion that we can categoriseGOVERNMENT into three categories: The good, the bad, the ugly.

    “As you can see now, in many countries in the world, there are ugly governments. We are lucky that we have a good Government. So I look at this election as a mandate for the Lee Hsien Loong Government.

    “If the Government doesn’t get a good support, you’re repudiating what they’re doing. It’s very important that you give them a very clear signal and support their agenda.”

    OPPOSITION ARE LIKE “NOMADS”

    “Opposition parties come and go like nomads. Nomads will not have anINTEREST in the people’s welfare. A new tribe is coming – do they really have interest in Marine Parade’s welfare?

    “Having spent forty years there, the residents know me. I will leave it to them to decide whether I’ve done a goodJOB or not.

    “The opposition will be there just throwing all kinds of distractions.

    “You know the fable of the rooster that crows when the sunrises? The rooster goes around claiming that it’s the crow causing the sun to rise. So that’s what they’re doing.”

    “A CERTAIN ARROGANCE” ABOUT WP

    “Strength is relative. They (WP) are stronger than NSP (National Solidarity Party) – there’s no doubt about it – but there is a certain arrogance about them.

    “With that arrogance will they be able to replace me and my team? Let them try.

    “Are we worried that WP is coming to MP? Look at the way they run their Town Council’sFINANCES and look at the way we run (ours).

    “You decide – who do you want to manage your town council?”

    “I COULD HAVE RETIRED”

    “I’ve fought nine General Elections. I could have retired … (I’m) the only pioneer generation leader left in politics. When PM (Lee) asked me to stay, I felt duty bound to contribute.

    “Chuan-Jin has beenWORKING hard as the anchor minister and he is leading the Marine Parade team to fight the elections. Chuan-Jin is a member of the fourth generation leadership team.

    “Will I be running the next election after this? I want to have theOPTION to retire. So, I hope that Chuan-Jin will give me the option to retire.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com