Tag: National Solidarity Party

  • Dear NSP Ignore The People’s Voices And See It Backfire In Your Face

    Dear NSP Ignore The People’s Voices And See It Backfire In Your Face

    With all respect Steve Chia and NSP CEC, you and your CEC have taken the narrow and disregarded the wide.

    The narrow refers to your interests in your own party … and to an extent, your followers. The wide refers to the current political situation that Singapore and Singaporeans find themselves in today.

    While every political party is looking toward correcting the wider imbalance of one party dominance, and seeking ways to correct that by weighted and considered compromises … your party is taking the opposite path to protect the narrow.

    All I can say is that this will most likely backfire and set your party back to a stage where it might not be recoverable.

    Please reconsider and tell us that you do feel the pulse of Singaporeans at large, and not only those of your supporters.

     

    You do realise that in the news reported this morning, your party comes across as having the same mentality as that of the PAP.

    You are only interested in serving your party supporters and has no qualm to disregard the voices of others who may not have yet supported you.

    You still have time to correct your stance and to win back the confidence of Singaporeans and not just that of your supporters.

    You do see that the 43% of voters who voted for the NSP in GE 2011 were Opposition supporters more than they were NSP supporters.

    When push comes to shove, the party with the better parliamentary experience and trustworthiness will be preferred to take the PAP to task.

    The 3 cornered fight will do NSP no good because the outcome is foreseeable …. you may not get half of your previous 43%. Why damage the good repute because of this?

    Please reconsider for the larger cause and larger good of Singapore.

    Thank you.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • NSP’S Steve Chia Withdraws From Macpherson SMC

    NSP’S Steve Chia Withdraws From Macpherson SMC

    National Solidarity Party’s member, Mr Steve Chia has announced via his personal facebook account that he would not be contesting in MacPherson Single Member Constituency (SMC) and also would not be contesting in the upcoming General Election.

    While Mr Chia did not clearly attributed the reason for his withdrawal from the election, but the content of the post suggests that the negativity surrounding NSP’s flip-flopping on the withdrawal from MacPherson SMC might have affected him much.

    The former non-constituency Member of Parliament (NCMP) wrote in his post, “The Trolls have won”, followed with hashtags of ‪#‎MyReputationIsGone‬,  ‪#‎PeopleOnlyRemembersTheBad‬,‪ #‎NotWorthIt‬.

    He also attached a hyperlink to a website created that contains information of his past as a politician. He clarified that the site is not set up by him and that some of the information in it are not correctly written.

    Mr Chia went on to state his personal wish that Workers’ Party would send a strong candidate and take down MacPherson SMC.

    Earlier this week, former Secretary General, Hazel Poa resigned from NSP due to the party’s decision to go back on its earlier decision to contest MacPherson SMC, going into a three-corner fight with Workers’ Party and People’s Action Party. Mr Chia is said to be the candidate that the party was going to field for the SMC.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • NSP’s Steve Chia To Contest Macpherson SMC

    NSP’s Steve Chia To Contest Macpherson SMC

    National Solidarity Party (NSP) council member Steve Chia ran in MacPherson estate on Friday.

    The former non-constituency MP posted on this Facebook page early Friday morning saying: “Just completed two rounds around the perimeter of MacPherson SMC early morning. Greeted many residents who have to get up early to go for work.”

    Mr Chia, an avid runner who regularly takes part in endurance races, also posted two screenshots from a smartphone running app that showed him taking two loops around the estate. Accompanying one of the images was a post that said, “Saw many areas that needs improvement”.

    His Facebook post comes two days after the NSP made a surprise surprise U-turn to contest MacPherson SMC. The opposition party has yet to announce who it would field at the coming general elections, widely expected to be held next month. But the latest post by Mr Chia gave the strongest hint yet on who the party may field as a candidate for the SMC.

    When asked by followers of his Facebook page on whether he will be contesting in MacPherson, he replied: “Yes, we will be committed to the residents of MacPherson SMC,” without elaborating further.

    The party announced in a statement on Wednesday that it had a change of heart after receiving “feedback and pledges of support” from residents of the two constituencies, where it had also contested at the last polls in 2011.

    Therefore, it has decided to contest MacPherson SMC, given its outreach efforts there before the previous general election. “This decision made by the CEC is final, and reflects our view that maintaining Opposition unity requires mutual respect and a spirit of compromise on the part of all parties,” it added.

    Just over an hour later, NSP secretary-general Hazel Poa announced that she had quit the party as she disagreed with the decision.

    The NSP had said on Aug 10, in a statement signed by Ms Poa, that it would not contest MacPherson and Marine Parade GRC to avoid three-way fights with the WP.

    This after two rounds of horse-trading talks failed to resolve its overlapping claims with the Workers’ Party (WP).

    In the recent elections boundary review, MacPherson SMC was carved out as a single-seat from Marine Parade GRC, where NSP contested in 2011. The GRC also absorbed the Joo Chiat single-seat ward, which was contested by the WP.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • NSP Don’t Sabotage Your Own Electoral Chances By Fielding Kevryn Lim

    NSP Don’t Sabotage Your Own Electoral Chances By Fielding Kevryn Lim

    To NSP,

    You must be nuts to get a part-time model to be elected as MP.

    For heaven’s sake, just look at the way she wears!

    Did she think she was going to Zouk to party or attending a serious opposition conference to decide on the outcome of Singapore?

    What is the purpose of wearing such a short skirt to the opposition meeting?

    See the way she talks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8H-BeVtH4jw

    It reminds me of one of those beauty pageant contests where the contestants are interviewed on stage. I wouldn’t have been surprised if she had ended her interview with another one of those “world peace” quotes.

    NSP, please don’t sabotage opposition chances to get into Parliament.

    The opposition die-hards will vote for her even if she walks around Orchard Road naked. But if you are really serious about winning, you have to convince the conservative middle ground voters. Honestly, they are not going to take her seriously.

    You know what my mother said when I showed her the miniskirt photo of Kevryn Lim standing on the road, now circulating on social media? My mother asked if it was about a fight outside a KTV (there was a guy standing next to her using the phone)?

    NSP, your party reputation is already going down with the exodus of the many reputed members from your party.

    Now, you further harm your party and opposition reputation by getting a bimbo worse than Tin Pei Ling to stand for election.

    Please lah, NSP!

     

    James

    * Contributed by TRE reader

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

  • WP, NSP In Heated Wrangle Over 3 Constituencies

    WP, NSP In Heated Wrangle Over 3 Constituencies

    A day after opposition leaders emerged all smiles from a three-hour meeting and declared that most potential multi-cornered fights had been resolved, it emerged yesterday that discussions were dominated by a heated tussle between the Workers’ Party (WP) and the National Solidarity Party (NSP) over Marine Parade Group Representation Constituency (GRC), Jalan Besar GRC and the MacPherson single-seat ward.

    At one point, an NSP representative even threatened to send a team to contest in Aljunied GRC — which is held by the WP — if the WP refused to back down, sources who attended the closed-door meeting at the NSP’s Jalan Besar headquarters told TODAY.

    The sources, who declined to be identified as the parties had agreed on keeping the discussions confidential, said the WP stood firm on its decision to send a team to contest Marine Parade GRC, where the NSP had lost in the 2011 General Election despite garnering 43.4 per cent of the votes.

    The NSP had asked for the WP to withdraw its interest in Jalan Besar GRC, in return for the NSP to give up contesting Marine Parade GRC. The WP said no. There was also no room for negotiation on MacPherson Single-Member Constituency (SMC), which the NSP is also eyeing, the sources added. They said the WP maintained that it will not budge on the five GRCs (Aljunied, East Coast, Marine Parade, Nee Soon, Jalan Besar) and five SMCs (Hougang, Punggol East, Fengshan, MacPherson and Sengkang West) which it had declared its interest in, following the release of the electoral boundaries report last month.

    Yesterday, both the WP and NSP conducted house visits in Serangoon Central — which falls under Marine Parade GRC — with the two entourages only hundreds of metres away from each other.

    WP Non-Constituency MP Yee Jenn Jong, who is likely to lead the WP’s team in Marine Parade GRC, told TODAY that his party’s position on the GRC is “firm”. The NSP declined comment, referring to the ongoing discussions that will resume tomorrow.

    In the 2011 GE, Mr Yee had contested and lost narrowly in Joo Chiat SMC, which has been absorbed into Marine Parade GRC for the coming elections. Mr Yee said that apart from continuing to walk the ground in Joo Chiat after the GE, he had also started outreach efforts in the rest of the Marine Parade GRC area since “more than a year ago”.

    Apart from Mr Yee, WP potential candidate Terence Tan, 44, was also spotted at the party’s house visits in Serangoon Central.

    Mr Tan, who was one of the speakers at a WP rally in the Punggol East by-election in 2013, is a lawyer. He is on the legal team representing the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East (AHPETC) Town Council in the ongoing court case against the Ministry of National Development. The ministry is appealing against a High Court’s refusal to appoint independent accountants to oversee government grants to the AHPETC.

    For the NSP, central executive committee members Steve Chia and Spencer Ng were among party members and supporters canvassing support in Serangoon Central, several blocks of flats away from the WP group.

    Political analyst Eugene Tan noted the guiding principle among some in the opposition circles that a party that had contested in a ward would have “the first right to contest there”. “The WP, however, has never explicitly agreed to that,” said the Singapore Management University law don.

    While the WP could be seen by the NSP as butting into Marine Parade GRC, “voters may not necessarily see the WP as a bully if it were to contest in both MacPherson and Marine Parade”, said Associate Professor Tan. “They are likely to subscribe (to the belief) that voters should be able to vote for the best candidates from the opposition, rather than having opposition candidates foisted on them as a result of a political compromise.”

    Assoc Prof Tan noted the absence of WP leaders Low Thia Khiang and Sylvia Lim from the horse-trading talks on Monday. On the WP’s firm stance on where it would be contesting, he said: “It’s effectively saying that other opposition parties going into a multi-cornered electoral contest with it (and the People’s Action Party) are doing so at their own risk.”

    National University of Singapore political scientist Bilveer Singh felt that the NSP has “strong grounds” to contest in Marine Parade GRC and MacPherson SMC. “What happens when two rationalities clash? In politics you give and take, something the Opposition is not good at in Singapore so far,” he said.

    He felt that opposition parties such as WP and NSP have “already put the cart before the horse and that is going to make horse trading next to impossible”. “Whenever the (opposition) parties clash among themselves, simple logic tells you that it will benefit the incumbent, the PAP in this case. The key to the game is reaching a consensus on where each party should contest.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com