Tag: PAP

  • Vivian Balakrishnan: SDP Policies Will Set Singapore On “Path To Greece”

    Vivian Balakrishnan: SDP Policies Will Set Singapore On “Path To Greece”

    Dr Vivian Balakrishnan (photo) did not mince his words when he warned voters that the policies of his opponents from the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) “will set us on our paths to Greece”.

    He and his People’s Action Party team are up against SDP’s team headed by Dr Chee Soon Juan at the polls for Holland-Bukit Timah GRC.

    Dr Balakrishnan went on the offensive, calling for a press conference at the Holland-Bukit Panjang Town Council at Bangkit Road hours after nominations closed yesterday.

    He said of SDP’s policies: “Tax, spend, cut essential services and investments, including defence, that will put our country at risk and ultimately lead to bankruptcy, and a very big bill being passed to our children, not to mention very high levels of taxation.

    “These are not new ideas, these are ideas cut and copied and pasted from other parts of the world, which have failed.

    “In other words, the SDP will set us on the road to Greece and it’s the duty of my team to awaken Singaporeans to the dangers of such policies.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • NSP: Workers’ Party Left Us With No Choice, We Had To Enter Into 3-Cornered Fight In MacPherson

    NSP: Workers’ Party Left Us With No Choice, We Had To Enter Into 3-Cornered Fight In MacPherson

    In the wake of a frantic few hours on Nomination Day, which saw three multi-cornered fights emerge in the General Election, the leaders of the National Solidarity Party came forward to say they were “the most active party promoting Opposition unity”.

    NSP candidate Cheo Chai Chen will face a three-cornered fight in MacPherson SMC, where he will come up against the People’s Action Party’s Tin Pei Ling, 31 – the incumbent after the ward was carved out of Marine Parade GRC – and the Workers’ Party’s Bernard Chen, 29.

    Said party Acting Secretary-General Lim Tean, at a press conference where the party’s Tampines GRC team was introduced: “I believe to a very large extent we have avoided multi-cornered fights but for MacPherson we had to do it. MacPherson used to be part of Marine Parade. We did very well in the last GE and we have already made a huge concession to WP there.”

    An NSP team featuring Ms Nicole Seah took 43.36 per cent of the vote against the PAP in 2011.

    “If WP wanted to avoid a three-cornered fight they should have allowed us to fight with PAP in MacPherson,” said Mr Lim.

    “That decision to contest in MacPherson was made a few weeks ago, and we’ve never departed from that decision. NSP has been the most active party promoting Opposition unity. We initiated talks to avoid three-cornered fights.”

    The decision to contest in the SMC led to fissures within the party, including the departure of then-Acting Secretary-General Hazel Poa. Mr Lim said that the lessons learnt over the past few weeks will make the party “stronger for the battle ahead”.

    “We are a democratic party and in a democratic party run on democratic principles you’re going to have a difference in opinions. I think that’s healthy,” said Mr Lim.

    “As for party members who have left, we cannot stop people from leaving – it’s their right to join any party they wish. And as for why we have been so quiet in the last couple of weeks, I think the media made a lot of the disunity and turmoil, so we decided that it’s best not to add to the frenzy, and instead regroup to prepare for the coming GE.”

    NSP President Sebastian Teo – part of the party’s Tampines GRC team that includes Mr Lim, Ms Nor Lella Mardiiah Mohamed, 41, Mr Fong Chin Leong, 46, and Mr Choong Hon Heng, 45 – said that if elected, the party did not think think it would face any problems running a Town Council in Tampines.

    Said Mr Teo: “It’s not that difficult to run a Town Council. I’m sure we have all that we need to put in place and to run a Town Council. It’s not difficult like the PAP say. You need capital, you need manpower. So I don’t understand – what’s so difficult about running a Town Council?”

    The NSP will face a People’s Action Party team led by Education Minister Heng Swee Keat at the polls on Sep 11.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • How Bukit Batok SMC Came To Have 3 Corners

    How Bukit Batok SMC Came To Have 3 Corners

    Out of nowhere, an independent candidate popped up to contest the Bukit Batok single-member constituency (SMC). His presence greatly upset some Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) supporters who were expecting a straight fight between their candidate Sadasivam Veriyah and the People’s Action Party’s (PAP) David Ong. This made Bukit Batok one of three SMCs that will see three-cornered fights this general election.

    Independent candidate Samir Salim Neji’s nomination attempt was first disqualified by the election returning officers at Keming Primary School which served as the nomination centre for Bukit Batok and three other constituencies. He came to the centre with three other persons, when the rules require that each nominee should present a proposer, a seconder, four assentors, and can also have “one other person” present, making a total of eight persons including the nominee/candidate. With only four persons in Samir Salim’s group, it didn’t look as if he met the criteria.

    pic_201509_02The proposer, seconder and assentors must all be registered voters in the respective constituency. The “one other person” is typically the election agent who attends to all supporting activities to aid the candidate in his or her campaign.

    Jaslyn Go is the SDP candidate for Yuhua

    I was in the nomination centre to observe all this as I had agreed to be one of the assentors for SDP’s candidate for Yuhua, Jaslyn Go. Keming Primary School also served as the nomination centre for Yuhua constituency.

    It took only a few minutes for the officials to turn Samir Salim away. A few SDP supporters went over to speak to him, and (I was later told), it seemed that his problem was that his other assentors were either overseas or failed to show up at the nomination centre. I also heard that he had been “in Singapore” for fifteen years.

    It should be noted — not that race is any issue here, but just to help understand the next part of the narrative — that all four persons in Samir Salim’s group were non-Chinese.  They appeared to be of South Asian origin.

    It wasn’t long before a flurry of conversations occurred among the PAP people in the nomination centre, and ten or fifteen minutes later, fresh documents were brought before the nomination centre officials. It turned out that the PAP had offered three persons living in Bukit Batok to be Samir Salim’s assentors, thus saving his candidacy from disqualification. At the close of the one-hour nomination window, this form was posted for public viewing, showing three Chinese names as his assentors, making the requisite four:

    pic_201509_05

    After 12:30pm, the accepted nominees were formally announced, and all candidates had a chance to make a short speech to the assembled crowd, which mostly comprised PAP supporters, with a sprinkling of red-shirted SDP supporters. Samir Salim spoke only in English. “No Tamil?” I whispered, to no one in particular. “He’s from Kerala,” came a reply from a stranger close by. How true that is I cannot say, but I’m sure we will know over the next few days from other sources.

    The SDP supporters were quite upset by this turn of events. Their knee-jerk reaction is understandable: they think the third candidate’s presence on the ballot will split the “opposition vote”. First of all, I think it’s a caricature to speak of a unified “opposition vote”, but secondly, I think it can very well be argued that giving voters a choice can’t be bad thing. Of course the counter-point can also be made that if one of the more established opposition parties were short of assentors, the PAP wouldn’t be lending them any, so it’s not as if we can read this gesture from the PAP to be as noble as it may first appear.

    * * * * *

    Here are a few other photos I took this morning:

    Sadasivam Veriyah of SDP (second from left) leading his supporters as they walk to the nomination centre

    Unions come out in support of a PAP candidate

    Singapore First Party organise their election materials at a coffee shop

     

    Source: https://yawningbread.wordpress.com

  • There Will Still Be A Contest In West Coast GRC

    There Will Still Be A Contest In West Coast GRC

    A team of PAP candidates and supporters at the nomination centre at Keming Primary School in Bukit Batok spotted an error in the nomination forms put up by the Reform Party (RP) on Tuesday (Sept 1) to contest West Coast GRC in the Sept 11 General Election.

    West Coast GRC candidate S. Iswaran pointed it out to RP leader Kenneth Jeyaretnam. “It isn’t an easy thing to fix,” he said.

    Contacted by The Straits Times at the nomination centre shortly after the incident, Mr Iswaran explained what had happened. The Reform Party candidates had not stated whether they were contesting as a party or as independents on the form, which had been signed by the Commissioner of Oath.

    “They were supposed to cross one out, but they didn’t delete anything, and it was under oath,” he said. A member of the People’s Action Party (PAP) team spotted it and Mr Iswaran decided to point out the error to Mr Jeyaretnam.

    Mr Iswaran said: “It was grounds for disqualification. But we felt it was important to point this out and give them opportunity to rectify the mistake in good time. We are not looking to win by default on a technicality – we want a fair fight.”

    This required the Reform Party candidates to take down the form, and correct the entry and have it certified by the Commissioner of Oath at the centre.

    They managed to do this within about 10 to 15 minutes, and not miss the 12 noon deadline when nominations close.

    Asked how the Reform Party responded, Mr Iswaran said: “They were surprised and appreciated the fact that we pointed it out in good time.”

    He added: “We did this in the spirit of being fair.”

    In the 2001 General Election, a Workers’ Party team was disqualified from contesting when its nomination papers were found to be incomplete, as it had not filled in a blank for the name of the ward it wanted to contest, which was Aljunied GRC.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Three-Cornered Fight Shaping Up In Macpherson SMC Between PAP, WP And NSP

    Three-Cornered Fight Shaping Up In Macpherson SMC Between PAP, WP And NSP

    In a surprise twist, the single-seat ward of MacPherson might be set for a three-cornered fight after all, after the National Solidarity Party (NSP)’s Cheo Chai Chen said he will throw his hat into the ring on Nomination Day morning.

    Mr Cheo, 65, announced that he will stand in MacPherson when he arrived at Kong Hwa School to file his nomination papers.

    This means that MacPherson will likely see a three-cornered fight between Mr Cheo, the People’s Action Party’s (PAP) Tin Pei Ling, 31, and the Workers’ Party’s Bernard Chen, 29.

    Mr Cheo was an MP for Nee Soon Central from 1991 to 1997 under the Singapore Democratic Party.

    Ms Tin, the incumbent MP, came in for fierce criticism at the last election but appears to have turned the tide of public opinion in her favour.

    Addressing her supporters before filing her nomination papers, Ms Tin said: “Today is the day. We will put up a tough fight. We will put up our best and 101 per cent. Thank you for fighting this with me. Every vote counts we are the best party to do this.”

    The WP and the NSP have crossed swords over MacPherson in recent weeks, after both sides disagreed over who should contest in the single-member constituency.

    The NSP made several U-turns in the lead-up to Nomination Day over whether or not it would contest MacPherson.

    After initially agreeing to not contest the seat, the NSP then voted last month to field a council member there. The decision prompted acting secretary-general Hazel Poa to resign from the party.

    The party then flip-flopped on that controversial decision again, when Mr Steve Chia announced on social media that he would not contest MacPherson SMC or any other constituency in the general election, threatening to throw the party – already seemingly troubled by factional splits – into disarray.

    MacPherson was part of the Marine Parade GRC in the last election in 2011 and reportedly garnered the second-highest PAP vote share among the wards in that GRC.

    Candidates will file their nomination papers between 11am and noon on Tuesday (Sept 1).

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

deneme bonusu