Tag: PAP

  • Tan Chuan-Jin Anchor Minister For Marine Parade GRC

    Tan Chuan-Jin Anchor Minister For Marine Parade GRC

    Minister for Social and Family Development Tan Chuan-Jin will be the anchor minister at Marine Parade GRC in the upcoming election, he announced on Saturday evening (Aug 15) at the sidelines of a Hari Raya celebration event.

    Mr Tan said this means he will be “playing a leading role” within a team, adding that ESM Goh Chok Tong will continue to run in Marine Parade GRC for the upcoming election.

    “We will continue leveraging on his experience. He’s much loved and respected by many of the residents in Marine Parade and Marine Parade GRC, and I would say many Singaporeans as well,” Mr Tan said. “We will discuss issues together and I think we operate very much as a team, and I don’t see that changing.”

    ESM Goh Chok Tong had on Friday announced that he will be standing for election in Marine Parade GRC, where he has been an MP for close to 40 years.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Teck Ghee Residents Can Look Forward To More Upgrading Works

    Teck Ghee Residents Can Look Forward To More Upgrading Works

    Residents in Teck Ghee can look forward to more upgrading works within the constituency this year and also in the years ahead, said Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

    These include an improved community centre, which will be completed by 2017, and several Home Improvement Programmes (HIP) projects.

    Mr Lee, who is a Member of Parliament of the ward, said this at the Ang Mo Kio National Day Dinner on Saturday evening (Aug 15).

    “Besides that, we will be upgrading our blocks. We have several HIP projects already, but we will have more HIP projects this year and next year. Year by year, we will make this place better. Year by year, as our children grow up, we will see that we are able to make our lives improve,” he said.

    At the dinner, Mr Lee also introduced to residents the PAP candidates that will contest alongside him in Ang Mo Kio GRC in the coming elections. The candidates had been officially announced earlier in the day.

    He hoped that residents could give them their support in order to work together.

    Mr Lee again thanked the outgoing MPs – Mr Inderjit Singh and Mr Seng Han Thong – for their contributions.

    CONSENSUS WON’T BE EASY: WONG KAN SENG

    At the Bishan East National Day Dinner on Saturday, Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC MP Wong Kan Seng said as Singapore becomes more diverse, bringing about consensus on national issues will not be easy.

    As such, the country will need competent leaders with integrity, foresight and drive. He said the Government must also make decisions that are in the best interest of Singaporeans and not just because they want to be popular.

    Also present at the event was anchor minister for Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC, Dr Ng Eng Hen, who shared with residents how the areas in the constituency have been spruced up with the addition of facilities and amenities. These included new lifts at multi-storey car parks, subsidised hand rails for the elderly in HDB flats and fitness stations.

    Dr Ng also mentioned that the neighbouring Potong Pasir constituency has become more vibrant under MP Sitoh Yih Pin, with the completion of the Kallang River Active, Beautiful, Clean Waters Programme. He added that it would be good for the entire central region if both towns continue to improve.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • From TV To Politics, PAP Candidate Darryl David Relishes Chance To Serve

    From TV To Politics, PAP Candidate Darryl David Relishes Chance To Serve

    Most Singaporeans would remember him as the host of popular television game show “The Pyramid Game”, and Mr Darryl David, 45, believes the skills which he had picked up as a media personality would be useful in serving residents should he be elected as part of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s Ang Mo Kio Group Representation Constituency (GRC) team.

    In all, Mr David spent 22 years in the media and communications industry, and the experience of working as a team under pressure would stand him in good stead in the political arena, he said. So, too, would the interpersonal skills that he had acquired, he added.

    Mr David was among the new candidates introduced by Mr Lee today (Aug 15) at a press conference. “I have spent time understanding (residents), trying to understand the issues they’re dealing with… working with grassroots leaders. And I believe that through what I’ve learnt… I have built up a series of experiences that will allow me to help and contribute to the community and society at large,” he said.

    The formal introduction of Mr David as a People’s Action Party (PAP) candidate makes him the first well-known ex-media personality here to enter the political fray. Nevertheless, he was also quick to point out his experience as deputy director at the School of Design in Temasek Polytechnic, and his involvement in grassroots activities and several national committees.

    Mr David started community work as a district councillor with the North-East Community Development Council in 2009. Over the past two and a half years, he has been active in Sengkang West, Kebun Bahru and Ang Mo Kio-Hougang. He will be succeeding Mr Yeo Guat Kwang in the Ang Mo Kio-Hougang division. Mr Yeo will be redeployed to another GRC.

    Apart from English, Mr David is able to converse in Mandarin and Hokkien as well. This has helped him establish rapport with residents, especially the elderly, and understand the issues they are facing, he said. “As an educator, I’ve learnt that it’s only through patience and empathy that you’re able to realise the potential of the student because every student learns differently. So likewise when you deal with residents and their problems, you have to appreciate that every problem is unique to every resident,” he added.

    If elected, Mr David, the father or two children aged four and seven, said he would champion issues related to childcare and the ageing population. Adding that he has seen first-hand the quality and calibre of polytechnic and Institute of Technical Education (ITE) students, described himself as a “big supporter” for skills-based education – and this was something that he hoped to push for at the national level, he said.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • PAP Has Lost My Vote. Permanently. Forever

    PAP Has Lost My Vote. Permanently. Forever

    Would the Amos Yee Saga have an influence on our Singaporeans’ voting choices?

    And how significant would be this impact be, to our upcoming elections?

    This is the last interview Offbeat Perspectives will be posting to close off the collection of audio interviews we took @ the Free Amos Yee Rally on July 5 of 2015. Feel free to “like” us on our Facebook page – Offbeat Perspectives Facebook Page if you hope to receive updates on our upcoming street interviews where we seek on-the-ground opinions towards GE 2015.

    * DISCLAIMER:

    1) The articles of any online sites using quotes from our interviews are not representative of Offbeat Perspectives vision, mission, and aims, nor are we affiliated to any website. We are independently run as simply, Offbeat Perspectives.

    2) We respect the opinions expressed by our interviewees, but it should not be interpreted as that of Offbeat Perspectives. Our role is to act as a platform to share the diverse views of people.

    3) I didn’t ask nor require interviewees to provide their names 🙂

    UntitledProfile

    • 57 Years Old
    • Female
    • Chinese
    • Retired
    • Atheist

    Regards to public response towards Amos Yee

    “The use of his words, his behavior, his audacity is something Singaporeans are not used too and they somehow feel offended by it, which I don’t understand but; it’s not something that they have seen before and that’s something they don’t understand, maybe they fear.”

    On the openness of Singaporeans

    “I don’t think is just the older generation. The younger people are reacting, and some of them themselves are very offensive to Amos Yee so I don’t think is a generation thing.”

    How the authorities should have handled the matter

    “They should have just ignored or give him a warning. It would have all died down and it wouldn’t have all these hoo haa.”

    When asked if people might start to follow in Amos Yee footsteps

    “What will happen? What do you think? They will overthrow the government? I don’t think so.”

    Amos Yee charges

    “I don’t think the issue is to do with religion in the first place. [So you see it as the political side?] And yes, the timing also you know? One week after LKY’s death. [So you see more it as a political move?] Oh definitely. And I think they are using him as an example of – there’s a line that Singapore should not cross.”

    If she felt the Saga would impact the upcoming GE 2015

    “Definitely. PAP has lost my vote. Permanently. Forever. Actually before this, I had voted PAP but not the last election. [Was there any reason?] The same reason as now, but now, I’m even more sure. Now I just see them as being really evil, cruel, and they should not do this to their own people. And the government should take care of their own citizens and not instill fear and intimidate, and personally I don’t like bullies.”

    Whether she sees’s Singapore as a democratic country?

    “(Chuckles) I mean, I don’t understand the question, I mean if you want to talk about elections and vote – each one has a vote, that is democratic but I don’t understand democracy anymore. I don’t know what it means. All I know is that I want people to treat each other right, take care of each other. Do not bully or intimidate and be cruel, especially to your own people, to each other, that’s all.”

    If she agrees with western perspectives that deems Singapore as an authoritarian state

    “Yes, definitely. [What is one change you would like to see in Singapore?] I would like to see this not happen, and that people be given a voice to recognize we have a right to question, and that nothing and nobody is above criticism – full stop.”

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     “Good government includes pursuit of national interest regardless of theories or ideologies. Good government is pragmatic government.”

    – Lee Kuan Yew

    • The way the government handled the matter, are they going to gain or lose more supporters?
    • It can really go either ways as some rallied the government’s decisions, while some felt Amos treatment was too disproportionate. Only time will tell. Vote wisely.
    • Are we going to let one incident waver our vote? Are we going to let one incident change our vote? The next 4 years is going to be a very long one if we do not vote wisely. Do we want to place stability over change? Or do we want to place change over stability?
    • The ball is in our hands. It’s time to head into the playing field, the score will be out in a due. Let’s weigh our outcomes wisely and vote for what we think will do us well for the next 4 years

     

    Source: https://offbeatperspectives.wordpress.com

  • Tharman: Social Upliftment Is Real Success Story

    Tharman: Social Upliftment Is Real Success Story

    At the heart of the Singapore story in the past 50 years is its broad-based social upliftment, not its multi-fold increase in gross domestic product per capita, said Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam yesterday as he stressed that the Government’s more decisive shift towards mitigating inequality began close to a decade ago.

    “It’s not just the innovation of the last five years. And I recognise, of course, that there’s some political cunning in saying that this all came about because of GE2011,” he said, referring to the General Election four years ago.

    “I’m sorry, it didn’t. The world didn’t start in 2011. We made very clear our intentions and our motivations in 2007, stated that it was going to be a multi-year strategy and, step by step, starting from the kids when they’re young, through working life, and into the senior years, we’ve been moving towards a more inclusive society.”

    Mr Tharman, who is also Finance Minister, added: “We intend to continue on this journey, learning from experience and improving where we can. But this is not the result of 2011.”

    The broad-based social upliftment came about through a combination of economic and social policies, and Singapore’s economy could not have succeeded without social strategies, he said at the Economic Society of Singapore’s SG50 Special Distinguished Lecture last night. “Social strategies were critical all along the way,” he said. “Economic and social strategies have gone hand in hand and that is the Singapore story.”

    From the 1960s to 1980s, the focus was very much on economic survival with very little support for the poor in the “explicit sense”, he said. Social well-being went up through focusing on the fundamental basics such as jobs and housing.

    Mr Tharman noted that in the 1965 Budget speech by Mr Lim Kim San, there was only one mention of social intervention — the provision of 40 more places at Mount Emily Girls’ Home to cater to a total of 85 girls.

    From the 1990s, social policies started coming to the fore, with Edusave grants for students, Medifund to assist the poor with medical expenses and housing grants for the resale market announced, he said.

    From around 2006, a more decisive rebalancing to ensure Singapore remains an inclusive society began, he added.

    Rebutting sceptics who said the shift came about after the 2011 General Election, Mr Tharman flashed charts to show the amount of government transfers lower-income households received, after paying taxes.

    In 2005, the bottom 20 per cent of households in terms of income received S$103 in net government transfers for every S$100 earned. In 2010, the quantum of net transfers increased to S$136. By 2015, the figure was S$163.

    Government transfers include Workfare income supplements, housing grants, healthcare and education subsidies.

    In the next phase of development, the Government wants to make sure Singapore becomes a more inclusive and innovative society, said Mr Tharman, who noted that “the two things go hand in hand”.

    Singapore must keep creating value and earn its place in the world by being original to keep incomes growing. It must also keep working to ensure “birth is never destiny”, he said. The low- and middle-income will also need more assurance as they get older.

    The Silver Support Scheme, which will provide payouts to needy elderly, will temper inequality in one’s golden years. The Central Provident Fund scheme is also a key pillar as it is not only an individual savings scheme, but also one that features government transfers to the lower-income through Workfare, housing grants and extra interest earned.

    Based on the latest policies in these areas, a 25-year-old at the 10th percentile of the income ladder today would have received about S$200,000 from the Government — or about 40 per cent of his total CPF savings — by the time he turns 65, Mr Tharman said.

    All countries would like to sustain income growth, mitigate inequality and keep social mobility, but few have succeeded or maintained success on all three fronts, he said. But Singapore has not done badly on these fronts.

    Singapore’s Gini coefficient was relatively high even back in 1980 and its level of inequality now is “not particularly high” before taxes and transfers, when compared with countries such as Finland and the United States, using the OECD method that adjusts for family size.

    Countries like Denmark and Finland achieve large reductions in their Gini coefficients after taxes and transfers, but this is through heavy taxation on the middle-income, said Mr Tharman.

    Singapore’s approach is to provide targeted help to temper inequality, while keeping relatively low overall tax revenues and helping everyone to move up, he said.

    The Republic needs to work hard at it, experiment where possible and learn from mistakes, “but not think there’s only one model that we need to follow”, said Mr Tharman.

    “We can’t take a hands-off policy, it can’t be all about self-reliance because the natural workings of the market will lead to inequality. Excessive inequality and it will just sap the morale of our society,” he said. “Neither do we want a strategy of handouts all the way because that just takes the pride out of people and it saps the energy of our society.”

    Mr Tharman added: “We’ve got to have a system … of hand-ups starting from young, helping everyone discover their strengths, helping them to have a real chance of succeeding in what they’re doing and having the pride of contributing, so that everyone feels they’re contributing even as they get a fair deal.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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