Tag: Singapore democratic Party

  • Jaslyn Go Drawn To SDP Over Education And Cost Of Living Issues

    Jaslyn Go Drawn To SDP Over Education And Cost Of Living Issues

    Mother-of-two Jaslyn Go began working during the school holidays from the age of 12, travelling from her home in Bukit Merah to a Paya Lebar garment factory to earn S$5 a day.

    She began working part-time from Secondary Two at McDonald’s, but juggling work and studies took its toll. She ventured into the working world after her O-Levels, doing sales and marketing mainly in the automobile industry.

    Ms Go said yesterday that she has also personally experienced challenges facing small and medium enterprises, running a construction company with her husband since 2004 that now hires 30 people and has an annual turnover of S$2 million.

    Her children are aged 12 and 10, and Ms Go said she feels strongly that education policies should encourage children to enjoy the process of learning.

    “Do we actually want our kids to grow up in this kind of stressful environment (today)?” she said.

    There is now also an overemphasis on paper qualifications, she feels. “In my generation, we are still able to make it without the paper chase. Unfortunately, I can’t say the same for the younger generations,” she wrote in her biography published on the SDP’s website.

    Her son will be taking his Primary School Leaving Examination this year and she is counting on her supportive husband to look after the children in her absence.

    Ms Go joined the Singapore Democratic Party in 2007, drawn by concerns over the cost of living, she said.

    “I felt strongly about it as a new mother. I was worried for my children, how they were going to … pay for a decent house and having to compete for places in schools, and (for) job opportunities,” she said.

    Jaslyn Go Hui Leng, 43

    Sales director of a construction company co-founded with her husband

    Fact file:

    • Has a certificate in early childhood education and a diploma in sales and marketing

    • Began working part-time from the age of 14 to help her family financially

    • Oversees sales, does training and develops profit targets at the construction company set up with her husband in 2004, that now has 30 staff and annual turnover of S$2 million

    She said:

    “Attitude in life surpasses academic qualifications … The twists that life throw at you can be turned into valuable lessons, they are experiences that books can’t teach you. They certainly brought me to where I am today.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • SDP Opens New Office At Ang Mo Kio

    SDP Opens New Office At Ang Mo Kio

    The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) on Saturday (Aug 22) opened its new office at Ang Mo Kio Street 62, saying that it is “good and ready to go” for the election. The political party was previously based in Jalan Gelenggeng.

    The election, which is widely expected to be called in the next few weeks, will be the first time Secretary-General Chee Soon Juan will be contesting after being discharged of bankruptcy in 2012. He was barred from contesting in the previous two general elections (2006 and 2011) due to the charge.

    “I cannot wait to stand,” he said, “To get up on stage and connect with Singaporeans again.” He said his message to voters was that Singapore “can be much better than we are today”.

    Dr Chee said the party will be announcing its line-up “very soon”, saying that the SDP is eyeing five constituencies: Holland-Bukit Timah and Marsiling-Yew Tee, both four-member GRCs, and the single seat wards of Bukit Batok, Bukit Panjang and Yuhua. Party leaders said they have continued to walk the ground since after the 2011 election, on top of publishing alternative policy proposals on issues such as housing, healthcare and education.

    Referring to the People’s Action Party (PAP) suite of infrastructural plans announced at the unveiling of its Holland-Bukit Timah slate on Saturday morning, Dr Chee said, “It just sounds very much what you would expect them to do before an election … What is lacking in every PAP-run constituency is that it’s very brick-and-mortar, steel. But where is that X-factor where we can involve the people, not just to upgrade their quality of life, their well-being? And I think all that is missing from Holland-Bukit Timah.”

    On giving up Sembawang GRC to the National Solidarity Party in order to avoid a multi-party fight with the incumbent People’s Action Party, Dr Chee said it was “the most difficult decision we had to make”, and that Sembawang “is very dear to us”. He added that giving way to the NSP on the matter of Sembawang had “released some pressure” in the horse-trading discussions, and that this did not mean that the party was giving up the GRC. “We look forward to the day when we shall return”, said Dr Chee.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • SDP Asking Elections Department To Clarify Rules For Coming GE

    SDP Asking Elections Department To Clarify Rules For Coming GE

    The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) has written to the Elections Department seeking clarification on several elections rules, especially those on the use of promotional material and access to counting centres .

    The letter from SDP chairman Jeffrey George, which was released to media on Friday, said the party was seeking “clear, concise and written rules that will be practised by all Returning Officers”. The letter goes on to outline incidents in previous elections where the party said there was confusion over procedures its polling agents and counting agents were required to follow.

    “In short, the multiple standards of operations by the Elections Officials at the various Polling and the Counting centres resulted in us not being able to fully utilise our resources and ground supporters/ volunteers,” wrote Mr George.

    The SDP is also asking if it can play party music during campaign rallies and also if it can have a decorated campaign bus.

    “We have the intention to advertise via bus wrapping advertisement on a Private Hire Bus for the nine days of electoral campaigning starting from Nomination Day for the upcoming General Election,” said the letter.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Chee Soon Juan: Will Lee Hsien Loong Be The Leader That Singapore Needs

    Chee Soon Juan: Will Lee Hsien Loong Be The Leader That Singapore Needs

    Observers will undoubtedly note that Mr Lee Hsien Loong’s decision to call for a general election two years ahead of time is a clever one. How can it not be? The celebration of our 50th National Day, itself a significant milestone, allows the Government to hand out goodwill packages in various guises that will usher in the feel good factor for the PAP.

    Add to this a system awash with anti-democratic practices – the continued use of the print and broadcast media to constantly churn out welcome news for his administration, the redrawing of electoral boundaries behind closed doors, the introduction of the GRC system in the 1980s to hobble opposition efforts, the crackdown on the online media, the employment of HDB upgrading as punishment or reward, the dishing out of financial packages just before elections, the use of state-funded organisations for political purposes, the imposition of impossibly short campaign periods – and it is not difficult to see how the next polls will again end up in overall victory for the PAP.

    It is a system that does not, indeed cannot, admit of democratic progress.

    As I said, it may be politically clever to craft such a system. But cleverness is not what Singapore needs right now – especially at this stage of our country’s development. There is not any doubt that Mr Lee’s continued adoption of such tactics will help his party secure another five years in power, as it has done so for the last 50. But he should be reminded that, in the fullness of time, such an approach has not been looked kindly upon.

    The PAP may insist, as it is wont to do, that its mandate to govern is derived from the majority of voters in regularly held elections. But it is also aware, I am certain, of the difference between elections held in undemocratic systems and genuinely free and fair elections held in democratic ones.

    Strongman-type systems led by autocrats like Suharto and Ferdinand Marcos held regular elections to legitimise their rule and, for a time, few questioned their right to govern. Whether their legacies endured the stringent test of time is another matter.

    In undemocratic states, it is not the majority’s opinion at the polls that rulers should be worried about. It is the minority, rather, the one which watches – and gets increasingly agitated at – how the system is being manipulated to buttress the status quo at which rulers should cast their nervous glance. For is there ever any doubt that it is this segment of the population that brings about change? History is replete with instances where a significant minority calls for, works towards and, ultimately, brings about political reform. These movements are especially potent when frustration and resentment with the ruling clique’s intransigence crosses the threshold.

    At home, anger at the current political situation is palpable and some have resorted to action (seehere). If the PAP is content to label this group of citizens as the ‘noisy minority’, then it should re-read the preceding paragraph. For these people, the prospect of being unable to bring about political change through the ballot box only makes the PAP’s claim of legitimate power sound dangerously vacuous.

    It will be undoubtedly (autocratic) politics-as-usual after the next election. The country will continue to hum along. But this is predicated on the assumption that circumstances in and around Singapore remain unmolested.

    It is, however, a big assumption. Socio-economic developments within our shores point to a future fraught with difficulty and uncertainty: An expensive city with limited opportunity especially for the youth, an ageing population with retirees having little or no income, an economy with wide income disparity, a crowded city set to become even more congested, and a people increasingly feeling alienated from their country of birth.

    Developments farther afield are not more encouraging. Economic uncertainty in Europe and China will not leave Singapore unscathed. The spat over claims on some islands in the South China Sea by China and her neighbours in the region is another flash point.

    When a crisis envelops Singapore, as one will sooner or later, how will the people react? More important, will Singaporeans continue to accept placidly the PAP’s undemocratic rule especially if they feel that the situation is caused, or at least exacerbated, by the party in the first place?

    On the bright side, the problem is not intractable. The Prime Minister is in a unique position rarely accorded to people. He stands at a political crossroads: He can open up the system in Singapore and seal his legacy as an enlightened statesman, or he can continue the ugly spectacle of winning elections through undemocratic means.

    I can think of two other persons who were in a similar position but who took their countries on very dissimilar paths: Taiwan’s Chiang Ching Kuo and Syria’s Bashir Al-Assad. Both became their countries’ leaders following their fathers’ rule: Chiang Kai-shek and Hafez Al-Assad. While the younger Chiang opened the door by instituting political reforms (albeit in a limited manner) for Taiwan to develop into a vibrant democracy that it is today, Bashir Al-Assad continued with his father’s dictatorial rule which eventually met with sustained rebellion and reduced his country to rubble.

    It is said that politicians think about the next elections, leaders think about the next generation. Will Mr Lee be the leader that Singapore needs?

     

    Source: www.cheesoonjuan.com

  • SDP Mahu Kemuka Tiga Isu Sewaktu Berkempen

    SDP Mahu Kemuka Tiga Isu Sewaktu Berkempen

    Parti Demokratik Singapura (SDP) akan mengetengahkan tiga isu semasa berkempen dalam pilihan raya umum akan datang, kata pemimpin parti itu, Dr Chee Soon Juan.

    Tiga isu tersebut ialah kos hidup, Jumlah Minimum Tabung Simpanan Pekerja (CPF) dan jumlah penduduk negara yang semakin bertambah.

    Isu yang bakal diketengahkan itu berdasarkan apa yang dimaklumkan kepada beliau oleh warga Singapura, terutama kesukaran dalam menampung kos sara hidup yang semakin meningkat, kata beliau dalam satu pameran di Holiday Inn Singapore Atrium kelmarin, yang diadakan sempena menyambut ulang tahun ke-35 parti pembangkang itu.

    Menurut beliau, SDP pertama kali menentang keperluan Jumlah Minimum CPF 20 tahun lalu.

    “Kami mahu memberitahu pengundi: jika anda tidak mempunyai pembangkang, Parti Tindakan Rakyat (PAP) akan bertindak bebas dalam mempertingkatkan Jumlah Minimum,” ujarnya.

    Pada Februari lalu, panel penasihat yang dilantik pemerintah menyarankan menjadikan skim CPF lebih fleksibel, namun berkata keperluan bagi jumlah asas untuk disimpan perlu dikekalkan.

    Mengenai jumlah penduduk pula, Dr Chee berkata ia penting dalam menilai sama ada Singapura mempunyai prasarana mencukupi.

    Terdapat bantahan pada 2013 apabila pemerintah memperkenalkan Kertas Putih mengenai parameter bagi jumlah penduduk lebih ramai.

    Namun, kertas itu juga menggariskan rancangan bagi prasarana menampung potensi jumlah penduduk antara 6.5 juta hingga 6.9 juta orang menjelang 2030.

    Dr Chee kelmarin berkata SDP telah membuat persiapan bagi pilihan raya umum akan datang, yang perlu diadakan menjelang Januari 2017, berdasarkan anggapan ia boleh diadakan seawal September ini.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg