Tag: Sylvia Lim

  • Quah Kim Song Opens Up About Girlfriend, Sylvia Lim

    Quah Kim Song Opens Up About Girlfriend, Sylvia Lim

    To many, it is an unusual relationship, astonishing even.

    He is a former footballer, and she, an opposition politician.

    He prefers privacy and she cannot avoid public scrutiny.

    Quah Kim Song, a widower, is a grandfather. Sylvia Lim has never been married.

    He is 63 and she, 50.

    Both are celebrities in their own right.

    His is a household name, famous for being fleet-footed and light on his feet.

    She draws thousands as a speaker at Workers’ Party (WP) election rallies. Her speeches draw roars of approval from supporters and ridicule from detractors.

    Defending her Aljunied GRC seat against the People’s Action Party (PAP), she is in the driver’s seat of her party’s political ambitions.

    And he is her personal chauffeur.

    Who would have expected them to be an item?

    He was a bright student at Naval Base Secondary School and Raffles Institution, but he devoted his energy to football after his A levels.

    The Manchester City fan held several corporate jobs before retiring early.

    Ms Lim – politician, lawyer and academic – had her early education at CHIJ Our Lady of Good Counsel, CHIJ St Joseph’s Convent and National Junior College.

    She graduated with a law degree and was called to the Bar in Singapore in 1991. She is a senior associate with Peter Low LLC.

    Ms Lim was not a sportswoman, but she enjoys watching sport.

    And Quah, from a famous footballing family, was once one of Singapore’s biggest stars.

    It has been more than two years since they met and, as Quah says: “We are very happy just going with the flow without any preconceptions about what the future might bring.”

    Ms Lim, the WP chairman since 2003, adds: “As both of us are not spring chickens, we accept each other totally and do not change the other.”

    Quah, who had to be persuaded to grant this interview, was put in the spotlight when Ms Lim, who has been extremely busy with the hustings, revealed at a rally that Quah “will act as her driver, ferrying her to rally sites and other places”.

    Quah says he enjoys doing that, adding: “When people see us, they do come up to say ‘hello’ or take pictures with us.

    “I must say that the police at the rallies have been quite nice to me.”

    Quah’s chauffeuring job is a way for them to see each other during the election campaign period, when Ms Lim is swamped with party matters.

    The affable Quah loves watching the rallies, but prefers to be low-profile, usually standing behind the stage but inside the barricades.

    FAS ISSUE

    The talk about town is that Quah encouraged Ms Lim to raise the issue of the Football Association of Singapore being run by PAP Members of Parliament, a move she said had stifled Singapore football.

    To that, Ms Lim replies: “No, he did not alert me. I have raised the issue of Singapore soccer slipping down the Fifa rankings in Parliament before I met Kim Song.

    “In the Workers’ Party manifesto in 2011 and earlier, we had already proposed that sports associations be led by persons from the fraternity (rather) than by politicians.”

    So what is it that attracts the star footballer, who speaks with a measured, soft tone, to the steely politician who is often known for making fiery speeches?

    The answer: Common interests in music and football.

    It was in January 2013 at a WP variety concert that love between the two blossomed.

    Mutual friends had coaxed Quah to sing and his rendition of Keith Locke & The Quests’ Don’t Play That Song impressed Miss Lim.

    Later, they danced on stage. A new romance was born.

    Quah, who loves the oldies and lists American icon James Taylor as his favourite singer, says: “I practise the guitar every day to familiarise myself with the chords to widen my repertoire.

    “I also have a guitar at Sylvia’s family home. We enjoy listening to live music and occasionally sing at home over some drinks.”

    These sessions help Ms Lim relax from the stress that comes with politics.

    She, too, enjoys the oldies and is a big fan of US singer-songwriter Carole King.

    As for their other passion, football, Ms Lim would make it a point to attend social matches when Quah is playing. He remains a drawcard among fanatical fans.

    Recently, at a social match at the Marina Floating Platform, Ms Lim made her presence felt by cheering for Quah’s team.

    Hers is not a new craze. She watched Quah during his heyday at the National Stadium, accompanying her brother Arthur to Malaysia Cup matches.

    So what is life like away from the heat of the hustings?

    “I am a retiree, so I have more freedom with my time. Sylvia is a busy person, so we occupy different time slots,” adds the grandfather of twins Renee and Ryan, three, from his daughter Leonora, 31.

    Quah, who was married to Madam Shirley Wang, a bank manager with OCBC, also has a son, Leon, 35, who is married but has no children. Madam Wang died of cancer in 2007.

    Quah adds that Ms Lim has a special relationship with his children and siblings and “she joins social gatherings involving my children, and my brothers and sisters”.

    When he was once asked how he feels about dating one of Singapore’s most prominent women politicians, Quah replied: “I know her as Sylvia Lim, and not Sylvia Lim, chairman of Workers’ Party.”

    For him, more importantly: “We are enjoying our time together and hope to be together for a long time.”

    But no, while they are a “couple”, marriage is far from their minds.

    In a newspaper interview recently, Ms Lim said: “People do ask us when we’re getting married. But we have discussed this and he’s already a grandfather.

    “We’re enjoying our relationship as it is now, so we have no plans to get married at this point.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Accountant Questions Sylvia Lim’s And AHPETC’s Accounting Practices

    Accountant Questions Sylvia Lim’s And AHPETC’s Accounting Practices

    As an Accountant, here’s my argument with you Sylvia Lim!

    You said “We emphasise that AHPETC has ensured that payments made to FMSS are in line with and within the budget provided under the tender awarded.”

    So that means when you awarded the contract, you MUST know that the Town Council will run into deficit, shouldn’t you ALERT your residents at some point in 2012-2014 and look for solution (which is to increase the TC rate again) instead of keeping quiet?

    You have failed to understand the very basic of budgeting!

    Next, you want to build a 1st world parliament, but you can’t even attract enough people to clean your town, have you asked yourself why?

    And the only MA who bid must be your supporter, wouldn’t you be able to negotiate with them since you know their rate is going to almost “bankrupt” your beloved Town and affecting no one else but only your dear supporters?

    What business logic is this?

    $300k flat professional fees?? That’s $25k per month! Why do they need to factor this in their cost before bidding for the job?

    Don’t you think 在情在理,you should be questioning them for your own people’s sake?

    And lastly I sincerely hope the cleaners employed by FMSS are paid at least 50% above the market rate as compared to all cleaners employed by PAP TC’s MA, since your MA is charging in accordance to the comparison, almost 50% more than other MAs, technically they must have bid at this rate due to cost roll up which means their cost must be higher.

    Don’t worry Sylvia Lim, MND’s letter will not be putting you in disadvantage position.

    Your supporters have compared this to the like of our Ministers’ pay and Our CPF scheme, so you have successfully convinced your supporter that you are a good opposition to vote into parliament. They will continue to support you de!

    Nothing will change their mind and simply we couldn’t be bothered to do that either.

    We are only interested in the people sitting on the fence!

    People who will ask, am I important if I am a resident of Aljunied?

    Do I want to vote in someone who cannot even run a TC well!

    So let’s leave it to the people in Singapore to judge whether have Workers’ Party run the TC well since GE2011!!!

     

    Source: http://sghardtruth.com

  • Marriage Not On The Cards for Sylivia Lim And Quah Kim Song

    Marriage Not On The Cards for Sylivia Lim And Quah Kim Song

    Marriage is not on the cards for Workers’ Party (WP) chairman Sylvia Lim and her boyfriend of more than two years, retired football star Quah Kim Song, as they are happy with where the relationship is at.

    “People do ask us often when we’re getting married. But we have discussed this and he’s already a grandfather and we’re enjoying our relationship as it is now, so we have no plans to get married at this point. We do not know if things will change but, at the moment, we’re quite happy with the way things are,” Ms Lim told The Straits Times.

    Despite her increasingly busy schedule as the party kicks into high gear for the polls, they have been meeting every day.

    “Kim Song is a very understanding person so he would try to get out of the way when I’ve got work to do,” said Ms Lim, 50, wearing a top emblazoned with football powerhouse Brazil’s flag during the interview.

    They have even devised a way to see each other during the impending campaign, as Mr Quah will act as her driver, ferrying her to rally sites and other places.

    Ms Lim also opened up in the exclusive interview about her wish to spend more time with her parents – who are in their late 70s – and her struggles with her father’s ill health due to strokes and dementia.

    “He was always a great supporter of the WP when I joined it 14 years ago and he was so proud when I went on to be sworn in as a Non-Constituency MP in 2006,” she said, adding that both her parents attended the ceremony.

    “But in between, before the 2011 General Election, he had two strokes so he was not able to come when I was elected.”

    Parenthood is not something that Ms Lim will experience “as being a mother is past my age now” and she will not consider procedures such as in vitro fertilisation, she said.

    “I suppose I have missed out on something very special – being a mother. But that was where my life took me so I just have to enjoy my life the way it is.”

    But the topic of marriage and children is still regularly brought up to her, she said, recounting a “hilarious” incident at an event she attended. “Somebody came up to me and said ‘Zao sheng gui zi’ (may you have a son soon) and I looked at the person – ‘Do you know how old I am? What are you trying to tell me?’ ” she said with a laugh.

    As for being a woman in politics, Ms Lim said: “I think my gender is just a fact. I don’t like to dwell on it in any way and I don’t expect people to treat me differently because I’m a woman or to judge me by different standards.”

    Ms Lim was 36 when she joined politics. Looking back on that decision and her journey, she referred to a book by US public speaker Brene Brown titled Daring Greatly. “The fundamental message of that book is that sometimes we may be very self-critical and face criticism from others as well,” she said.

    “But we should always remember there’s something to celebrate about the endeavour itself. And people who are prepared to come forward to be criticised should also sometimes cut ourselves some slack.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • WP To Field Social Media-Savvy Candidates

    WP To Field Social Media-Savvy Candidates

    The Workers’ Party (WP) is looking to field a younger, more social media-savvy slate of candidates for the coming General Election (GE), according to Secretary-General Low Thia Khiang on Aug 12. In the 10 days preceding that statement, four potential new faces for the party set up their public Facebook pages.

    The four – lawyers He Ting Ru, 32, and Dennis Tan, 44, as well as sales consultant Cheryl Denise Loh, 32, and associate librarian Mohamed Fairoz Shariff, 36 – all set up their public Facebook pages between Aug 2 and Aug 10.

    All four have been sighted during WP walkabouts and identified by various media as potential new candidates at the upcoming GE.

    Of the four, Ms He has attracted the most attention, with some calling her WP’s answer to the People’s Action Party’s Member of Parliament (MP) Tin Pei Ling or the National Solidarity Party’s possible candidate Kevryn Lim.

    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, 7 August 2015

     

    She is the most popular of the quartet – as of Aug 14, her Facebook page has 976 likes compared to Ms Loh (723), Mr Fairoz (156) and Mr Tan (3) – and is also the only one among the four potential new WP candidates to also hold both a Twitter and an Instagram account.

    And off we go to visit!

    Posted by Cheryl Denise Loh on Sunday, 9 August 2015

     

    Their posts are unmistakably political in nature, with Ms He posting about her walkabouts in the Katong and Geylang Serai area. Both fall within the Marine Parade GRC boundaries. Mr Fairoz shared photos of his house visits in Simei (East Coast GRC) and Fengshan SMC.

     

     

    ALREADY ONLINE

    While Mr Low seeks to bring in social media candidates, the existing WP MPs are ramping up their activity on social media, too.

    For instance, party chairman Sylvia Lim set up her Instagram account on Wednesday with a picture of her having a meal at a Fengshan hawker centre. Her photo caption, which included #reasonstowin, sparked speculation that she may leave Aljunied GRC to run in the Single Member Constituency (SMC).

    That said, she has not updated her Facebook or Twitter profiles since 2011.

    Chair of WP’s media team, non-constituency MP (NCMP) Gerald Giam, 37, is a more active online presence, gathering more than 5,000 likes on his Facebook page, more than 300 followers on Instagram and more than 2,000 followers for hisTwitter account that was created in 2009.

    Punggol East SMC MP Lee Li Lian, also 37, has 12,000 likes on her equally active Facebook page, and also more than 300 followers on her Instagram account, which was created nearly five years ago.

    MPs Faisal Manap, Png Eng Huat and Pritam Singh as well as NCMP Yee Jen Jong have between 2,000 and 10,000 Facebook likes between them.

    Topping them all, however, is Mr Chen Show Mao. The 54-year-old party treasurer has 41,000 fans on Facebook and more than 14,000 followers on Twitter, making him the most social media savvy candidate in WP’s ranks – at least for now.

    The glaring exception? Mr Low himself. The party Secretary-General does not have a social media account of his own, although some supporters manage a Facebook Community Page with news about him. It has not been updated since October 2011.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • WP’s Sylvia Lim Dismisses Talk Of Competing In Fengshan SMC

    WP’s Sylvia Lim Dismisses Talk Of Competing In Fengshan SMC

    Workers’ Party (WP) chairman Sylvia Lim will likely stay put to defend her seat in Aljunied GRC at the next election, party sources said yesterday, dismissing speculation that she is being sent out to boost WP’s chances in a different ward.

    Talk of such a move spiked after WP chief Low Thia Khiang refused to say if his Aljunied team will remain unchanged for the polls and Ms Lim posted a photo of herself eating at Fengshan Market and Food Centre online. The photo, the first in her newly set up Instagram account, was accompanied by the caption “the taste of Fengshan – heavenly” and a cryptic hashtag “#reasonstowin”.

    Party insiders, however, were quick to pour cold water on the idea, telling The Straits Times that internal chatter pointed to the Aljunied GRC team remaining unchanged. A party member said Mr Low wants to keep the current Aljunied team intact to “entrench the opposition vote in Aljunied GRC”. Mr Low himself has said he will definitely be standing in the constituency.

    Political observers also agreed that moving Ms Lim to the newly created Fengshan single-seat ward did not make sense.

    It would open up the party to accusations that it is taking Aljunied GRC for granted, raise questions about why the chairman of an embattled town council was abandoning it, and suggest a demotion for a senior party leader.

    Said political scientist Derek da Cunha: “Ms Lim eating at a hawker centre at Fengshan could simply be a smokescreen. Moving out of Aljunied only makes sense if Ms Lim, given her relatively high profile nationally, were to helm a WP GRC team.”

    Fengshan SMC is one of the five GRCs and five single-seat wards that WP wants to contest in the next polls. It was carved out of East Coast GRC, where WP polled 45.17 per cent of valid votes in 2011.

    At the same time, observers did not want to completely discount the possibility that WP is plotting a surprise move. Institute of Policy Studies senior research fellow Gillian Koh said: “While Mr Low is saying that he is going to hold fort in Aljunied GRC, if the party does wish to extend its reach, it will have to send its other top gun out.”

    Dr Koh added that if Ms Lim does make the move, where she ends up will depend on “whether the WP is ambitious in wanting to make a serious bid for East Coast GRC… or it is a little more modest and places its chairman in a single seat”.

    Similarly, Dr da Cunha said WP could calculate that it can hold Aljunied even without Ms Lim on the slate there, since Ms Lim’s Serangoon division drew the highest vote for WP in all five Aljunied divisions.

    Former Nominated MP Zulkifli Baharudin said WP would probably have to weigh the options of having Ms Lim “stay and solve the issues in the safe seat” and of letting her helm another GRC but face the potential of losing.

    Ms Lim is the chairman of the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council, which is currently sorting out finance and governance issues after the Auditor-General’s Office found lapses in these areas in a year-long audit.

    “Certainly the issue complicates things for them, otherwise it would be quite obvious that they should spread out their best candidates instead of putting them all in the same place,” said Mr Zulkifli.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com