Tag: WP

  • WP Big Guns Steady But Newbies Uninspiring

    WP Big Guns Steady But Newbies Uninspiring

    I am a voter in Aljunied GRC and I will continue to vote WP. They are our real check against the PAP in the Parliament. Only they can voice the people’s unhappiness, unlike the PAP MPs who are nothing but paper tigers due to the party whip.

    Thus far the big guns of WP have been steadily whacking the PAP and offering alternative solutions for the future of Singapore. But the same cannot be said of some of the newbies. I have been observing the speeches of WP non big guns and find that they are very good with asking rhetorical questions: do you this? Do you that? Do you think? The answer is of course no and this tactic seem to be a big crowd pleaser.

    But sometimes it is over-used, like last night WP candidate Terence Tan asked these rhetorical questions for almost half of his speech. The problem with rhetorical questions is it sounds good but when they come to the substance of their speech, like the policies, it becomes very visibly bad. On Terence, I thot was very aggressive with how he ended his speech by telling votes “You BETTER vote for Li Lian …”; as WP now its ok, but it was like demanding voters like dat, and honestly not very good.

    Some candidates really cannot speak. If I am a Fengshan voter, I will be seriously worried with Dennis Tan’s Chinese speech last night. To say it was bad is an understatement. Honestly, it was atrocious. All I got out of it was that he does a lot of walkabouts and will do a lot of walkabouts and meet many people in coffeeshops if he elected. It got slightly better with his English delivery but by then, the damage done.

    It is important for WP to continue to have their big guns in every rally: LTK, Sylvia, CSM and Pritam. But they also need to tell their newbies to be more constructive and bring the fight to the PAP. If they don’t, they might fall to the same PAP GRC trap where less credible candidates get overlooked because they have heavyweights around.

    In this case, if you look at it, if lee li lian or the Sengkang West guy or the Bernard Chen in Macpherson do not have the big guns speaking for them, honestly I really think their chances are much reduced. Strangely if PAP rallies were to have their big guns like PM or DPMs talking in every GRC rally, they will be attacked. Strange but true in Sg.

    Mr Ng
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Why Are The WP And SDP Rallies So Popular

    Why Are The WP And SDP Rallies So Popular

    News is probably trending about two rallies:

    • The size of the WP crowds at WP rallies.
    • Chee Soon Juan’s return after 15 years of not being able to contest in elections.

    The crowds are huge and much has been said about them. Do the crowds translate to votes? Why are people so attracted to such rallies?

    Here are three plausible reasons, though I will not qualify the robustness of these reasons from a logical perspective. After all, with such rallies, emotions tend to run very high. Here are three reasons, why they are not quite sound, and better suggestions (if possible) to achieve said objectives.

    1.) I want to know what the opposition has to say; I’ve heard the ruling party too much.

    The argument goes: The PAP has the MSM, so we had better go to the rally to listen first-hand to what the opposition has to say so that the media won’t perturb the message.

    The issue: you get much more than what you attend the rally for. In rallies, it is a typical routine to get the crowd angry with the incumbent. (The incumbent clearly cannot do this.) With an angry crowd, the rally speaker then goes on to rattle about their suggestions and why said anger with be soothed. It could be about foreigners or political persecution to make people angry. Lines such as “why so many FT stealing jobs” or “why such a dominant party for so long unlike other countries” will anger people. Then even suggestions such as “zero foreign worker growth” and “abolish ISA” sound promising even if they were never actually discussed at the rally.

    WP manifesto

    The solution: if you really want to know what the opposition wants to say, read the manifesto, don’t turn up for the rally. The emotional soundbites are slightly reduced.

    2.) I really don’t like the incumbent.

    The argument goes: Show support for the opposition by turning up for the rally! Let the incumbent know that we are really angry!

    crowd_1

    The issue: it would be quite inane to suggest that the incumbent doesn’t know about the anger. Certainly their volunteers, when scolded by irate citizens will know that. Political theory also states that voters can be divided in three blocs: hardcore incumbent, swing voters and hardcore opposition. Clearly the people who fall under (2) are the hardcore opposition.

    The solution: Stay that way. Nothing this article will suggest will necessarily be of any impact.

    3.) Actually, I don’t know about politics, neither do I know about policy, so perhaps I should go listen to find out what’s going on.

    The argument goes: since I know nothing, and apparently this rally seems popular, so go for it.

    The issue: in most rallies one cannot learn much about policy. It is simply not the place to have robust discussion over policy. Who uses statistics and charts to explain why a certain number is thought of? Is it arbitrary or derived? Who cares at a rally. The rally is fundamentally one to gather emotional support, not rational support (except if the speaker is very well-known to just put forth rational arguments). Thus if this is the objective, it will backfire.

    The solution: the rally really has no place for you. Three good starting points to read policy: IPS Commons, various intellectual thinkers, and the press releases of important documents such as the Budget, white papers and ministry press releases. From there, make a choice on the supplementary material to read.

     

    Source: www.fivestarsandamoon.com

  • WP Mahu Lebihan TTFS Digunakan Untuk Pelajar Dewasa Melayu Buru Ijazah Pertama

    WP Mahu Lebihan TTFS Digunakan Untuk Pelajar Dewasa Melayu Buru Ijazah Pertama

    Parti Pekerja (WP) mengadakan rapat pilihan raya untuk pasukannya bagi GRC East Coast, di Simei Road.

    Salah seorang calonnya bagi GRC tersebut, Encik Fairoz Shariff berucap tentang kesukaran yang dihadapi para pelajar dewasa.

    Beliau menekankan lagi kandungan manifesto pilihan raya WP, yang mahu mewajibkan syarikat-syarikat melaksanakan peraturan kerja fleksibel untuk golongan tersebut.

    Beliau juga mendesak supaya wang lebihan dari skim Subsidi Yuran Pengajian Tinggi (TTFS), yang kemudian disalurkan ke Dana Pembangunan Pendidikan (EDF) kendalian MENDAKI, digunakan untuk membiayai pengajian pelajar dewasa Melayu yang memburu ijazah pertama mereka.

    Encik Fairoz berkata: “Laporan kewangan MENDAKI untuk tahun 2014 menunjukkan bahawa kira-kira $18 juta subsidi TTFS yang tidak diagihkan, telah dipindahkan ke EDF pada tahun 2014.

    “Saya berpendapat membenarkan pelajar-pelajar dewasa Melayu kita untuk memanfaatkan dana yang tidak diagihkan dari subsidi TTFS tidak akan menimbulkan masalah kerana jumlahnya amat besar. Lagipun, pelajar-pelajar dewasa Melayu kita, patut dikategorikan sebagai pelajar-pelajar pengajian tinggi walaupun mereka belajar secara sambilan.”

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Do Opposition MM Politicians Have A Hidden Agenda?

    Do Opposition MM Politicians Have A Hidden Agenda?

    Aiseyman! This GE is so exciting siol~ With all seats being contested, it is a sight to see so many Malay-Muslim opposition candidates standing up to be counted to speak up for Singaporeans, and be the voice of the MM community. For far too long, the MM community has been under-represented in our country’s political conversation that it would be a step in the right direction for our community if more are willing to be involved in the governance of our country.

    But with the increasing religiousity within the MM community, it is worth questioning if these MM opposition candidates truly believe in furthering the democratic process of our political system, or are they merely using the various political parties as a platform to air their grievances and further their religious agenda of pushing for a more conservative and Islamic society?

    Just look at SDP’s Damanhuri Abas. Even though he represents a party that believes in the ideals of democracy, justice and equality, he himself is not a true believer of these values because he cherry picks who he thinks deserves to be treated as equals and who deserves to be discriminated against. On the one hand, he fights for the rights of Muslim NSmen and Hijabi Muslimahs, but on the other hand, he says that the law should continue to discriminate against gay men by retaining Section 377A.

    SDP_Damanhuri_2

    Another example is NSP’s Nor Lella Mardiiah Mohamed. In the 2011 elections, she represented the party without wearing the hijab. This time round however, she is representing the party as a Muslimah wearing the hijab. While it is her prerogative to wear the hijab, one can’t help but wonder if this change is reflective of her increasing religiousity, and whether this will translate into support for the hijab issue and more broadly, issues that demand for more allowance of Islamic practices in our secular society.

    GE2011

    GE2015

    What about WP’s Firuz Khan who appears to be a supporter of former Malaysian Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad? Like Mahathir, is he also a fan of race-based politics and the bumi-policy? If he is voted into parliament under the WP ticket, will he champion for more MM entitlements and privileges that will affect the delicate racial situation in singapore?

    FiruzKhanDrMahathirApr2013

    FiruzKhanDrMuhrizMahathir2

    These are questions that the opposition parties or the MM candidates themselves must address so that voters know what these candidates truly stand for and whether they are deserving of our votes.

     

    Source: www.aiseyman.com

  • 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