Tag: WP

  • 5 Things About The First Night Of Rallies

    5 Things About The First Night Of Rallies

    Two rallies on Wednesday (Sept 2) night wrapped up the first full day of campaigning for the Sept 11 general election.

    The People’s Action Party held a Tanjong Pagar GRC and Radin Mas rally at Delta Sports Complex, and the Workers’ Party turned up for a Hougang rally in the area.

    Here are 5 things about the two rallies.

    1. BIG TURNOUT AT THE WORKERS’ PARTY RALLY

    The crowd at the WP rally at Hougang Central on Sept 2, 2015. ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE
    The crowd at the WP rally at Hougang Central on Sept 2, 2015. ST PHOTO: YEO KAI WEN

    As expected and as seen in the last few general elections, the WP rally in a field in Central Hougang attracted people in the thousands. They started gathering at about 6.15pm and by the end of the evening, the field was packed to overflowing.

    After the rally was over, access to Hougang MRT station nearby was closed for a short while to control the human traffic on the platforms.

    But the crowd was generally well-behaved. In fact, people were spotted picking up litter from the field after the rally was over.

    2. TURNOUT AT PAP RALLY SMALLER

    Over in Tiong Bahru, the crowds were smaller and more measured, but things perked up when a vocal section of supporters for former senior police officer Melvin Yong – a Tanjong Pagar GRC candidate – turned up.

    Outgoing Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew and former Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Lim Hwee Hua were also spotted among the crowd.

    Mr Chan Chun Sing greeting supporters at a PAP rally on Sept 2, 2015. ST PHOTO: JOANNA SEOW

    Asked by reporters later if he felt discouraged that the turnout was smaller than that of the WP rally, anchor GRC candidate Chan Chun Sing had this reply: “No, no, we don’t let such things get into the way we serve our residents. Our focus is very simple. We take care of the residents and I think the residents will take care of the results.”

    3. SPEECHES – WHO SPOKE AT THE PAP RALLY?

    PM Lee (third right) and eight others spoke at the rally. ST PHOTO: ONG WEE JIN

    Nine people including Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who wrapped up the event.

    Mr Chan was a lively presence, speaking fluidly in Malay and Chinese before launching into an impassioned English speech. Mentioning how he was laughed and mocked at times, he said in Mandarin: “I can’t bear to give up on my country or Tanjong Pagar!”

    The other GRC candidates spoke about the causes they were passionate about. For instance, Ms Indranee Rajah on education (she also spoke briefly in Cantonese), Ms Joan Pereira on care for the elderly, and Dr Chia Shi-Lu on healthcare. Guest speaker Sidek Saniff touched on how the Malay community was never left behind while paying tribute to the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

    Two issues – housing and healthcare – were on PM Lee’s agenda.

    But he also spoke about the standard of the opposition towards the end of his speech, emphasising how politicians cannot afford to “cover up” or “play taiji” and delay problems, in a veiled reference to the ongoing Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council (AHPETC) saga.

    4. AND AT THE WP RALLY?

    Mr Low was joined by 13 other speakers at the WP rally. ST PHOTO: KEVIN LIM

    The slate of 14 speakers was designed to show off both the WP’s new faces and put the spotlight on familiar ones.

    Newcomers such as Cheryl Denise Loh (Nee Soon GRC) and Dr Daniel Goh (East Coast GRC) got airtime to talk about the causes they believe in as well. They also reiterated the party line about the opposition as a necessary check to the PAP and empowering Singaporeans in Parliament.

    WP veterans Png Eng Huat and Low Thia Khiang were the big guns, coming on only towards the end after the younger ones had paved the way. They came out blazing with their speeches in Hokkien (Mr Png) and Teochew (Mr Low). While English speeches from the candidates in general tended to be more circumspect, the dialect speeches were earthier and more direct.

    Rounding off the night was chairman Sylvia Lim, who, like the other WP seniors, addressed the AHPETC issue. She debunked four myths that she said the PAP had been spreading about the town council.

    5. MEMORABLE QUOTES?

    PM Lee speaking at a PAP rally on Sept 2, 2015. ONG WEE JIN

    “If people do something wrong but don’t fix it, and say ‘well, I haven’t been sent to jail’, then standards for politics is too low.”

    – PM LEE HSIEN LOONG, WRAPPING UP HIS SPEECH

    “In politics, your heart must be right. You cannot afford to be selfish, you cannot afford to cover up or play taiji, delaying problems.”

    – PM LEE HSIEN LOONG

    “Please don’t insult my residents. Do you think they are here to be bribed? Is this an election or an auction?”

    – MR CHAN CHUN SING ON OPPOSITION PARTIES PROMISING RESIDENTS $300 A MONTH

    “If there are any residents of Aljunied here, ‘kee chiew’!”

    – MR MUHAMAD FAISAL ABDUL MANAP, WP CANDIDATE FOR ALJUNIED GRC, AT THE START OF HIS RALLY SPEECH. KEE CHIEW MEANS RAISE YOUR HAND IN HOKKIEN AND WAS A REFERENCE TO HOW MR CHAN CHUN SING HAD TRIED TO RALLY A CROWD USING THIS PHRASE WHEN HE FIRST ENTERED POLITICS

    “You are the shareholders of this country. You tell the government what to do. Not the other way around.”

    – MR DENNIS TAN, WP CANDIDATE FOR FENGSHAN

    “The PAP government is not a government of the future but a ghost from the past.”

    – MR PNG ENG HUAT, WP CANDIDATE FOR HOUGANG, IN HOKKIEN

     

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Rosalyn Lee: Good That PAP Not Populist, Does Not Foster Loser Mindset

    Rosalyn Lee: Good That PAP Not Populist, Does Not Foster Loser Mindset

    Responding to Calvin Cheng’s comment that WP has dangerous socialist ideas like minimum wage, this is what local celebrity Rosalyn Lee has to say:

    Calvin Cheng On WP Minimum Wage

    ***

    The Workers’ Party finally stand for something. lol!

    im now fully convinced that they are nothing more than dangerous populists who would say/do anything to win the votes of the common people, without giving a hoot about the crippling consequences.

    there are plenty of jobs available, its up to you to take it. heck, even collecting rubbish is a decent gig. i dont ever want us to stoop to becoming a state that takes care of the unemployed! it encourages complacency. cuz i mean, why bother to find work when you can collect benefits? and then what will happen to singapore if more people adopt that loser mindset? wahlaueh. pls lah!

     

    Source: Rosalyn Lee (Official)

  • Daniel Goh: Life As A Politician During GE Campaigning

    Daniel Goh: Life As A Politician During GE Campaigning

    My side of the story … Back home from campaigning in East Coast to prepare for party political broadcast, and my dad comes back from NTUC and goes, “eh your Workers’ Party people at the other block, they ask me to vote for them, I say sure one, my son East Coast one, Daniel Goh, and they very happy, say will come up.”

    “Orh okay, the botak is it?”

    “Yah, and a girl called Her something and a man called D something.”

    I carry on working on my com next to the door, then all of a sudden, Ru appears at the door with her geeky smile, “HELLO!” and a troop of blue soldiers appear behind her. I quickly go put on my party polo tee as I was wearing an unclely singlet and sports shorts.

    We took a group photo in the corridor garden (thanks Steven for blocking my shorts and legs in the photo), with my true blue supporter neighbour shouting “Workers’ Party!” from his flat to make us smile. My son was bemused and stuck the Marine Parade calling card on our door.

    I come back from the rally and wife tells me the story. They were watching the rally on the com, just when I was speaking, when the PAP fellas came house visiting, “hello sir, please vote for us.” “Sure sure,” says my dad to the shock of my wife and sniggers of my mum, while my son hisses at them. The whites go, “but you have the Workers’ Party card stuck on your door.” My dad points to his grandson, “he stick one!” And I spoke on kiasi, kiasu and kiagui …

     

    Source: Daniel Goh 吴佩松

     

  • 15 Quotes That Sums Up Worker’s Party’s First Rally At Hougang

    15 Quotes That Sums Up Worker’s Party’s First Rally At Hougang

    The first Workers’ Party (WP) at Hougang just ended and from the looks of the many photos on social media, it looked like the gig of the year.

    What…

    The…


    Heck…

     

    According to the Electoral Boundaries Review Committee, there are 24,064 residents in Hougang.

    The crowd certainly looks like its “Hougang core” has just faced a severe immigration problem.

    Anyway, here are some quotable quotes that stood out at the rally tonight.

    Yee Jenn Jong – WP candidate for Marine Parade GRC.

    1. “Because Marine should be blue. Not white!”

    2. “Actually they (Goh Chok Tong and Tan Chuan-Jin) are all mistaken. The rooster does not crow to make the sun rise. It crows every morning because it’s morning and it’s time to wake up.”

    3. “Four and a half years later, by the grand wisdom of a small committee of people, Joo Chiat SMC is now no more.”

    Daniel Goh – WP candidate for East Coast GRC.

    4.” They (Goh’s family and friends) told me: ‘They will throw the kitchen sink at you – that one is American expression. The local equivalent is: ‘They will even throw the toilet bowl at you. Everything inside.’”

    5. “Life is too short and special to be kiasu, kiasi and kiakwai (afraid of ghosts).”

    Png Eng Huat – WP candidate for Hougang SMC

    6. “The Workers’ Party has never set up a $2 private limited company.”

    7. “The PAP would rather fix the opposition, than the transportation system”

    8. “The PAP government is not a government of the future, but a ghost of the past.”

    Pritam Singh – WP candidate for Aljunied GRC

    9. “The PAP has worked overtime to ensure that a Singapore of checks and balances does not occur or make progress.”

    10. “Is this the future we want for Singapore or our children in the next 50 years? Ownself check ownself?

    11. “AIM is a beautiful metaphor for the politics that takes place in Singapore in our town council. Residents first pay for a computer system which is then sold to a PAP-owned company”

    Sylvia Lim – Chairperson of WP and candidate for Aljunied GRC

    12. “I thought the civil service only work five day week? But I received letters from Saturday and Sunday as well. They are probably listening to our speeches now. They are as good as a 24/7 EMSU unit.”

    13. “Many Town Councils also overpaid, including Nee Soon Town Council.”

    14. “Without Hougang, the Workers’ Party would not have Aljunied or Punggol East.”

    Low Thia Khiang – Secretary-General of WP and candidate for Aljunied GRC

    15. (in Teochew) “PAP looks for a small hole and keeps digging like its life depends on it.”

     

    Source: http://mothership.sg

  • WP Will Check On The PAP!

    WP Will Check On The PAP!

    CHAN Ah Pek sat in his chair and took a sip of kopi. What a night. He knew it was going to be crowded, of course. But when he heard that his buddy Low was going to be at the rally, he thought, well maybe he might want to get a cup of kopi with him after, catch up. Well, he would just have to catch him another time.

    It was good to see him on stage though, the old man thought as he closed his eyes, recalling the scene at the open field outside Blk 837 in Hougang Central. He seemed confident, as he usually did, but perhaps a little tired. Still, the crowd loved him. His speech was entirely in fluent Teochew – usually, he would also speak in Mandarin at these rallies but he ran out of time, he said. It was 10pm. Had to close shop. Well, that was fine. Ah Pek was getting a little sleepy himself.

    He took another sip of kopi and tried to recall what his buddy said. He was most passionate when he spoke on the AHPETC controversy, Ah Pek thought. The G had checked the town council’s accounts for 10 months, and couldn’t find anything, he said. If he was really corrupt, he would have long been taken away and locked up by the CPIB. The crowd cheered, drowning out Ah Pek’s own thoughts, which was how he really didn’t care that much about the whole affair. He was tired of reading it in the papers every day, frankly.

    But it was a topic that came up several times. That Indian man, Mr Pritam Singh. He was talking about how town councils were being used as political tools against the Opposition, and perhaps, should they be returned to the Housing Board and be run by them instead? Also Mr Png Eng Huat, who talked about how the G was “highly mischievous” for suggesting that the party had caused the multi-constituency town council to fall into a deficit since both Aljunied and Punggol East were in surplus before they were taken over by the Opposition. He had a few choice words for the PAP, but it was this line that stood out for Ah Pek, and for the crowd – that the PAP was “not a party of the future, but a ghost of the past”.

    Then of course, there was that lady, Ms Sylvia Lim. She seemed very frustrated, Ah Pek thought. Apparently, the Ministry of National Development (MND) has been sending her letters asking her questions about AHPETC – even on the weekends. “I thought they work only a five-day week?” she had asked incredulously.

    Her defence of AHPETC was passionate, that much Ah Pek could tell just from her opening line: “I am the chairman of AHPETC. And I’m proud of it.” And when she went on to bust what she called the four myths about the town council, she really sounded like she knew what she was talking about.

    The details were too convoluted for Ah Pek to recall, but it wasn’t that different from what he had read over the past few days while having his morning kopi at the coffeeshop: That the Workers’ Party did not use AHPETC to reserve contracts for friends, that it did not “overpay” its managing agent, that they did not “freely sign cheques to themselves” – and lastly, that the town council was doing just fine. The beginning was tough, she acknowledged, but “we have turned things around”, she said.

    Ah Pek tried to remember what the other candidates had said. He took another sip of his kopi.

    He liked the sociology professor, Dr Daniel Goh. He had said that “life was too short to be kiasu, kiasi, and kiagui”. Fear of losing, dying, and ghosts. Again with the ghosts! Was it because it’s the 7th month? Ah Pek wondered. So much fear, all because of the PAP’s policies that made education stressful for children, caused prices to go up, and people afraid to lose their jobs. Especially those who already were struggling daily to make ends meet. Now this Ah Pek was interested in – and he was glad that these subjects were touched on by the other people on the stage, even as he wondered sometimes if it was fair to blame everything on the PAP. The crowd certainly seemed to think so. Ah Pek tried to remember their names but failed. During the three-hour rally, including his buddy Low, there had been 14 people who spoke.

    There were two men who talked about where they contested in the last election. One said he had kept his promise and returned; the other said there was nothing to return to – his constituency was now gone. There was a lawyer, a new candidate competing in a new SMC, who argued for more diversity in Parliament as a solution to the pitfalls of “groupthink” in a one-party dominated government.

    That was also a point made by the man who spoke in lightly accented Mandarin – though, he spent too much time talking about roosters in the East and in the West, Ah Pek thought.

    But what was all this diversity for? That was when things started to sound very similar to the Workers’ Party’s rallies that Ah Pek had gone to in 2011. To be a check against the G, almost all of them had said.

    Ah Pek took another sip of his kopi, and was startled by a low growling sound coming from his kitchen. He got up and went to investigate, and caught a glimpse of a small furry creature racing across the linoleum floor into the back of the fridge.

     

    Source: http://themiddleground.sg