Tag: WP

  • PAP vs WP – What These Four Years Have Shown

    PAP vs WP – What These Four Years Have Shown

    An interesting period in Singapore politics will soon end with the coming general election.

    In fact, it was probably the most significant four years between elections. How so?

    This requires some explanation, so I should start at the beginning, after the 2011 GE.

    When the ruling party lost Aljunied GRC, there were some who argued that it was a good result for the country.

    They were not necessarily opposition supporters but believed that the People’s Action Party’s almost complete electoral domination could not last.

    Sooner or later, it would lose some of its appeal: its policies might not be working as well, voters want more alternatives or they might simply tire of its longevity and desire change.

    This transition to a more competitive political landscape could result in several possible scenarios. Will a two-party system emerge, as in many mature democracies? Would the PAP lose power one day? Or might it survive and continue to succeed but renewed and transformed.

    Whatever the outcome, Singaporeans hoped the change would be gradual, peaceful and lead to a stronger nation, one as able as it was in the past to overcome its challenges. What they feared

    most was sudden, unpredictable change, leading to instability or mediocrity and a loss of confidence in the country.

    Seen from this perspective, GE 2011 was a good outcome.

    Even though the PAP lost a GRC, it scored a landslide victory nationwide, winning 80 out of 87 seats and 60.1 per cent of the votes.

    If the country was indeed transiting towards a more normal democracy, this was a gradual, controlled shift.

    That was the initial assessment in the days immediately after the GE.

    Now, four years later, and as another election looms, the question is whether the experience so far has reinforced or weakened this view.

    Did it offer a glimpse of what the changing politics might look like and which of those three scenarios is the more likely?

    In fact, these four years were rich with data, and if I were a political scientist I would have had a field day.

    The ruling party swung into action on the policy front, determined to fix those policies that had caused much unhappiness in 2011. It tightened immigration, ramped up the construction of Housing Board flats and added hundreds more buses to the public transport network financed from government coffers.

    In doing so, it lived up to its reputation of being able to deliver results when it puts its mind to it.

    But there was no radical change in its approach to solving these problems, no huge departure from existing policies.

    Those who wanted a more fundamental review of, say, housing or transport would have been disappointed, though the Government might counter that it was more interested in tackling the problems in a pragmatic way rather than indulging in the grand ideas.

    The biggest shift in thinking was on social policy.

    It seems unlikely the subsidies and assistance given to senior citizens will end with the pioneer generation – more likely it signals a new approach to welfare support.

    Ditto the new health insurance scheme, MediShield Life, which now covers those with pre-existing medical problems.

    While you could argue the merits of each of these changes, taken together, the picture seems clear: The Government has become more responsive in helping vulnerable segments of the population.

    The PAP set out to make sure these issues would not dominate the agenda when it fights the next general election.

    On the political front, though, its approach could not be more different, refusing to concede much ground, and it might even have dug in some more.

    It pressed the WP on the management of its town council and the saga is still ongoing.

    It tightened legislation on online media and took legal action against several people for what they said in their blogs.

    Wasn’t this reverting to the bad old days? If it was, so be it, it seemed to be saying to its critics.

    For the PAP, change would not mean going soft on its political opponents. If these four years have shown how the party is responding to the new political landscape, it is this: fix the policies but give no quarter on the political front.

    On the opposition side, the only party of note is the WP, and it too showed plenty how it was managing the new situation.

    Those who expected it to liven up politics here by proactively engaging the PAP and giving it a hard time would have been disappointed. Even when the debate was over ministerial salaries, an issue on which it could have scored many political points, it did not rise to the bait and maintained a position not too far off the Government’s.

    Did these four years show up its inadequacy as the main opposition party holding the Government accountable or was it part of its strategy to consolidate its gains.

    Possibly both.

    The WP is intent on being regarded as a serious-minded party appealing to the middle ground, not one on the fringe.

    It believes this is the way to increase its share of the votes and that, with its small presence in Parliament, going full frontal against the ruling party on every issue will bring more risks than gains. That is why it prefers to work quietly on the ground in its own wards and in those it fancies at the next election.

    For the WP, the four years have shown it is content to make headway steadily rather than noisily. It appears more in consolidation phase than in any hurry to install a two-party system.

    One area though hasn’t been revealed but will become clearer in the coming weeks when it introduces its candidates for the GE: Its ability to attract people into the party, particularly those with ability and commitment.

    For me, this will be the most interesting and revealing part of its four-year journey so far.

    Do well on this front, and it would have made real progress.

    For the other opposition parties, I am afraid the four years have been more of the same. Still at the fringes, and all of them still hoping for the one breakthrough on Polling Day.

    Back to the question I posed at the beginning: Has it been good for the country?

    From the way the PAP responded, it has to be a qualified yes. The people got a more responsive government and the main opposition party is still keeping alive the hopes of opposition supporters. Voters now have a better measure of the two main parties and can cast their votes accordingly.

    In fact, you could also say GE 2011 was good for the PAP, forcing it to adjust to the new reality. I bet that’s not how they saw it four years ago.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Low Thia Khiang To Contest In Aljunied GRC

    Low Thia Khiang To Contest In Aljunied GRC

    The Secretary-General of the Opposition Workers’ Party (WP) Low Thia Khiang has confirmed he will defend his seat in Aljunied GRC for the upcoming General Election.

    “I appreciate very much the residents of Aljunied who have given us a chance to serve, who have responded to the call to move Singapore towards a First World Parliament,” he told reporters before his Meet The People session in Hougang on Wednesday (Aug 5).

    He said he is “happy” to see that the Government today is “more responsive”. “There are many policy U-turns being made for the benefit of the people and I want to continue to serve residents of Aljunied GRC and I’m grateful for their support,” Mr Low added.

    Aljunied GRC is the only Opposition-run GRC in Singapore. In 2011, the WP won 54.7 per cent of the votes in the General Election, versus the ruling People’s Action Party’s 45.3 per cent. The WP team there includes party chairman Sylvia Lim, and MPs Chen Show Mao, Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap and Pritam Singh.

    Mr Low added that it is difficult for the party to move. “Where else can we move? Our base is here. We don’t have the resources to go as far as the West or all over Singapore,” Mr Low stated.

    “We make good use of our resources to provide a choice to Singaporeans and to build up a credible Opposition over time.”

    When asked if the upcoming election will see the current WP team of Aljunied MPs intact, he said: “We will give you more information about the candidates and all that so let’s be patient about it. But I will stay.”

    He added that the WP would still like to avoid three-cornered fights if possible as it is a “waste of resources”.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Opposition Party Chiefs Slam Half-Truths Leaked From Meeting

    Opposition Party Chiefs Slam Half-Truths Leaked From Meeting

    Some Opposition party chiefs expressed unhappiness over a perceived breach of confidentiality following a meeting on Monday (Aug 3) attended by representatives of 11 parties, calling it an attempt to “destroy Opposition unity”.

    The aim of the first round of horse-trading talks was to discuss the possibility of avoiding multi-corner fights at the upcoming General Election.

    On Wednesday, People’s Power Party (PPP) chief Goh Meng Seng shared a TODAY report on his Facebook page, calling the purported leak a “despicable underhand tactic”.

    According to the report, sources who attended the meeting said that there was a “heated” disagreement between the Workers’ Party (WP) and the National Solidarity Party (NSP) over Marine Parade Group Representation Constituency (GRC), Jalan Besar GRC and the MacPherson Single Member Constituency (SMC).

    The sources declined to be identified as the parties had agreed on keeping the discussions confidential, according to the TODAY report.

    “As a participant of the meeting, I openly condemn such leaks of half-truths (as) a deliberate way of smearing NSP,” said Mr Goh. “This is not helpful for achieving opposition unity at all. This is a despicable underhand tactic that we should not condone.”

    Mr Goh is the former Secretary-General of the NSP, having run for elections under the party banner in 2011.

    Later on Wednesday, the NSP’s official Facebook page shared a screenshot of Mr Goh’s post and echoed his sentiments.

    “The ‘source’ who leaked these ‘half-truths’ is not doing anybody good and aims to split Opposition unity,” said the party, which urged the public to not “jump into conclusions yet, based on hear-say and rumours” until after the second round of discussions on Thursday.

    A day earlier, Reform Party chief Kenneth Jeyaretnam also took to Facebook to slam anonymous sources in a Straits Times article, who raised similar allegations of conflict between the WP and NSP.

    “What was the point of us all agreeing to keep the meeting’s discussions confidential when someone has leaked the whole caboodle to the press?” he asked.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • WP, NSP In Heated Wrangle Over 3 Constituencies

    WP, NSP In Heated Wrangle Over 3 Constituencies

    A day after opposition leaders emerged all smiles from a three-hour meeting and declared that most potential multi-cornered fights had been resolved, it emerged yesterday that discussions were dominated by a heated tussle between the Workers’ Party (WP) and the National Solidarity Party (NSP) over Marine Parade Group Representation Constituency (GRC), Jalan Besar GRC and the MacPherson single-seat ward.

    At one point, an NSP representative even threatened to send a team to contest in Aljunied GRC — which is held by the WP — if the WP refused to back down, sources who attended the closed-door meeting at the NSP’s Jalan Besar headquarters told TODAY.

    The sources, who declined to be identified as the parties had agreed on keeping the discussions confidential, said the WP stood firm on its decision to send a team to contest Marine Parade GRC, where the NSP had lost in the 2011 General Election despite garnering 43.4 per cent of the votes.

    The NSP had asked for the WP to withdraw its interest in Jalan Besar GRC, in return for the NSP to give up contesting Marine Parade GRC. The WP said no. There was also no room for negotiation on MacPherson Single-Member Constituency (SMC), which the NSP is also eyeing, the sources added. They said the WP maintained that it will not budge on the five GRCs (Aljunied, East Coast, Marine Parade, Nee Soon, Jalan Besar) and five SMCs (Hougang, Punggol East, Fengshan, MacPherson and Sengkang West) which it had declared its interest in, following the release of the electoral boundaries report last month.

    Yesterday, both the WP and NSP conducted house visits in Serangoon Central — which falls under Marine Parade GRC — with the two entourages only hundreds of metres away from each other.

    WP Non-Constituency MP Yee Jenn Jong, who is likely to lead the WP’s team in Marine Parade GRC, told TODAY that his party’s position on the GRC is “firm”. The NSP declined comment, referring to the ongoing discussions that will resume tomorrow.

    In the 2011 GE, Mr Yee had contested and lost narrowly in Joo Chiat SMC, which has been absorbed into Marine Parade GRC for the coming elections. Mr Yee said that apart from continuing to walk the ground in Joo Chiat after the GE, he had also started outreach efforts in the rest of the Marine Parade GRC area since “more than a year ago”.

    Apart from Mr Yee, WP potential candidate Terence Tan, 44, was also spotted at the party’s house visits in Serangoon Central.

    Mr Tan, who was one of the speakers at a WP rally in the Punggol East by-election in 2013, is a lawyer. He is on the legal team representing the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East (AHPETC) Town Council in the ongoing court case against the Ministry of National Development. The ministry is appealing against a High Court’s refusal to appoint independent accountants to oversee government grants to the AHPETC.

    For the NSP, central executive committee members Steve Chia and Spencer Ng were among party members and supporters canvassing support in Serangoon Central, several blocks of flats away from the WP group.

    Political analyst Eugene Tan noted the guiding principle among some in the opposition circles that a party that had contested in a ward would have “the first right to contest there”. “The WP, however, has never explicitly agreed to that,” said the Singapore Management University law don.

    While the WP could be seen by the NSP as butting into Marine Parade GRC, “voters may not necessarily see the WP as a bully if it were to contest in both MacPherson and Marine Parade”, said Associate Professor Tan. “They are likely to subscribe (to the belief) that voters should be able to vote for the best candidates from the opposition, rather than having opposition candidates foisted on them as a result of a political compromise.”

    Assoc Prof Tan noted the absence of WP leaders Low Thia Khiang and Sylvia Lim from the horse-trading talks on Monday. On the WP’s firm stance on where it would be contesting, he said: “It’s effectively saying that other opposition parties going into a multi-cornered electoral contest with it (and the People’s Action Party) are doing so at their own risk.”

    National University of Singapore political scientist Bilveer Singh felt that the NSP has “strong grounds” to contest in Marine Parade GRC and MacPherson SMC. “What happens when two rationalities clash? In politics you give and take, something the Opposition is not good at in Singapore so far,” he said.

    He felt that opposition parties such as WP and NSP have “already put the cart before the horse and that is going to make horse trading next to impossible”. “Whenever the (opposition) parties clash among themselves, simple logic tells you that it will benefit the incumbent, the PAP in this case. The key to the game is reaching a consensus on where each party should contest.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • People Of The Workers’ Party: Mohamed Fairoz Shariff

    People Of The Workers’ Party: Mohamed Fairoz Shariff

    Why did you join WP?

    I joined WP because of the 2001 elections. It was supposed to be my first opportunity to vote, but I couldn’t because the GRC I was living in was won by the PAP through a walkover.

    Furthermore, the WP team in Aljunied GRC had been disqualified that year.

    That was when I became politically conscious.

    I felt that there was a real need for a strong opposition that could give Singaporeans a genuine choice.

    How do you think you can contribute to that?

    I hope to encourage more like-minded Singaporeans to step forward.

    Singaporeans who want to see change should contribute in any way they can to bringing that change.

     

    Source: http://wpyouth.sg