Yahoo – AFP,
Bhavan Jaipragas, 25 Aug 2015
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Singapore's
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong speaks at the Istana presidential
palace in
Singapore on July 29, 2015 (AFP Photo/Roslan Rahman)
|
Singapore
will hold a snap general election on September 11, officials said Tuesday as
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong seeks a new mandate from voters worried over
immigration and the high cost of living.
Despite a
slowing economy the People’s Action Party (PAP), which has ruled for more than
50 years thanks to strict political controls and Singaporeans' rising
affluence, is expected to keep its overwhelming majority in parliament against
a fragmented opposition.
But the
party will be under pressure to improve on its electoral performance in 2011,
when it won just 60 percent of votes cast -- its lowest-ever share -- despite
retaining 80 of the 87 seats in a block-voting system.
![]() |
This photo
taken on August 9, 2015 shows
Singaporeans celebrating the country's
50th National Day in Singapore (AFP
Photo/Roslan Rahman)
|
The
election department set the shortest possible campaigning period of nine days
after President Tony Tan dissolved parliament at the prime minister's request.
Lee, who
has been in power for 11 years and had until January 2017 to hold an election,
sought support in a Facebook post.
"I
called this general election to seek your mandate to take Singapore beyond
SG50, into its next half century," he said, referring to the 50th
anniversary of independence from Malaysia.
Singapore celebrated
half a century as a republic on August 9 with a massive parade which
highlighted its rapid economic development and stability under PAP rule.
All eyes
will be on whether the opposition can gain more than the seven seats it
currently holds.
Watershed
election
"I
would say this would be the watershed election after independence because we
will see whether Singapore moves in a definitive manner towards a two-party
system," said analyst Eugene Tan, an associate law professor at the
Singapore Management University.
A survey by
local research firm Blackbox said the government enjoyed a "satisfaction
index" of 76.4 percent in July after peaking at 80 percent in April
following Lee Kuan Yew’s death, which triggered an outpouring of grief and
stirred patriotism.
But its
satisfaction rating on the cost of living in July stood at just 42 percent,
housing affordability at 53 percent, public transport at 57 percent and
population management at 61 percent.
An influx
of foreign workers and immigrants as the local birthrate declined has seen the
population surge from 4.17 million in 2004 to 5.47 million last year, of whom
over 2.46 million are eligible Singaporean voters.
Middle-class
Singaporeans complain that newcomers are competing with them for jobs and
housing while straining public services like mass transport.
After the
2011 election the government invested billions of dollars in building new
public housing flats and metro lines while curbing the intake of foreign
workers and immigrants.
Michael
Barr, a Singapore politics researcher at Flinders University in Australia, said
the PAP had no doubts about being re-elected. "But they are worried about
losing more seats than the last time, which was a record for the
opposition."
However the
main opposition Workers' Party has indicated it will contest only 28 of the 89
seats in the next parliament, with weaker parties fighting the PAP in the rest.
"Most
of the opposition will simply secure a protest vote," said local analyst
Derek da Cunha.
Singapore
is now one of the world's richest cities, boasting top-notch education, health
care and high-tech industries and financial institutions that attract workers
and executives from around the world.
But rights
groups have long criticised the PAP, particularly under Lee Kuan Yew, for
jailing dissidents and driving political opponents to self-exile or financial
ruin as a result of costly libel suits.
Singapore
continues to impose strict rules on free speech and assembly, but social media
have undermined the government's control over information and political debate.
Braema
Mathi, president of independent human rights group Maruah, said the PAP has
largely abandoned its "big stick approach" under the younger Lee, a
British-educated former army brigadier general.




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