Yahoo – AFP,
Martin Abbugao, 9 Sep 2015
Singapore
(AFP) - Singaporeans vote in snap elections Friday that the opposition hopes
will dramatically boost its presence in parliament and challenge half a century
of ruling party domination, after huge crowds attended its campaign rallies.
Prime
Minister Lee Hsien Loong called for polls 16 months ahead of schedule to secure
a fresh mandate for the People's Action Party (PAP), which has been in power
for 56 years and is widely expected to win another majority.
The PAP
held 80 seats in the last parliament, with the Workers' Party (WP) occupying
the remaining seven -- a record for an opposition that has survived a campaign
of intimidation that saw some of its figures jailed as dissidents or bankrupted
by libel suits.
![]() |
A resident
walks past the ruling People's
Action Party campaign banner at Aljunied
in
Singapore on September 5, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Roslan Rahman)
|
His death
in March generated an outpouring of grief and nostalgia that the PAP hopes will
translate into votes on Friday.
But since
the nine-day campaign began on September 1, opposition rallies have dwarfed PAP
gatherings in both size and intensity.
Immigration,
the high cost of living and the need for more assistance to poor and elderly
Singaporeans are the main issues being raised by the newly confident
opposition.
The
repressive tactics that the PAP long used to keep them at bay are gone, under
pressure from the scrutiny of social media which sidesteps the
government-friendly press, and observers are debating if this vote will finally
see the emergence of a two-party system.
All seats
are being contested for the first time in half a century but the WP is fielding
only 28 candidates for the 89 seats up for grabs, with smaller parties
splitting the rest.
Opposition 'gaining traction'
"We
need at least about 20 elected members of parliament in order for you to have
enough resources, minimal resources, to be able to check the government,"
WP chief Low Thia Khiang said during a campaign sortie.
An
estimated 30,000 people attended a rally staged by the WP in eastern Singapore on
Sunday night.
"It is
not only curiosity. One could interpret the large turnouts -- by some accounts
larger than 2011 -- as pointing to WP's message gaining traction," said
political analyst Eugene Tan, an associate law professor at the Singapore
Management University.
"Voters
are reciprocating by turning up in full force," he told AFP.
A longtime
ban on the publication of pre-election voter surveys makes it difficult to
predict the outcome.
In the 2011
election, a public backlash against PAP immigration policies pulled down its
share of the popular vote to 60 percent, its lowest ever. It retained its
thumping majority only through a "winner take all" system of
electoral blocks.
![]() |
Supporters
listen to the candidate from opposition Singapore Democratic Party
speak during
a rally on September 3, 2015 ahead of Singapore's September 11
elections (AFP
Photo/Roslan Rahman)
|
"It is
my expectation that WP will pick up support and has a well-crafted campaign
focusing on gradual gains and appealing to concerns of ordinary citizens,"
said Bridget Welsh from the Center for East Asia Democratic Studies at National
Taiwan University.
Immigration a key issue
Another
opposition group, the Singapore Democratic Party, drew some 5,000 people to a
rare rally in the heart of the banking district, held at lunchtime on Monday.
SDP chief
Chee Soon Juan, one of those who endured jail time as well as bankruptcy in a
long battle against the PAP, was welcomed like a celebrity and signed
autographs.
A PAP rally
at the same spot on Tuesday led by the prime minister drew a similar sized
crowd but most of its other rallies had smaller turnouts.
Immigration
remains a hot-button issue in Singapore, which has 2.46 million eligible
voters.
Foreign
workers and immigrants brought in to mitigate Singapore's low birth rate have
boosted the population from 4.17 million in 2004 to 5.47 million last year.
Citizens
complain that newcomers are competing with them for jobs and housing while
straining services like mass transport and health care.
Opposition
parties say they are not against foreigners -- Singapore is an immigrant nation
-- but are calling for a more calibrated intake.
They also
accuse the PAP of failing to address the needs of marginalised people left
behind in Singapore's transformation into one of the world's wealthiest
societies, with a gross domestic product per capita of Sg$71,318 (US$56,284) in
2014.



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