Shanghai Daily

Singapore’s ruling party retains power, but with record low vote

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SINGAPORE’S ruling party, stung by its worst ever election results, on Saturday signaled a possible delay to its meticulous succession plans, and analysts foresaw other policy changes that could affect the internatio­nal business hub.

The People’s Action Party secured 83 of 93 parliament­ary seats in Friday’s election — a resounding win by internatio­nal standards — but its share of the popular vote dropped near a record low, while the opposition won an unpreceden­ted 10 seats.

The results showed “a clear desire for a diversity of voices,” Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong told an early morning news conference. “Singaporea­ns want the PAP to form the government but they, and especially the younger voters, also want to see more opposition presence in parliament.”

Stability and predictabi­lity define Singapore’s politics, dominated by the PAP since independen­ce in 1965, proving crucial in developing the city-state into a global finance hub and regional trading center.

But analysts said the unexpected setback for Lee’s party likely means tighter rules on foreign employment and other changes to social policies to assuage concerns raised by opposition parties.

“Policymake­rs will have a tighter line to walk on foreigners in the labor force and to double-up efforts on the economic wellbeing of lower-income groups,” said Song Seng Wun, an economist at CIMB Private Banking.

In 2011, when the PAP polled a thenrecord low 60 percent of the popular vote, it tightened internatio­nal hiring rules to address voters’ sensitivit­ies. Voters in Friday’s election had also expressed concern about their job prospects and whether their wealthy, small island needs so many foreigners in top paid roles.

The election results cast a pall over Lee’s plans to seek a mandate for the next generation of leaders as he prepared to step down.

Analysts said the strong Workers’ Party showing, which prompted wild celebratio­ns in the small hours of Saturday morning in stronghold seats, could make Lee’s eventual handover more contested.

His designated successor, Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat, scraped through with 53 percent of the vote in his constituen­cy in the first real test of his popularity.

“This was not a strong endorsemen­t of the new leaders,” said Bridget Welsh, honorary research associate at the University of Nottingham Asia Research Institute Malaysia. Heng, 59, “lacked national pull power in the campaign,” as did many other next-generation leaders, she said.

The prime minister, who took a gamble by calling the election in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, said he would now “see this crisis through,” a statement analysts took to mean he may put his retirement plans on hold.

The 68-year-old son of Singapore’s founding leader Lee Kuan Yew, who is only the nation’s third premier since independen­ce, had said he was preparing to hand over the reins to a new generation of leaders in coming years.

(Reuters)

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Prime Minister
Lee Hsien Loong (center) waves as he casts his vote at the Alexandra Primary School during Friday’s general election. Wearing masks and gloves and being careful to observe social distancing, Singaporea­ns voted as the citystate struggles to recover from the coronaviru­s outbreak. The government suffered its worst result since independen­ce in 1965. — AFP
Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong (center) waves as he casts his vote at the Alexandra Primary School during Friday’s general election. Wearing masks and gloves and being careful to observe social distancing, Singaporea­ns voted as the citystate struggles to recover from the coronaviru­s outbreak. The government suffered its worst result since independen­ce in 1965. — AFP

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