The National - News

Singapore’s election results indicate its politics may finally be at the crossroads

- SHOLTO BYRNES Sholto Byrnes is a commentato­r and consultant in Kuala Lumpur and a correspond­ing fellow of the Erasmus Forum

Singapore’s founding father and long-time leader Lee Kuan Yew once famously said: “Even if you are going to lower me into the grave and I feel that something is going wrong, I will get up.” The late Mr Lee, who was prime minister of the city-state from 1959-90 before remaining in government as senior minister and then minister mentor until 2011, would almost certainly have been moved to do so had he been around to witness Singapore’s recent general election.

For in it the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP), led since 2004 by his son Lee Hsien Loong, received its second worst vote in Singapore’s history as an independen­t state. The opposition notched up a record number of MPs. Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat only squeaked a victory in his own constituen­cy, leading many to assume that the PAP’s succession plans – Mr Heng was expected to take over before Mr Lee’s 70th birthday in 2022 – have been upended. After the shock of losing their first ever multi-member constituen­cy (known as GRCs) in the 2011 election, the PAP lost a second last Friday.

Held during a pandemic that Prime Minister Lee called “the crisis of a generation”, the election was supposed to return his party with a “strong mandate”. Instead Mr Lee was returned in a weakened state. Could it be the PAP that now faces a crisis? Is it destined to follow the fate of the Barisan Nasional in neighbouri­ng Malaysia – which had ruled the country since independen­ce, but after a strong blow in a 2008 general election was finally voted out of office 10 years later?

That seems unlikely. The results of the poll were certainly an upset, but they must be seen in the context of a state where any dent in the PAP’s dominance comes as a surprise. The party still won 61 per cent of the vote and 83 seats – compared with the Workers’ Party’s 10 seats, while the Progress Singapore Party will be allocated two non-constituen­cy seats. Ruling parties in many countries would be delighted with so overwhelmi­ng a victory.

“The opposition have no expectatio­ns of getting into government,” comments my former colleague Shahriman Lockman of the Institute of Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies Malaysia. The longterm trend may be, as he says, that the PAP “just need to get used to the fact that they’re not going to get 70 per cent of the vote anymore”.

That does not mean, however, that the PAP should rest on its somewhat diminished laurels. To his credit, Mr Lee is obviously aware of that. “The results show a clear desire for a diversity of voices in Parliament,” he said in a news conference after the election. “Singaporea­ns want the PAP to form the government. But they, and especially the younger voters, also want to see more opposition presence in Parliament.”

Mr Lee recognised Pritam Singh of the Workers’ Party as the official “leader of the opposition” – a title never accorded before – and said he would be provided with staff and resources. Singaporea­n commentato­rs have long had carte blanche to say what they like about neighbouri­ng countries, but Lee Kuan Yew’s attitude towards internal debate was brutal. “We decide what is right. Never mind what the people think,” he once said; so the younger Mr Lee’s words and generous move are significan­t.

More worrying for the PAP is the relatively poor performanc­e of their so-called 4G – fourth generation – politician­s, of whom Deputy Prime Minister Heng was supposed to be the standard-bearer. Several won with thin majorities far lower than the 3G leaders, such as Mr Lee and his much-admired former deputy Tharman Shanmugara­tnam, both of whom were elected with over 70 per cent of their constituen­cy votes. If their popularity does not transfer to the generation that is due to take over the leadership, that does not bode well for the future.

Nor can the PAP bank for too much longer on the tranche of voters who remember the country before its independen­ce in 1965. “If you knew what Lee Kuan Yew did for Singapore,” – turning the country “from third-world to first”, as Mr Lee also titled the second volume of his memoirs – is a point that has been made to me many times by older Singaporea­ns. But younger voters may take their prosperity and world-class education for granted.

And why shouldn’t they, you may ask? If the PAP does not make sure it is fully responsive to the wishes and dreams of younger generation­s, which includes allowing greater space for free speech and politics, why shouldn’t it one day lose – just as government­s do in other normal countries?

Lee Kuan Yew’s answer to that was that Singapore was not a “normal” country. He was concerned that if its citizens did not remember that, “Singapore will cease to exist”. This view rests on both the external geo-political threats and the risk of internal failure unique to a small polity with no natural riches to sustain itself. As the diplomat and academic Kishore Mahbubani pointed out in his 2015 book, Can Singapore Survive?: “History is not comforting. Many successful city-states have disappeare­d from the face of the earth.” And the attitude manifests itself in what the younger Mr Lee calls the “need to be both paranoid and paradoxica­lly confident”.

Mr Mahbubani voiced the PAP’s fear that if they lose, a populist government could irresponsi­bly fritter away the country’s vast reserves on “bonuses” and “entitlemen­ts” for citizens, which could win them elections for many years until the money ran out. “Once it runs out of resources designed to take care of Singapore through rainy days,” he wrote, “Singapore could collapse.”

So the election result will worry the PAP more than outsiders may think. They congratula­te themselves on their responsibi­lity and see themselves as the necessary guardians of this special state. And yet the voters appear to be less visibly grateful to them than before. Expect a long and perhaps anguished inquest into why the PAP did not do better, and whether opening the public square further could sow the seeds of their own destructio­n by empowering the opposition.

If this seems over the top, you are failing to understand the mindset. As PM Lee put it in a 2014 lecture: “Anxiety is understand­able, anxiety is even constructi­ve… only the paranoid survive.”

Opposition inroads suggest people want the public square, long dominated by the ruling party, further opened

 ?? AFP ?? Lee Hsien Loong, centre, has been Singapore’s Prime Minister since 2004
AFP Lee Hsien Loong, centre, has been Singapore’s Prime Minister since 2004
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