Sadly, I disagree.
The people who use the internet are mainly people from their 20s to their 40s.
The PAP's main block of votes comes from the older generation, those aged 60 and above. These are the less educated aunties and uncles who remember the bad old days, and who are grateful to the PAP for turning Singapore into a metropolis.
However, they are so shrouded from the day-to-day realities of working Singaporeans (some don't even take the MRT) that they don't realise the PAP of the 1960s and 1970s is no longer existent. Once upon a time there were capable men like Goh Keng Swee, Toh Chin Chye and S Dhanabalan, working under the leadership of Lee Kuan Yew. Love or hate him, he was an excellent politician - probably the first and last of his kind of the PAP.
Today's PAP is full of technocrats, scholars and policy wonks with little or no empathy for real issues on the ground. They are also unable to think like politicians and have little charisma - many of them have admitted that they are "not politicians", and instead they see themselves as civil servants or "officials".