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Although "checks and balances" continues to be a dirty phrase for the political establishment, the time has come for a paradigm shift on how policies are conceived.
The argument that the government can check itself is being questioned in the case of immigration policy. It is still a mystery how a government known for its beyond-the-horizon vision never saw the infrastructural nightmare that would come with the decision to lift the floodgates for foreigners to wash in like a tidal wave. Trains got crowded and public housing became scarce.
As for politics, the need is for a rethink of how the opposition and those with opposing views are treated. What is the harm in getting opposition MPs to be part of the official consultation process in policy-making?
Inclusivity is something the prime minister promised when he took over in 2004. His National Day rally speech last month provided an opportune moment to add flesh to that approach. Imagine the impact if he had, in front of a live audience, stretched out a hand to the opposition and said: Together, let's build a new Singapore.
It is this new Singapore, combined with a new reality, that the prime minister and his team will have to grapple with in the coming days, months and years.
Now that the first 100 days have witnessed the dramatic and decisive announcements, the public waits for the deep changes.
- http://www.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne+News/Singapore/Story/A1Story20111001-302563/2.html
The argument that the government can check itself is being questioned in the case of immigration policy. It is still a mystery how a government known for its beyond-the-horizon vision never saw the infrastructural nightmare that would come with the decision to lift the floodgates for foreigners to wash in like a tidal wave. Trains got crowded and public housing became scarce.
As for politics, the need is for a rethink of how the opposition and those with opposing views are treated. What is the harm in getting opposition MPs to be part of the official consultation process in policy-making?
Inclusivity is something the prime minister promised when he took over in 2004. His National Day rally speech last month provided an opportune moment to add flesh to that approach. Imagine the impact if he had, in front of a live audience, stretched out a hand to the opposition and said: Together, let's build a new Singapore.
It is this new Singapore, combined with a new reality, that the prime minister and his team will have to grapple with in the coming days, months and years.
Now that the first 100 days have witnessed the dramatic and decisive announcements, the public waits for the deep changes.
- http://www.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne+News/Singapore/Story/A1Story20111001-302563/2.html