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[TD="class: row1, width: 150"]meesiamaihum
Joined: 05 Oct 2010
Posts: 248
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Posted: Sun Sep 04, 2011 9:32 am Post subject: Charles Chong: Marine Parade MPs are 3rd Rates reject[/TD]
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[TD="colspan: 2"]sent by LHL to ESM because it was a walkout GRC(as these 3rd Rates cannot stand on their own) that Opposition usually avoid contesting.
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US Embassy Cable on the 2006 General Election
The decline in the quality of PAP MPs, much more evident in the 2011 elections, had already been noticed then:
The new group of 24 PAP MP candidates has benefited from extensive and glowing media coverage starting well before the announcement of the election date, while opposition candidates have been given cursory attention. Despite the media hype and the fact that they still outshine the opposition, the new PAP MP candidates are a mixed lot.
PAP MP Chong admitted that the party had not succeeded in recruiting a number of “high-flying” business leaders to run. In fact, the party had to reach down to some of its second and third tier candidates to fill out its ticket. Those new candidates will all run in the Group Representative Constituencies (GRCs) helmed by higher profile ministers — for example, four of them will run in Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong’s uncontested district.
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[TD="class: row1, width: 150"]meesiamaihum
Joined: 05 Oct 2010
Posts: 248
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[TD="colspan: 2"]sent by LHL to ESM because it was a walkout GRC(as these 3rd Rates cannot stand on their own) that Opposition usually avoid contesting.
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US Embassy Cable on the 2006 General Election
The decline in the quality of PAP MPs, much more evident in the 2011 elections, had already been noticed then:
The new group of 24 PAP MP candidates has benefited from extensive and glowing media coverage starting well before the announcement of the election date, while opposition candidates have been given cursory attention. Despite the media hype and the fact that they still outshine the opposition, the new PAP MP candidates are a mixed lot.
PAP MP Chong admitted that the party had not succeeded in recruiting a number of “high-flying” business leaders to run. In fact, the party had to reach down to some of its second and third tier candidates to fill out its ticket. Those new candidates will all run in the Group Representative Constituencies (GRCs) helmed by higher profile ministers — for example, four of them will run in Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong’s uncontested district.
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