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[h=2]Playing the politics bogeyman[/h]
October 30th, 2012 |
Author: Contributions
I was flabbergasted to read of the scenario planning
exercise at the Institue of Policy Studies (IPS). The article, “A Singapore with
more .sg than .gov?” by the Straits Times, 27 Oct 2012 reported that IPS gave
three scenarios of how Singapore might be governed 10 years from now. One is a
strong pro-growth, pro-business government that citizens trust. The second is a
pro-welfare state that sacrifices growth for inclusiveness. The last scenario is
that of a corrupt and untrustworthy government, one which according to the ST
report, is ruled by a coalition government that is corrupt and so weak that
citizens are largely left to fend for themselves, running their own schools and
hospitals.
I am not familiar with the details of the IPS exercise. My reaction from my
reading of the article is, why are we painting such stereotypes? Why is a
corrupt and untrustworthy government that of a coalition government? A coalition
is necessary when no one party has enough seats to form the government. Is such
a government necessarily corrupt? Many governments in the world are coalitions.
A Singaporean based in Finland shared in my blog about the Finnish government. The current
government is a 6-party coalition, with another 2 parties forming the
opposition. The UK is currently having a coalition government. So are Australia,
New Zealand, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and many other developed countries. Are
these corrupt governments? Are they weak and unable to execute policies? Surely
these countries would be finished off by now, as some have been having coalition
governments for decades. They have learnt to adjust and deal with the situation.
Why can’t we have honest and capable coalition governments?
Is a single party government necessarily strong and non corrupt? There are
many examples of single party governments in the world that are said to be
corrupt or deemed weak in policy execution.
Sure, we need certain scenarios for planning purposes. If IPS wish to get
people to talk about the possibility of a future corrupt Singapore government,
why can’t it just be about a corrupt and untrustworthy government instead of a
corrupt and untrustworthy coalition government? The 3 scenarios paint the
typical cases we have been told so many times: Strong single party government
having to choose between growth and inclusiveness, and an incapable non-single
party government.
When repeated often enough, it is designed to lead people to make stereotype
assumptions. You will hear such sterotypes repeated many times during elections,
questioning the motives of opposition members (as if we have so much to gain by
joining the opposition) and that Singaporeans will mess things up if we break
the strong single party rule (TOC article and YeeJJ’s rally speech).
I am reminded of how as a child, adults would use a bogeyman story to
get me to do things. I was told to finish my meal, or stop crying, or behave
myself. If not, some bogeyman would come and catch me. At some point, I grew old
enough to know this is just scare tactics. In this day and age, we have better
access to open information. I just hate it when I read of such stereotypes. They
are nothing more than putting up politics bogeyman to hope to frigthen people to
behave in a certain way desired by certain groups.
.
Yee Jenn Jong
Non-constituency Member of Parliament
[Source]: Yee Jenn Jong’s blog (http://yeejj.wordpress.com).



exercise at the Institue of Policy Studies (IPS). The article, “A Singapore with
more .sg than .gov?” by the Straits Times, 27 Oct 2012 reported that IPS gave
three scenarios of how Singapore might be governed 10 years from now. One is a
strong pro-growth, pro-business government that citizens trust. The second is a
pro-welfare state that sacrifices growth for inclusiveness. The last scenario is
that of a corrupt and untrustworthy government, one which according to the ST
report, is ruled by a coalition government that is corrupt and so weak that
citizens are largely left to fend for themselves, running their own schools and
hospitals.
I am not familiar with the details of the IPS exercise. My reaction from my
reading of the article is, why are we painting such stereotypes? Why is a
corrupt and untrustworthy government that of a coalition government? A coalition
is necessary when no one party has enough seats to form the government. Is such
a government necessarily corrupt? Many governments in the world are coalitions.
A Singaporean based in Finland shared in my blog about the Finnish government. The current
government is a 6-party coalition, with another 2 parties forming the
opposition. The UK is currently having a coalition government. So are Australia,
New Zealand, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and many other developed countries. Are
these corrupt governments? Are they weak and unable to execute policies? Surely
these countries would be finished off by now, as some have been having coalition
governments for decades. They have learnt to adjust and deal with the situation.
Why can’t we have honest and capable coalition governments?
Is a single party government necessarily strong and non corrupt? There are
many examples of single party governments in the world that are said to be
corrupt or deemed weak in policy execution.
Sure, we need certain scenarios for planning purposes. If IPS wish to get
people to talk about the possibility of a future corrupt Singapore government,
why can’t it just be about a corrupt and untrustworthy government instead of a
corrupt and untrustworthy coalition government? The 3 scenarios paint the
typical cases we have been told so many times: Strong single party government
having to choose between growth and inclusiveness, and an incapable non-single
party government.
When repeated often enough, it is designed to lead people to make stereotype
assumptions. You will hear such sterotypes repeated many times during elections,
questioning the motives of opposition members (as if we have so much to gain by
joining the opposition) and that Singaporeans will mess things up if we break
the strong single party rule (TOC article and YeeJJ’s rally speech).
I am reminded of how as a child, adults would use a bogeyman story to
get me to do things. I was told to finish my meal, or stop crying, or behave
myself. If not, some bogeyman would come and catch me. At some point, I grew old
enough to know this is just scare tactics. In this day and age, we have better
access to open information. I just hate it when I read of such stereotypes. They
are nothing more than putting up politics bogeyman to hope to frigthen people to
behave in a certain way desired by certain groups.
.
Yee Jenn Jong
Non-constituency Member of Parliament
[Source]: Yee Jenn Jong’s blog (http://yeejj.wordpress.com).