Latest: Only 23% of S’poreans trust PAP Govt leadership

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[h=2]Poll: only 23% of S’poreans trust PAP Govt leadership[/h]
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March 5th, 2013 |
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Author: Editorial

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The 2013 Edelman Trust Barometer research was conducted October/November 2012. It ranks a selected group of countries through a survey on how trustworthy their citizens think their key institutions are.

Edelman conducted an online survey which sampled 26,000 general population respondents with an oversample of 5,800 informed publics in two age groups (25-34 and 35-64) across 26 countries. All informed publics met the following criteria: college-educated; household income in the top quartile for their age in their country; read or watch business ⁄ news media at least several times a week; follow public policy issues in the news at least several times a week.

For Singapore, despite a high level of trust Singaporeans place in the government as an institution, it was revealed that Singaporeans’ trust in the government leadership is a lot less.

For those Singaporeans who were polled by Edelman:

  • 23% said they trusted government leaders to tell the truth
  • 72% said they trusted Government to do what is right as an institution.
Thus, there is a 49-point gap in public trust between the government as an institution and government leadership.

Edelman’s Singapore managing director Amanda Goh, tried to explain the gap, “Individual leaders are not getting the credit for the stability and strength of their institution, which are perhaps already deemed stable, but do take the blame when things have gone wrong.”

Straits Times Editor, Yap Koon Hong, who wrote about this on ST yesterday (4 Mar), explained that it could be due to public trust in leadership today is increasingly being “driven by instinct and feeling, perhaps more so than by thought and considered reasoning”.

He said, “Visceral instincts, not hard-headed reasoning, explain why two constituencies went to opposition hands at the two by-elections after the 2011 General Election. Both seats fell vacant for similar reasons: the incumbent’s reported sexual impropriety. But voters turned against the ruling party when it was its candidate who had the affair; while continuing to support the opposition party whose candidate’s misbehaviour triggered the by-election.”

He said people took for granted the good things did by PAP in the past. “The public now has different expectations of its leaders,” he said.
He said that currently, there is a gap between what people expect and what the government leaders are delivering, resulting in negativity towards the establishment.

“That is why the vocal clout of social media, whose default sentiment is anti-establishment, is magnified many times beyond its actual size,” he added.
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72% said they trusted Government to do what is right as an institution.

Chump you and your misleading titles again?
 
I think the 23% answer is the only accurate one. The other is due to Stalinist fear. But wait for elections to find out.
 
So 72% believe the institution is not broken, but 77% believe our current leaders are incorrigible liars? Sounds about right. Good time for a management shuffle.
 
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If we use the Catholic Church as an analogy: that would be like 72% of the believers trust the Church as an institution, but only 23% of them trust the priests/bishops/nuns/Pope.
 
If we use the Catholic Church as an analogy: that would be like 72% of the believers trust the Church as an institution, but only 23% of them trust the priests/bishops/nuns/Pope.

If we use Investment Bank analogies, investors trust the positions in the institution but do not trust the people holding those positions.
 
hi there


1. aiyoh!
2. running dogs, clowns, dafter sheep, crying things etc.
3. all from the same material & make mah.
4. what's there to trust in the first place:D
 
“Individual leaders are not getting the credit for the stability and strength of their institution, which are perhaps already deemed stable, but do take the blame when things have gone wrong.”

Further proof that opposition supporting retards are total morons. Only take the bad and blame the government totally failing to see all the good they have done and are still doing. Opposition supporting retards should be banned from voting
 
Does this imply that opposition supporters are irrationale and rash?

Straits Times Editor, Yap Koon Hong, who wrote about this on ST yesterday (4 Mar), explained that it could be due to public trust in leadership today is increasingly being “driven by instinct and feeling, perhaps more so than by thought and considered reasoning”.
 
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