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SPH tells oppositions - cant do better again go bang wall and die la

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Dec 27, 2010
Opposition has no excuse not to do better at GE
In its favour: Electoral and societal changes, more qualified recruits
By Kor Kian Beng

THERE I was, seated in one corner of a hotel ballroom two weeks ago, watching six opposition leaders doing their best to prove that their parties have what it takes to do well in the next general election.

They fielded questions and presented their parties' positions on a wide range of issues, from housing prices, income inequality and national service, to civil liberties, the Internal Security Act, the role of the mainstream media and defamation laws.

They took jibes at the ruling People's Action Party (PAP) over some government policies and for not responding to an invitation to send a representative to the dialogue itself, which was organised by sociopolitical website The Online Citizen.

Most of the 350-strong audience lapped it all up. The atmosphere was much like that at an opposition rally during a general election.

At the end of the 21/2-hour event, there were smiles, handshakes, high fives, pats on the back, and words of praise for the six panellists.

When I asked opposition veteran Chiam See Tong after the event for his view on how it went, he declared: 'The winds of change are here. People are fed up with the PAP.'

Looking and sounding confident too, when approached, were his fellow opposition leaders: Dr Chee Soon Juan of the Singapore Democratic Party; Mr Kenneth Jeyaretnam of the Reform Party; Mr Chia Ti Lik of the Socialist Front; Mr Goh Meng Seng of the National Solidarity Party; and Mr Gerald Giam of the Workers' Party.

There are a number of possible reasons for the sense of optimism among the opposition about its chances at the next polls - due by February 2012 but widely predicted to be held by June next year.

First, high property prices and a surge in foreigner numbers have caused dissatisfaction among Singaporeans, and are issues ripe for opposition exploitation.

Second, electoral changes in the form of more single-member constituencies and smaller group representation constituencies will lower entry barriers for the opposition in terms of campaign costs and resources.

Third, the opposition has a number of new recruits who are well-qualified professionals. They include the Reform Party's Mr Jeyaretnam, Mr Tony Tan and Ms Hazel Poa, the Singapore Democratic Party's Dr Vincent Wijeysingha, and Workers' Party's Mr Giam and postgraduate law student Pritam Singh.

Fourth, the lure of HDB upgrading as an electoral carrot has faded. When the PAP dangled this in the two opposition wards of Hougang and Potong Pasir in 2006, the tactic backfired.

Fifth, the electorate that the opposition has to woo is arguably better-disposed towards them. Half of the 2.31 million voters next year would have been born after 1965, as opposed to one-third in 2006. Although the PAP believed that post-65ers supported it during the last general election, there are also perceptions that this generation might be more open to voting for the opposition. This is because this generation would not have experienced first-hand how the PAP Government led the country through the struggles of the 1950s and 1960s and are viewed as having less attachment and loyalty to the ruling party.

Sixth, with an increasingly more tech-savvy population, the reach of the Internet would have become more pervasive than it was during the 2006 polls. The Internet not only gives the opposition parties their own channels to reach out to voters, but also provides an avenue for Singaporeans to seek more alternative viewpoints.

Lastly, the key opposition parties appear to be more at ease in working with one another and presenting a more united front to the voters and to fight the PAP.

One telling sign was the dialogue two Thursdays ago, which saw five opposition parties, except the Workers' Party, rolling out their top leaders to attend the event, with Mr Chiam's presence making the strongest statement.

The opposition patriarch, who rarely skips his Meet-the-People sessions on Thursday evenings, not even when he was recovering from a mild stroke in early 2008, made an exception two weeks go to join his fellow opposition leaders at the dialogue, where they interacted like war comrades, posed together for photographs, and hardly disagreed with one another in their replies to the audience.

Sources say negotiations are under way to strike new alliances among the opposition parties before the next general election.

If the proposed alliance pans out and coupled with the factors above, it can mean only one thing: The opposition has no excuse not to do better at the next polls.

To some, the test would be whether the opposition snags at least one GRC, or at the very least adds more single-seat wards to the existing two in Hougang and Potong Pasir.

To be sure, the opposition may yet fail to deliver, judging from its past record. It is one thing to look promising but another to garner more than 50 per cent of the votes necessary to send a candidate into Parliament.

The opposition's chances in the coming general election are probably as good as it will get. The parties must step up candidate recruitment and produce well-researched alternative policy proposals to offer in their election manifestos.

The opposition will have only itself to blame if it fails again to deliver the goods, especially if its failure stems from infighting. There is a limit to voters' patience.

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I think they make a good point. All the signs shows that the opposition party is going to get something this time round. They have no excuse not to do better then the last time and no excuse not to contest all wards and give all of us a chance to vote
 
i think SPH is adding pressure to opposition, just like premier league, before big matches, players and managers will say something to psychologically distract each other
 
The opposition themselves seem to be self destructing recently. They need to stop all this nonsense and leave the arguments until AFTER the elections
 
More like a usual trick of SPH. This latest move is to raise expectations so that people won't vote for the opposition. If we look at history, the opposition enters when it is least expected to.

In the first place, what is SPH's role in seeing to a healthy Parliament? Nothing. In fact, they have been a cause and critical tool for establishing a one-party state with no alternatives. They are more responsible for the current state of affairs than the PAP, I would say. The latest article adds a feather to the cap.

The whole article does not make sense. If the writer believes that the opposition has improved, then the gist should be that the people have no excuse not to vote for opposition, rather than the opposition has no excuse to do better.
 
The opposition themselves seem to be self destructing recently. They need to stop all this nonsense and leave the arguments until AFTER the elections

That only affects the SDA/SPP. Would I vote against the NSP, RP, SDP or WP because the SDA/SPP self-destructed? Definitely not. If Singaporeans are that dumb, they deserve the PAP.

My vote will go for whichever opposition, be it the self-destructive SDA/SPP, the dysfunctional NSP, pompous RP, befuddling SDP or nonchalant WP.
 
I will still vote opposition ust for the fun of it.

Anyway PAP winning all these years did not help our citizens, did it?

Their backside got played out by LHL.
 
with fcukin cheebye saboteurs like desmond, sinkektong, gohmengseng in the opposition making trouble time adn again...veri difficult for oppo to do better.....hard core supporters will still vote for oppo...but neutral voters will be turn off by all the bickering and antics of fuckin idiots like desmond, sinkektong and goh meng seng.....:mad::oIo:
 
actually, its a double impact pressure. looking at the stats, it seems obvious that the opposition r gaining footing, while the ruling r loosing their footing.

1. if opposition cant do better, they should go bang wall & die
2. if ruling party cant secure their winning margins, their lackies should go eat shit & die
 
actually, its a double impact pressure. looking at the stats, it seems obvious that the opposition r gaining footing, while the ruling r loosing their footing.

1. if opposition cant do better, they should go bang wall & die
2. if ruling party cant secure their winning margins, their lackies should go eat shit & die
PAP is now in crisis management mode.
U can watch a very humble and people oriented PAP fr now till the day after elections.

Would they be sucessful,I guess they will,as mad man but cunning politican Dr MadHati once famously declared
Give them(the voters) 6 months,they(the voters)will forget everythings

and we just watched how successful murderous Naji Razak applied that formula.
 
Honestly anything less than 3 or 4 seats for opposition is a major disaster for the opposition.

Got HDB issue, Got Inflation issue, Got transport issue, Got PR issue, like this still cannot win 1-2 more seats from the current 2, isn't it a disaster for the opposition?
 
Honestly anything less than 3 or 4 seats for opposition is a major disaster for the opposition.

Got HDB issue, Got Inflation issue, Got transport issue, Got PR issue, like this still cannot win 1-2 more seats from the current 2, isn't it a disaster for the opposition?

Many issues for the opposition to exploit. But when GE comes, they become impotent for various reasons. My guess is this will be a watershed election coz MIW will get a rude awakening. They must be taught a lesson for treating us worse than dirt, their double standards, incompetence etc.
 
i think SPH is adding pressure to opposition, just like premier league, before big matches, players and managers will say something to psychologically distract each other

The pressure has always been on the opposition parties. Just before election time, they suddenly become strange bed partners. Suddenly everybody is friends.

In Malaysia they did that, and although they did win some seats they make a mess of Malaysia. Suddenly ulamas are willing to sit or sleep with apostates. Some party members fubd each other quarrelsome.
 
There will never be real cooperation among opposition parties. It is obvious that they choose to stay as separate parties. Whatever movements, talks or gatherings you see, just take it with a pinch of salt and not hope for anything more.

In Singapore, the opposition generally has very average leadership. This affects a lot of its development. Chiam and JBJ, the only 2 most prominent opposition leaders to date, are responsible for the existence of at least 5 parties (SDP, SPP, SDA, WP, RP) despite being only 2 people. In addition, NSP came from SDP and SF came from RP. Whatever credits they have earned, nearly all the parties that exist today were mostly direct result of their actions as leaders and have already split up the opposition badly. Both have a history of losing favour of their parties, something quite bad for a leader.

There will only be cooperation among parties in a coalition if the coalition is in power. Because everyone has a share of power. In the first place, just remove the PAP.
 
Many issues for the opposition to exploit. But when GE comes, they become impotent for various reasons. My guess is this will be a watershed election coz MIW will get a rude awakening. They must be taught a lesson for treating us worse than dirt, their double standards, incompetence etc.

The PAP got 3 months to work their way out, Jan is out (near CNY), Feb (CNY month), March to May more likely.

So we shall see how the housing, pr, and inflation issues gets sorted out.
 
I think the writer did not say that, not opposition has improved but the conditions have improved for the opposition..

Fair enough. If the writer feels conditions have improved, the opposition should gain. It's the same around the world, whether you have quality opposition or not. If no gain, it is the voters, not the opposition. That's my point.
 
There will never be real cooperation among opposition parties. It is obvious that they choose to stay as separate parties. Whatever movements, talks or gatherings you see, just take it with a pinch of salt and not hope for anything more.

i think you are right.. :D
 
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