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General Election 2025

GE2025: Three-way fight for Potong Pasir; PAP newcomer to defend Mountbatten​

PAP's Alex Yeo, SPP's Williiamson Lee and PAR's secretary-general Lim Tean will contest the single seat of Potong Pasir SMC.

(From left) PAP's Mr Alex Yeo, SPP's Mr Williiamson Lee and PAR's secretary-general Lim Tean will contest the single seat in Potong Pasir.ST PHOTOS: DESMOND WEE
Ng Keng Gene and Shermaine Ang
Apr 23, 2025, 07:53 PM

SINGAPORE – Lawyer Alex Yeo, who is contesting his second election, will face a three-way fight to retain Potong Pasir SMC for the PAP.

On April 23, Mr Yeo, as well as his challengers – Singapore People’s Party (SPP) treasurer Williiamson Lee and People’s Alliance for Reform (PAR) secretary-general Lim Tean – showed up at Kong Hwa School to formally register for the polls.

The school, which is one of nine nomination centres for the general election, also saw candidates filing papers to contest Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC, Jalan Besar GRC and Mountbatten SMC.

In the first walkover in a general election since 2011, the PAP team contesting Marine Parade-Braddell Heights won five seats in Singapore’s 15th Parliament, after the WP did not show up at the centre despite contesting Marine Parade GRC in 2015 and 2020.

Jalan Besar GRC will see a straight fight between the PAP and the PAR for the constituency’s four seats, while maritime lawyer Gho Sze Kee will defend the PAP’s seat in Mountbatten against independent candidate Jeremy Tan.

In Potong Pasir, Mr Yeo, 46, replaces three-term MP Sitoh Yih Pin, who had held the seat from 2011.


Mr Yeo entered politics in 2020, when he was fielded in Aljunied GRC as part of a PAP slate that lost with 40.05 per cent of the vote against the WP’s 59.95 per cent.

He said he is not focused on his odds of winning, but on the PAP’s plans for Potong Pasir.

“I think it is important for any representative coming to Potong Pasir that we have to blend our rich heritage of the past together with the dreams and aspirations of our residents in the future,” he said.

The SPP’s Mr Lee, 46, said he will try his best for the rest of the campaign, and noted that Potong Pasir is a place closely affiliated with his party.

Former SPP leader Chiam See Tong held the Potong Pasir seat for 27 years before it was won by Mr Sitoh in 2011.

“I will try to reach out to every resident,” said Mr Lee, when asked about his campaign plans over the next nine days.

The PAR’s Mr Lim, 60, told reporters before entering Kong Hwa School: “The whole of Singapore is like an orchard with fruit trees, bearing very sweet fruit for the opposition this year, so we are very confident. And on the other hand, I think the ground is not so sweet for the PAP.”

On the multi-cornered fight, Mr Lim said: “I ask people not to worry about so-called splitting of opposition votes and all of that. It will not happen.

“We have seen from past history that even when there have been three-cornered, four-cornered fights... opposition supporters and those supporters who do not want the PAP gravitate towards the strongest candidate, because people all want to back a winner, don’t they?”

Ms Gho will contest her first election for the PAP against Mr Tan, 34, the independent candidate.

Ms Gho, a party activist since 2012, takes over from four-term MP Lim Biow Chuan, who had overseen the Mountbatten area from 2006.

The 46-year-old, who has understudied Mr Lim for about 10 months, told reporters: “I am not a seasonal politician. I have been on the ground for 13 years, pounding the ground, walking the ground, understanding residents’ needs and advocating for them.

“That’s why I hope I will be given a chance.”

During a house visit in Dakota Breeze after Nomination Day proceedings ended, Ms Gho told The Straits Times that she was surprised the PAR did not field a candidate in Mountbatten, even though its secretary-general, Mr Lim Tean, announced on April 18 that it would do so.

“I was a bit surprised. But nevertheless, there is an election ongoing right now, so let’s continue our canvassing of votes and fighting to win the hearts and minds of our residents.”

Ms Gho said she spoke to Mr Tan, her opponent in the election, at the nomination centre.

“I do think that he’s a worthy opponent, and it’s a contestation of ideas. So all are welcome.”

Mr Tan, a retired entrepreneur, said Singapore “should not have a system of Parliament where we lack diverse voices”.

He said he has spent time getting to know the concerns of Mountbatten residents. Even if he loses to Ms Gho in the election, he will “work with her to see how we can make the lives of Mountbatten residents better”.

“I plan to personally walk to every household in Mountbatten to give out my fliers and also to speak to the residents,” he added.


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GE2025: PSP team in West Coast-Jurong West GRC challenges PAP team led by Desmond Lee to debate​

The opposition PSP team (below) contesting West Coast-Jurong West GRC challenged the incumbent PAP team to a debate on national policies on April 23.

The opposition PSP team (bottom) contesting West Coast-Jurong West GRC on April 23 challenged the incumbent PAP team to a debate on national policies.ST PHOTOS: MARK CHEONG

Chin Hui Shan
Apr 23, 2025

SINGAPORE – The opposition PSP team contesting West Coast-Jurong West GRC on April 23 challenged the incumbent PAP team led by Minister for National Development Desmond Lee to a debate on national policies.

This invitation to a debate was extended in speeches delivered by three PSP members – its chief Leong Mun Wai, first vice-chair Hazel Poa and Mr Sumarleki Amjah – at the Nan Hua High School nomination centre, after the party’s candidacy in the GRC was confirmed.

“We would like to invite minister Desmond Lee and his team to debate on policies. Let the voters decide who has better ideas,” said Mr Leong in his address to the crowd.

Later, at a separate media interview held at the Block 505 Jurong West Market & Food Centre, Mr Leong elaborated on why the party had issued this challenge.

“For a healthy election, we must debate policies, we don’t (just) criticise one another. There must be good policies, and we think that we have put up a very strong manifesto,” he said.

Mr Leong added that he and Ms Poa, who are both Non-Constituency MPs, have over the past five years suggested alternative policies in Parliament to improve the lives and livelihoods of Singaporeans.


“So we really wish that our opponent, minister Desmond Lee and his team, could actually debate us on the policies and then let the voters decide who has better ideas,” Mr Leong said. “So that’s the reason why we have put forward that invitation to them.”

He added that the party is willing to accept the debate in any form and on any topic.

In response to PSP’s invitation, Mr Lee said there are platforms during the election for political parties to debate policies.

He added that parties publish their policy ideas in their manifestos, and voters can scrutinise these plans during the election.

“Political parties who say they have walked the ground should also be able to put out detailed proposals and local plans to benefit residents. We have done so. We ask PSP to publish these local plans for residents to study,” said Mr Lee.

The PAP team had detailed its plans for the constituency in a press conference held after the Nomination Day proceedings.

On Nomination Day on April 23, the PSP’s A-team, which includes its top three leaders – Dr Tan Cheng Bock, 84, Mr Leong, 65, and Ms Poa, 54 – was confirmed to be contesting West Coast-Jurong West GRC. The other two PSP candidates are first-timers – Mr Sumarleki, 53, head of packaged food and business development at a food and beverage firm, and in-house legal counsel Sani Ismail, 49.

The PSP team is up against a PAP team that includes Mr Lee, 48, who is the anchor minister for the GRC; Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Finance and Education Shawn Huang, 42; and three-term MP Ang Wei Neng, 58. Rounding out the PAP’s slate are two first-time candidates – orthopaedic surgeon Hamid Razak, 39, and lawyer Cassandra Lee, 33.

In the 2020 General Election, PAP won the constituency in its previous form – West Coast GRC – with 51.68 per cent of the vote against a PSP team led by Dr Tan. It was the narrowest win for the ruling party in that election.

Ms Poa said that the role of an MP is primarily to debate policies in the Parliament. “That should be the primary consideration for voters on who they think will better represent them,” she said.

She added that the concerns residents have raised include the rising cost of living and rising housing prices.

When asked what he thinks of his opponents, Dr Tan said they are “quite young”. He added: “I’m not too sure whether they are as knowledgeable about the constituency as us because we (have been) there for a pretty long time.”

Dr Tan had been a PAP MP for 26 years for the Ayer Rajah ward that is now part of West Coast-Jurong West GRC.


Asked if PSP is expecting to perform better this time around compared with the last election, Mr Leong said: “Yes, we are looking forward to better support from the residents, and we will strive to make a breakthrough this election.”

“We have to appeal to the residents and the voters, and the best way to do it is through policy recommendation,” he said.

On how the upcoming polls could be his last general election, Dr Tan said a key priority for him was to convince more young people to participate in politics.

“It is wrong of me (not to do so). If I know that something must be corrected, or if there are some improvements to be done, and I leave it to the generation, that will seem like I’m absconding (from) my job,” he said.

Commenting on how the battle was shaping up in other areas of Singapore, Mr Leong said the party found it “slightly disappointing” that there was a walkover in a group representation constituency.

In an unexpected turn of events, the PAP won its first constituency at the 2025 General Election when it stood uncontested for the five-member Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC on April 23.

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The PAP team was expected to be challenged by a team from the WP, which had contested Marine Parade GRC in 2020 and garnered 42.26 per cent of the vote, losing to the PAP’s 57.74 per cent.

“PSP believes that we should give Singaporeans a chance to experience the democratic process, we should not have (a) walkover, so that is a bit disappointing, but I suppose there are valid reasons why that happened,” he said.

Other than West Coast-Jurong West GRC, the PSP is also contesting Chua Chu Kang GRC and four single seats – Marymount, Kebun Baru, Bukit Gombak and Pioneer.

Asked about his view on the PAP’s move to send Manpower Minister Tan See Leng to Chua Chu Kang GRC, replacing Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong who was deployed to Punggol GRC, Mr Leong said: “We don’t want to read too much into that. They are all worthy opponents, and we will do our best to appeal to the residents.

In the last general election, the PAP secured Chua Chu Kang GRC with 58.64 per cent of the vote against the PSP.
 

GE2025: PAP to face familiar rivals in Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC and Bukit Panjang SMC​

The PAP's Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC candidates (from left) Cai Yinzhou, Elysa Chen, Saktiandi Supaat and Chee Hong Tat at the Methodist Girls’ School nomination centre on April 23.

The PAP's Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC candidates (from left) Cai Yinzhou, Elysa Chen, Saktiandi Supaat and Chee Hong Tat at the Methodist Girls’ School nomination centre on April 23.ST PHOTO: DESMOND FOO
Alyssa Woo and Andrew Wong
Apr 23, 2025


SINGAPORE – The PAP will be up against the Singapore People’s Party (SPP) in Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC once again, with a new anchor minister at the helm for the ruling party.

Transport Minister Chee Hong Tat, 51, will lead the four-man PAP team for the group representation constituency, following Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen’s retirement from politics.

Others on the PAP slate, which was confirmed on April 23 at the Methodist Girls’ School (MGS) nomination centre, are Mr Saktiandi Supaat, 51, and political fresh faces Elysa Chen, 41, a charity director, and social entrepreneur Cai Yinzhou, 35.

The SPP team comprises secretary-general Steve Chia, 54, and party chairman Melvyn Chiu, 45, along with two new faces: operations executive Muhammad Norhakim, 31, and operations manager Lim Rui Xian, 37.

Singapore People's Party (SPP) candidates for Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC party chairman Steve Chia, Mr Muhammad Norhakim and Mr Lim Rui Xian entering the nomination place at Methodist Girl?s School.

The SPP’s Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC candidates (from left) Lim Rui Xian, Muhammad Norhakim and Steve Chia at the Methodist Girls’ School nomination centre on April 23.ST PHOTO: DESMOND FOO
PAP had bested SPP in the previous 2020 contest, taking 67.23 per cent of the votes.

Mr Chee said his team would do their “very best to win the support, earn the trust of our residents and do more to rejuvenate our estate and improve their lives”.


He added: “Bishan-Toa Payoh is a mature estate, but we want to continue to rejuvenate our town so that it is a good home for residents of all ages... If they [residents] give us a chance to come in, if they support us, this is something that I hope we can do more for them in the next few years.”

In his speech, SPP’s Mr Chiu said the short waiting time to Nomination Day “forced” many parties to work overtime.

He added: “Unfortunately, we have to disappoint them (the PAP). The Singapore People’s Party, together with other opposition parties, have risen to the challenge and we have made it.”

SPP’s secretary-general Chia added: “Time to reflect on the past five years of PAP policy. Has it made your life better?”

Bukit Panjang SMC will see a rematch between PAP incumbent MP Liang Eng Hwa, 61, and Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) chairman Paul Tambyah, 60, both of whom arrived at MGS with a host of supporters.

Professor Tambyah, a senior consultant in infectious diseases at the National University Hospital, told the crowd after nominations closed: “Vote without fear, vote for a Singapore where everyone can thrive. Vote for the SDP.”

ST20250423_202582600978/ajbkpj23/Jason Quah SDP candidate for Bukit Panjang SMC Paul Tambyah on house visits in Fajar on April 23, 2025. ST PHOTO: JASON QUAH

The SDP’s Bukit Panjang candidate Paul Tambyah speaking to residents during house visits in Fajar Road on April 23.ST PHOTO: JASON QUAH
Speaking to the media afterwards, Prof Tambyah said in Mandarin: “I’m more confident about this SMC because I understand the residents’ problems more. But it’ll be harder this time... PAP can give a whole tray of eggs for one dollar (but) we don’t have such resources. So it’ll be hard to compete with that.”

PAP’s Mr Liang told The Straits Times: “I have the resources with me, behind me to help me move things and improve things. So that’s probably my strength. I know how to get help and support from the agencies or from our community partners, even some businesses... It’s going to be a very close race. So I will do my best and hope I can provide, I can serve the residents again like how I did. And then to make life better for everyone.”

ST20250423_202582600978/ajbkpj23/Jason Quah PAP candidate for Bukit Panjang SMC Liang Eng Hwa on house visits in Gangsa Road on April 23, 2025. ST PHOTO: JASON QUAH

Incumbent Bukit Panjang MP Liang Eng Hwa speaking to residents during house visits in Gangsa Road on April 23.ST PHOTO: JASON QUAH
Other teams contesting Holland-Bukit Timah GRC and Marymount SMC also showed up at MGS.

The line-up for the incumbent PAP team – which remains unchanged – in Holland-Bukit Timah GRC, led by Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan, 64, will have to defend the constituency against Red Dot United (RDU, which is contesting there for the first time.

Dr Balakrishnan’s team includes Senior Minister of State for Foreign Affairs and National Development Sim Ann, 50, lawyer Christopher de Souza, 49, and businessman Edward Chia, 41.

Thanking residents for the privilege of serving them for “many years”, Dr Balakrishnan said: “You know us, you know what we stand for, and what we believe.

“We’ve done our best, upgraded our town, stood with your families in good times and tough times, we’ve protected our greenery. But there’s so much more to be done and the world is in an uncertain place.”

“We will secure a better future for your children and your grandchildren. But we need your support, but we will need your vote.”

People?s Action Party candidate for for Holland-Bukit Timah GRC, Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan; Senior Minister of State for Foreign Affairs and National Development Sim Ann; Christopher de Souza; Edward Chia; arriving at Methodist Girls? School nomination centre, Apr 23, 2025.

Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan’s Holland-Bukit Timah GRC team includes Senior Minister of State for Foreign Affairs and National Development Sim Ann, lawyer Christopher de Souza and businessman Edward Chia (back row, right, partially hidden).ST PHOTO: GIN TAY
RDU’s Emily Woo, 59, who was originally set to be fielded in Jurong Central SMC, replaced business owner Patrick Tan, 70, to contest the constituency alongside financial consultant Fazli Talip, 43, assistant engineer Sharad Kumar, 25, and operations manager Nizar Subair, 57.

The decision to replace Mr Tan with Madam Woo was a “collective decision by the election committee”, said Mr Fazli.

He added: “Emily also is a good team player to the team. And she actually grew up in Holland-Bukit Timah in her younger days, so her experience really helps the team as well.”

Red Dot United candidates for Holland-Bukit Timah GRC, (from left): Nizar Subair; Emily Woo; Sharad Kumar; Fazli Talip; delivers their speech at Methodist Girls' School nomination centre, Apr 23, 2025.

RDU’s Holland-Bukit Timah GRC candidates (from left) Nizar Subair, Emily Woo, Sharad Kumar and Fazli Talip.ST PHOTO: GIN TAY
Madam Woo, a music teacher who said she grew up in the Ghim Moh area, said: “I believe that there are people who need help, for example, the residents in the rental blocks. So we will do our best.”

As for Marymount SMC, Minister of State for Education and Manpower Gan Siow Huang, 50, will defend her seat against PSP’s Jeffrey Khoo, 56.

Addressing the crowd, PAP’s Gan said she was “deeply touched” by the trust of voters who elected her to serve as their MP five years ago.

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Minister of State for Education and Manpower Gan Siow Huang will defend her Marymount SMC seat against PSP’s Jeffrey Khoo.ST PHOTOS: GIN TAY, DESMOND FOO
“Since then I’ve made it my duty not just to listen, but to take action and to deliver with purpose,” she said, adding that she and her team have introduced new community programmes and upgraded the estate over the years.

In his address, Mr Khoo said: “It is especially in these challenging times that we need to put Singapore first, we need to have more alternative voices in parliament for better outcomes.”

Show of support​

About 200 PAP supporters arrived at MGS in buses as early as 10am.

Mr Yan Tan, 40, who works in the finance industry and is a volunteer at the Bishan East-Sin Ming PAP branch for the past 12 years, said that “PAP is the right leadership for Singapore to move forward”.

“Being in the finance industry, we attract a lot of capital flows, because we are stable and have the right policies - this can only continue to happen if we have the right leadership.”

He came to support Ms Chen, a candidate for Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC.

SDP supporter Mr Sidney Soon, 68, was among the first to arrive at MGS at about 9am. He described Prof Tambyah as a “balanced and rational person”.

“I’m very impressed with his achievements,” said Mr Soon, who is a former SDA candidate who contested the 2011 general election.

Mr Sidney Soon, 68, part time customer service Holland Bukit Timah resident but supporter of Dr Paul Tambyah. Arrived at MGS at 9am

SDP supporter Sidney Soon is a former SDA candidate who contested the 2011 general election.ST PHOTO: GIN TAY
Dr Francis Pavri, 80, an adjunct professor with SMU, turned up to support PSP’s Marymount candidate Mr Khoo. Mr Pavri used to be an SDP supporter while living at Woodlands, and when he moved to the West Coast a while back, threw his support behind PSP.

He said: “I feel as a citizen it’s my responsibility. There should be more voices in Parliament. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. We need more opposition voices to temper that; it’s a check and balance thing.”

Mr Abdillah Zamzuri, a 41-year-old entrepreneur and RDU volunteer, showed up with about six to seven other supporters. He said that he supports RDU because he believes “in their values of building a more compassionate society”.

  • Additional reporting by Christine Tan, Rosalind Ang, Samuel Devaraj and Wong Yang
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GE2025: Indranee’s team to go up against SDA in Pasir Ris-Changi GRC​

(From left) Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Indranee Rajah, Mr Sharael Taha, Senior Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office Desmond Tan and Ms Valerie Lee on April 23.

PAP's slate for Pasir Ris-Changi GRC comprises (from left) Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Indranee Rajah, Mr Sharael Taha, Senior Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office Desmond Tan and Ms Valerie Lee on April 23. ST PHOTO: KEVIN LIM
Ang Qing and Harith Mustaffa
Apr 23, 2025

SINGAPORE - The Singapore Democratic Alliance (SDA) will go up against the PAP team led by Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office and Leader of the House Indranee Rajah in Pasir Ris-Changi GRC.

In a surprise move two days before Nomination Day, Ms Indranee, 62, announced that she would lead the newly created slate, leaving Tanjong Pagar GRC, where she had contested since her political debut in 2001.

Her team comprises Senior Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office Desmond Tan, 55, Mr Sharael Taha, 44, and political newbie Valerie Lee, 39, Sembcorp’s head of corporate affairs for Singapore and South-east Asia.

Ms Indranee told supporters on April 23 at the nomination centre in Yusof Ishak Secondary School that there are so many challenges facing Singapore and “we need to tackle this and work together to succeed”.

Meanwhile, SDA chairman Desmond Lim, 58, will be leading a team which includes its secretary-general Abu Mohamed, 74, and Mr Harminder Pal Singh, 53, the party’s communications lead.

Mr Singh, who was in a wheelchair, told the media that his leg had been amputated due to a life-threatening infection and a “big fall” that occurred 100 days ago.


“I really begged them not to do it, but at the end of it... they did it,” he said.

Formed in 2001, SDA comprises two political parties, the Singapore Justice Party (SJP) and Singapore Malay National Organisation (PKMS), although Mr Lim hinted at a walkabout that a “surprise” third party had joined the group.

This was revealed to be restaurant owner Chia Yun Kai, 32, who had initially announced that he would found his own party – Most Valuable Party – to contest East Coast, but turned up at the centre under SJP to join the SDA slate.

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(From left) SDA chairman Desmond Lim will be leading a team which includes Mr Harminder Pal Singh, secretary-general Abu Mohamed and Mr Chia Yun Kai.ST PHOTO: HARITH MUSTAFFA
In a nod to the party’s manifesto launched on April 23, Mr Chia, who towers over his teammates at 1.91m, said voters who choose them will experience sustainable low cost of living, affordable housing, and strong job security for all Singaporeans.

He said: “SDA is not your second choice. We are your best choice.”

Mr Lim told the media that SDA decided not to run in Punggol because WP had highlighted its intention to contest there.

In 2020, PAP, led by Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean, won the then five-member Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC with 64.16 per cent of the vote, while SDA came in second in the three-way fight with 23.67 per cent of vote.

SM Teo, who was anchor minister for Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC, is retiring from politics.

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Three-cornered fight at Sembawang GRC; straight contests in Nee Soon and Sembawang West​

Health Minister Ong Ye Kung (centre) will lead the PAP's Sembawang GRC team comprising (from left) Mr Ng Shi Xuan, incumbent MPs Vikram Nair and Mariam Jaafar, and Mr Gabriel Lam.

Health Minister Ong Ye Kung (centre) will lead the PAP's Sembawang GRC team comprising (from left) Mr Ng Shi Xuan, Mr Vikram Nair, Ms Mariam Jaafar and Mr Gabriel Lam.ST PHOTO: HESTER TAN

Sandra Davie
Apr 23, 2025

SINGAPORE – Sembawang GRC will see a three-cornered fight, with the opposition Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) and National Solidarity Party (NSP) both throwing their hats in the ring against a PAP slate headlined by Health Minister Ong Ye Kung.

Meanwhile, Law and Home Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam will once again helm the PAP team at Nee Soon GRC, in a face-off with a Red Dot United slate led by its secretary-general Ravi Philemon. There will also be a straight contest in the newly minted Sembawang West SMC, where PAP’s Poh Li San will take on veteran opposition politician and SDP chief Chee Soon Juan.

All three battlelines were formalised at the Chongfu School nomination centre on April 23, where candidates from the ruling party pointed to its record of helping residents, while the opposition parties touched on issues like the rising costs of living.

Speaking to the media, Mr Ong, 55, said: “I believe this is quite an extraordinary election, happening at the time when the global situation is changing, happening also at the time we have a new Prime Minister, and happening at the time when Singaporeans are thinking about what kind of government system we want.”

Mr Ong’s team will include two fresh faces – Mr Ng Shi Xuan, 35, and Mr Gabriel Lam, 42, alongside incumbent MPs Vikram Nair, 46, and Mariam Jaafar, 48. At the last general election, a PAP team led by Mr Ong beat the NSP to take Sembawang with 67.29 per cent of the vote.

This time, the NSP team comprises party chief Spencer Ng, 45; Ms Verina Ong, 46, a polytechnic lecturer; Mr Raiyian Chia, 46, a swimming coach; Mr Lee Wei, 50, an associate lecturer; and Mr Yadzeth Hairis, 62, a business owner.


pixnomination23 ST20250423_202566400116 Ong Wee Jin / NSP candidates for Nee Soon GRC (from left) Raiyian Chia, Verina Ong, Yadzeth Hairis, Spencer Ng, and Lee Wei, at Chongfu School Nomination Centre on Nomination Day, April 23, 2025.

NSP’s Sembawang GRC candidates (from left) Raiyian Chia, Verina Ong, Yadzeth Hairis, Spencer Ng and Lee Wei.ST PHOTO: ONG WEE JIN
Mr Ng said NSP, which contested Sembawang in the last two general elections, had tried to avoid three-cornered fights, but decided to continue running, as it did not want to “abandon” the residents.

NSP had faced calls from some quarters to step back from the GRC in the latest polls, after the SDP announced its intentions to contest there. Mr Ng said earlier that the SDP had offered Holland-Bukit Timah GRC in exchange for Sembawang GRC, but NSP had turned down the proposal, as it was akin to the “exchanging of wives”.

SDP’s slate for Sembawang comprises party vice-chair Bryan Lim, 49, treasurer Surayah Akbar, 42, deputy head of policy James Gomez, 60, and party members Damanhuri Abas, 54, and Alfred Tan, 59.

Dr Gomez was among several opposition candidates who raised concerns about the cost of living at Chongfu School, which was the designated nomination centre. He said that in this cost environment, Singaporeans had been hit by GST hikes twice.

pixnomination23 ST20250423_202566400116 Ong Wee Jin / SDP candidates for Sembawang GRC and Sembawang West SMC (from left) Bryan Lim, James Gomez, Chee Soon Juan, Surayah Akbar, and Damanhuri Abas leaving Chongfu School on Nomination Day, April 23, 2025.

SDP chief and Sembawang West candidate Chee Soon Juan (centre) with the party’s Sembawang GRC candidates (from left) Bryan Lim, James Gomez, Surayah Akbar and Damanhuri Abas.ST PHOTO: ONG WEE JIN
It was a theme that RDU’s Mr Philemon also raised, contending that citizens had to grapple with “rising costs of living and shrinking hope”.

“The issues are clear before us. The issues are how much money you have or you don’t have in your pockets,” he said at the podium. “The issue is, do we live with dignity or from voucher to voucher?”

Mr Philemon later reiterated RDU’s call for a rollback of GST to 7 per cent, coupled with an unconditional cash transfer of $200 for every Singaporean, which he said would provide a more long-term solution to cost of living pressures while requiring less government spending.

Dr Chee, 62, also spoke on rising costs, and said Mr Ong had a lot of explaining to do on why healthcare costs kept rising, especially in light of the ageing population.

In response to questions from reporters at a doorstop, Mr Ong said it is important that the new government that is elected continues to manage the country well, fiscally. He said: “The best safeguard against higher prices is that the economy continues to grow and incomes continue to rise”, adding that the government will step in to offer help when it is needed.

At a doorstop, Mr Shanmugam also addressed concerns over rising costs, given the global economic situation.

He said the Government had rolled out a range of support for Singaporean households, which he will explain to people in the coming days. Assistance schemes with more targeted help have also been introduced at the local level, he added.

Mr Shanmugam, 66, said his team was also aware of the concerns of younger voters over how secure their jobs were and whether they could afford a flat. He noted that eight in 10 first-time BTO owners did not have to service their instalments with cash and that his team would “bring that message across on affordability”.

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Law and Home Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam will once again helm the PAP team at Nee Soon GRC.ST PHOTO: SHABANA BEGUM
The other four members of the PAP’s Nee Soon team are new faces: former civil servant Goh Hanyan, 39; former Nominated Member of Parliament Syed Harun Alhabsyi, 40; cleaning service and pest control company director Jackson Lam, 40; and long-time Nee Soon volunteer Lee Hui Ying, 36.

They will go up against an RDU team with Mr Philemon, 57; RDU chair David Foo, 60; private school teacher Syed Alwi Ahmad, 57; tech start-up business director Pang Heng Chuan, 56; and IT consultant Sharon Lin, 40.

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RDU’s Nee Soon GRC candidates (from left) Syed Alwi Ahmad, David Foo, Ravi Philemon, Pang Heng Chuan and Sharon Lin.ST PHOTO: HESTER TAN
While the official campaign period has just started, Mr Shanmugam said any credible party cannot be only starting their campaign now.

“If you haven’t done anything, haven’t gone (to the ground) all this while, and then turn up and say ‘please support us’, I think the people will be very sceptical,” he said.

Meanwhile, Ms Poh, 49, who has been MP of the area that Sembawang West was carved out from said: “The work has actually been done over the past five years... this period is really the final dash.”

pixnomination23 ST20250423_202566400116 Ong Wee Jin / Sembawang West SMC's PAP candidate Poh Li San making her speech at Chongfu School on Nomination Day, April 23, 2025.

PAP candidate Poh Li San has been MP of the area that Sembawang West was carved out from.ST PHOTO: ONG WEE JIN
Touching on the fresh faces on the ruling party’s slate, Mr Ong said that for the PAP to continue to govern well, it has to keep refreshing its talent base.

“It also means that sometimes we have to say goodbye to people who actually can contribute a lot more, but I think we always force ourselves to refresh ourselves,” he said. “Someday, it will be my turn too.”

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GE2025: Jalan Besar GRC incumbent team goes head-to-head with PAR slate​

The incumbent PAP team (top) will go head-to-head with the PAR (bottom), an opposition coalition, in a battle for Jalan Besar GRC.

The incumbent PAP team (top) will go head-to-head with the People's Alliance for Reform team in a battle for Jalan Besar GRC.ST PHOTOS: ARIFFIN JAMAR

Judith Tan
Apr 23, 2025


SINGAPORE – The incumbent PAP team will go head-to-head with the People’s Alliance for Reform (PAR), an opposition coalition, in a battle for Jalan Besar GRC in Singapore’s general election on May 3.

Candidates from both sides successfully filed their nomination papers at Kong Hwa School in Guillemard Road on April 23.

In the last general election in 2020, Peoples Voice (PV) – which is now a member of PAR – had jostled with the PAP for the group representation constituency, which represented the largest area of the downtown city centre of Singapore.

That year, the four-member PAP team, led by the current Minister for Digital Development and Information Josephine Teo, won the election with 65.36 per cent of the vote.

PV, then led by party chief Lim Tean, obtained 34.64 per cent of the vote.

This general election, Mr Lim, who is secretary-general of PAR, will not be contesting Jalan Besar. He will be in a three-cornered fight with Singapore People’s Party (SPP) treasurer Williiamson Lee and Alex Yeo of the PAP for Potong Pasir SMC.

Instead, the PAR team contesting Jalan Besar comprises newcomers. They are freelance private tutor Chiu Shin Kong, nurse Sarina Abu Hassan, early childhood educator Vigneswari V. Ramachandran and the party’s treasurer Mohamad Hamim Aliyas.

PAR is an alliance of three parties – PV, the Reform Party and the Democratic Progressive Party. It was first formed in November 2024 with four parties, with the aim of strengthening opposition unity. The People’s Power Party withdrew in February 2025 over irreconcilable strategic differences.

The PAP team for Jalan Besar GRC will be led by Mrs Teo, and includes incumbent MPs Denise Phua and Wan Rizal Wan Zakariah, as well as new face Shawn Loh.

Mr Loh, who is currently the deputy group managing director of Singapore-based investment company Commonwealth Capital Group, was introduced on April 16 as a new candidate joining the incumbent PAP team to contest Jalan Besar GRC in the general election.

He will take over the GRC’s Whampoa ward from Senior Minister of State for Defence Heng Chee How, who stepped down from the team.

Amid cheers from the crowd after the PAP team’s slate was confirmed, Mrs Teo, who has served as Jalan Besar GRC’s anchor minister since the last election in 2020, said: “We now have a strong track record, and we have presented our plans to make our town your best home. You know that you can trust us to be honest and hard-working.”

On a similar note, team, Ms Sarina from PAR said her party has been engaging residents. “But now we want to work, serve and walk with you into Parliament for Jalan Besar GRC,” she said.

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Speaking to the media after his team’s confirmed candidacy, Mr Chiu said the only experience he had was walking the ground in Jalan Besar.

“It was an eye-opener for me personally because I had never done this before,” he said.

Asked how his team, which is new to the game, would challenge the incumbent, Mr Chiu said his team would represent residents and the issues they face by asking questions on their behalf. These issues include cost of living and inflation.

Ms Vigneswari added: “We dare to stand out and raise issues that other parties don’t want to raise... like immigration and job security for Singaporeans.”
 

GE2025: Faisal Manap’s move to Tampines GRC was one he always wanted, says WP chief Pritam Singh​

WP chief Pritam Singh speaking to reporters after submitting nomination papers for the Aljunied GRC team at the Poi Ching School nomination centre on April 23.

WP chief Pritam Singh speaking to reporters after submitting nomination papers for the Aljunied GRC team at the Poi Ching School nomination centre on April 23.ST PHOTO: CHONG JUN LIANG

Aqil Hamzah
Apr 23, 2025


SINGAPORE – The Workers’ Party decision to move incumbent Aljunied GRC MP Faisal Manap to Tampines GRC was to fulfil his longstanding wish, and because the party felt it had a strong enough slate to contest the ward.

WP chief Pritam Singh said Mr Faisal, 49, “always wanted” to contest in Tampines GRC.

“He’s been asking me to consider that proposal from him for quite a long time already. So he succeeded.

“And Faisal Manap is in Tampines, and he is proud to lead the WP Tampines team,” said Mr Singh, who added that the party had planned to field a team in Tampines GRC in the 2020 General Election.

In the end, it was the National Solidarity Party (NSP) which contested in the constituency. The PAP won 66.41 per cent share of the popular vote that year.

Mr Singh, who was speaking to reporters on April 23 after submitting nomination papers for the Aljunied GRC team, said: “The same consideration that has come to the fore now was prevalent then, which is, do we have enough good candidates to put a slate there?”


He felt the party had found the “best candidates who are prepared to stand for the Workers’ Party”.

Besides WP vice-chairman Faisal, the five-member team comprises Mr Jimmy Tan, 53, co-founder of industrial equipment supply firm Immanuel Engineering; Institute of Mental Health senior principal clinical psychologist Ong Lue Ping, 48; former diplomat Eileen Chong, 33; and Mr Michael Thng, 37, co-founder of technology start-up Showdrop.

CMG20250423-TayYM01 / 郑一鸣 / 林弘谕、张鹤杨、谢慧平、林煇智、陈紫筠、魏瑜嶙 / 大选提名日 GE Nomination Day {Zone C} [ Poi Ching School ]

WP is fielding (from left) Mr Faisal Manap, Mr Michael Thng, Ms Eileen Chong, Dr Ong Lue Ping and Mr Jimmy Tan in Tampines GRC.PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO
Tampines GRC will see a four-cornered fight with the WP, NSP and the People’s Power Party (PPP) going up against the incumbent PAP team led by Social and Family Development Minister Masagos Zulkifli.

Asked about the multi-party fight, Mr Singh said in a democracy, anyone can contest an election, adding that he had respect for all political parties contesting in the constituency.

“My pitch to voters in Tampines (is the) same pitch to Aljunied voters. We’ll represent you well in Parliament, and we’ll look after your estate, and we’ll do our best for you,” he said.

WP will field 26 candidates in the general election across eight constituencies.

Besides Tampines GRC, WP is contesting for the first time in Punggol GRC as well as Jalan Kayu SMC and Tampines Changkat SMC, single seats carved out in the Electoral Boundaries Review Committee report on March 11.

Mr Singh will lead the team defending Aljunied GRC, with incumbent MPs contesting in Sengkang GRC and Hougang SMC. The party has again fielded a team to wrest control of East Coast GRC from the PAP.

Despite earlier indications, WP will not contest in Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC – a decision Mr Singh said was made after the party considered the redrawing of electoral boundaries and made other calculations.

He declined to give more details, but said the party will continue its work in Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC after the general election, and appealed for the understanding of residents in the constituency.


At the press conference, Mr Singh also acknowledged that WP new face Andre Low and Mr Kenneth Foo, who are both contesting in single-member constituencies, will have a tough fight ahead of them.

Mr Low, 33, will face National Trades Union Congress secretary-general Ng Chee Meng in Jalan Kayu SMC, while Mr Foo, 48, will go toe-to-toe with incumbent Tampines GRC MP Desmond Choo, who is an assistant secretary-general of NTUC and director of its policy division.

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WP new face Andre Low (left) and Mr Kenneth Foo are contesting in single-member constituencies.ST PHOTOS: GAVIN FOO, WONG PEI TING
“Andre Low is a very capable man, and I look forward to him contributing in Parliament,” said Mr Singh.

The last minute changes to PAP’s slates in different constituencies also came as no surprise, he said, with the ruling party reserving its final line up changes for the few locations that WP would likely contest.

At the eleventh hour, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong, who was expected to lead the PAP team in Chua Chu Kang, was suddenly brought on to lead the party’s team in Punggol GRC, where senior counsel Harpreet Singh is contesting under WP’s banner.

Replacing Mr Gan was Manpower Minister Tan See Leng, who moved from Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC.

“I expected there to be a lot of shuffling on Nomination Day. It’s going to be a tough fight for the Workers’ Party, no matter who is on the PAP slate, and we have to respect our opponents. And the team will try its best,” Mr Singh said.

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GE2025: PAP West Coast-Jurong West team plans easier social service access, cost-of-living help​

The PAP team contesting West Coast-Jurong West GRC elaborated on plans to refresh ageing infrastructure and help families cope with the rising cost of living.

The PAP team contesting West Coast-Jurong West GRC elaborated on plans to refresh ageing infrastructure and help families cope with the rising cost of living.ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG
Michelle Ng and Ng Wei Kai
Apr 23, 2025


SINGAPORE – The PAP team contesting the new West Coast-Jurong West GRC wants to make it easier for residents in rental flats in Taman Jurong, Boon Lay and Nanyang to access social services, said Mr Desmond Lee, the area’s incumbent PAP MP, on April 23.

Now that the three estates are in the same constituency, it may be easier for the MPs to advocate for these residents and link them up with national schemes that provide financial assistance, such as ComLink+. The Taman Jurong ward had previously been part of Jurong GRC.

Speaking at a press conference announcing the party’s plans for the GRC, held hours after it was confirmed that the PAP would face the PSP at the upcoming polls, Mr Lee said the PAP hopes to do more to ensure national schemes benefit residents in the area.

“For example, ageing is an issue that runs through the whole nation, but in certain parts of our estate, we have seniors, including low-income seniors, and we feel the need to bring Age Well SG from a national level hike onto the ground in a very integrated way,” said Mr Lee, who is Minister for National Development.

Age Well SG is a national programme led by MOH, MND and MOT to support seniors to age well in their homes and their communities.

The PAP team contesting West Coast-Jurong West GRC also elaborated on plans to refresh ageing infrastructure, bridge generational gaps and help families cope with the rising cost of living.

Mr Lee, who is also the Minister-in-charge of Social Services Integration, also cited work that has been done in the past five years, such as the Gift-A-Family initiative which pairs individuals with vulnerable families in Boon Lay.

The existing scheme aims to provide families with opportunities and resources necessary to overcome their challenges and meet their aspirations, by working with social workers to, for example, identify courses and programmes they can attend.

Programmes that may be sponsored include those for upskilling, enrichment and tuition. The sponsorship requests will then be matched with donors and sponsors.

“So it’s not (just) to donate, contribute, or (having) a big company giving resources and volunteers, but to be able to journey with individual families,” he said.

If elected, Mr Lee said he plans to expand the initiative to other areas within the constituency, such as Taman Jurong and Nanyang. The scheme also has the potential to be expanded nationally, he said.

During the press conference, Mr Lee did not respond to questions on the PSP’s challenge for the PAP team to engage them in a policy debate.

He said instead that the PAP will focus on unveiling their plans for the area, which outline the party’s track record for the past five years, and what the party is committed to doing to improve residents’ well-being and their livelihoods.

He added that residents should also ask contesting parties about their plans for the constituency.

“I can’t say for a fact, but I imagine that every incumbent, whether the ruling party or the opposition, would roll out some initiatives,” he said, adding that some programmes would be government-funded, while others would not.

“So I think you can ask the opposition whether they have such programmes too. Can’t imagine they don’t,” he said.


Singapore goes to the polls on May 3. Candidates will start campaigning in earnest from April 23 for nine days before Cooling-off Day on May 2.

Besides Mr Lee, the PAP slate includes Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Finance and Education Shawn Huang, three-term MP Ang Wei Neng, orthopaedic surgeon Hamid Razak and lawyer Cassandra Lee. All were present at the press conference.

They will be facing off against the opposition PSP’s A-team, which includes its top three leaders – former PAP stalwart Tan Cheng Bock, party chief Leong Mun Wai and vice-chair Hazel Poa. The other two candidates are head of packaged food and business development Sumarleki Amjah and in-house legal counsel Sani Ismail.

During the press conference, Mr Lee introduced nine key areas which his team will focus on for the next five years if elected.

This includes helping households cope with the cost of living by supplementing national programmes with local support schemes, ensuring good jobs for job seekers by organising more career and skills fairs in the community and championing families through family-centric events.

On the infrastructure front, neighbourhoods will undergo revitalisation and new sports and fitness facilities will be built. These include a new Clementi Stadium set to be completed by 2030, along with the former West Coast Recreation Centre, which will feature softball and baseball fields.

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Mr Lee said the refreshed plan announced at the press conference builds on the previous plan launched in 2020, while taking into account the new electoral boundaries changes that have brought together most of Jurong West town within the West Coast-Jurong West GRC.

Said Mr Lee: “You’ll see that these nine pillars are centred around our residents and communities and the needs that different groups of residents face.”

 

GE2025: Edwin Tong says East Coast GRC fight will be his toughest​

(From left) Ms Hazlina Abdul Halim, Senior Minister of State for National Development Tan Kiat How, Culture, Community and Youth Minister Edwin Tong, Ms Jessica Tan and Mr Dinesh Vasu Dash during a PAP press conference on April 23.

Culture, Community and Youth Minister Edwin Tong (third from left) with his team for East Coast GRC (from left) Ms Hazlina Abdul Halim, Senior Minister of State for National Development Tan Kiat How, Ms Jessica Tan and Mr Dinesh Vasu Dash during a press conference on April 23.ST PHOTO: KEVIN LIM
Ng Keng Gene and Joyce Lim
Apr 23, 2025

SINGAPORE – The PAP’s battle with WP for East Coast GRC will be Culture, Community and Youth Minister Edwin Tong’s toughest General Election to date, he said on April 23.

At a press conference where he formally introduced PAP’s East Coast team, which he is leading, Mr Tong said that East Coast has always been a tough constituency to win.

Earlier in the day, it was confirmed that besides Mr Tong, 55, the PAP will field East Coast incumbent MPs Senior Minister of State for National Development Tan Kiat How, 47, and four-term MP Jessica Tan, 58, as well as new faces Hazlina Abdul Halim and Dinesh Vasu Dash, to contest the constituency’s five seats.

They are up against a team from WP helmed by former Non-Constituency MP Yee Jenn Jong, 60, as well as IT professional Nathaniel Koh, 41, former US Navy administrator Paris V. Parameswari, 51, former lawyer Sufyan Mikhail Putra, 33, and Visa product lead Jasper Kuan, 46.

This comes as Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat, 64, who led the team in the last election, is not on the slate.

At GE2020, the five-member East Coast GRC saw the second-closest winning margin for the PAP.


Then, the PAP team led by DPM Heng – who was moved to the GRC in a Nomination Day surprise – won against the WP with 53.39 per cent of the vote. The WP received 46.61 per cent.

Mr Tong said: “I think opposition presence has become a permanent feature of Singapore’s political landscape – more contestation, more diversity of representation, more voices – and I think this is here to stay.

“In particular, East Coast has always been a tough ward for the PAP over the many decades of GEs that we have seen.”


Mr Tong entered politics in 2011 as an MP for Moulmein-Kallang GRC, and then served two terms in Marine Parade GRC – both times beating WP teams that Mr Yee was part of.

He said the WP “is a good party”, that has “a credible team”.

“I believe they will put up a good fight, and it’s something that we have to take very seriously, and that’s why I regard this as possibly my toughest GE amongst the four,” Mr Tong said.

He described Mr Yee as “a very seasoned operator”, noting that the entrepreneur has been part of the WP for many years and run several elections – both in GRCs and single-seat constituencies.

“So he’s a very good operator, and I think he’s also very seasoned and experienced,” said Mr Tong.

“So that means that he’s someone who understands how elections work. He understands how to campaign, and I believe that he will make a good job of leading his team.”

Mr Tong is leading a PAP team contesting a GRC for the first time, after the Joo Chiat ward that he has overseen since 2015 was absorbed into East Coast from Marine Parade GRC when the electoral boundaries were redrawn in March.

As for the PAP’s East Coast slate, Mr Tong said it comprises “a diversity of different experiences” that bring together “different voices and different lived experiences”.

Mr Dinesh, 50, replaces DPM Heng in PAP’s East Coast line-up, overseeing the Bedok area, while fellow new face Madam Hazlina, 40, takes over the Siglap area from Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Maliki Osman.

Both DPM Heng and Dr Maliki have announced their retirement from politics.

“DPM’s retirement, no doubt, has left big shoes to fill, but I think amongst us – the diversity of this team – we do have some big feet, thankfully,” said Mr Tong, adding that the “freshness” and experience of his team puts them in good stead to serve East Coast residents.

He pointed out that when fresh PAP candidates are fielded, “we don’t take over from ground zero”.

Mr Tong said that new candidates “build on and work off the work that has been done in preceding terms, by preceding teams”, and emphasised the “sheer continuity” of the work done by PAP East Coast teams that have “successively and successfully” contested the constituency.

“We want to assure our residents that despite the retirement of DPM, we will continue with work that he has started, and we will build on it, add to it, and make it even brighter for our residents at East Coast,” he said.


Mr Dinesh said that if elected, he will focus his efforts on supporting seniors and caregivers, helping young families, and uplifting minority communities and the vulnerable.

He said he takes inspiration from his parents’-in-law, who had to take care of his wife’s grandmother, who had a mental illness and was confined to her home, for almost four decades.

Madam Hazlina, a former journalist, said that she has the ability to “go deeper and peel the layers of the onion” when interacting with residents, which will help her to connect with and better understand them.

Addressing a question on whether Mr Dinesh and Madam Hazlina could potentially take up political office, Mr Tong said the PAP looks at the “fundamental quality of a new candidate, and in many ways, we expect – in some form or other – for the new candidate to rise up above and to do more than just be a backbencher”.

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Noting that some political office-holders such as himself and National Development Minister Desmond Lee did not take up office roles immediately upon being elected, Mr Tong said that “everyone has the potential to do so, and it really depends on when that can happen and what needs we might have in political office-holder spaces”.

Should his team win the trust and votes of the electorate, said Mr Tong, Mr Dinesh and Madam Hazlina “can go far”.

“They are good people, very well grounded, very much an expert in the areas that they look after. And more importantly, I think they have a strong heart for the people,” he said.
 

GE2025: Opposition parties upset that WP pulled out of Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC​

CMG20250423-HoKJ01 Election official sticking party stickers on nomination forms at Poi Ching School

CMG20250423-HoKJ01 Election official sticking party stickers on nomination forms at Poi Ching SchoolSPH Media Limited

Esther Loi
Apr 23, 2025


SINGAPORE – Several opposition parties have expressed displeasure with WP for not contesting Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC leading to an unexpected walkover, the first at a general election since 2011.

WP was expected to field a team in this constituency, as it had contested Marine Parade GRC in 2020 and won 42.26 per cent of the vote.

Hours after a five-member PAP team in Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC won unopposed on April 23, some opposition parties took to social media or spoke to media outlets to voice their opinions.

Mr Goh Meng Seng, 55, secretary-general of People’s Power Party (PPP), said in a Facebook post: “WP was the last minute spoiler party, (who was) willing to sacrifice 130,000 voters’ rights in Marine Parade-Braddell Heights, just to get into a four-cornered fight!”


This four-cornered fight will take place in Tampines GRC, where the WP, PPP and National Solidarity Party (NSP) will go up against the incumbent PAP team led by Social and Family Development Minister Masagos Zulkifli.

Similarly, PPP’s chairman Derrick Sim said he could not believe that WP had pulled out from Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC, adding that his team was “dumbfounded”.


In a Facebook post on April 23, Mr Sim, 44, noted that WP had never contested in Tampines since the party was formed in 1988, while it had consistently contested and walked the ground in Marine Parade for over a decade.

Adding that WP’s “star candidate” Harpreet Singh was frequently spotted in Marine Parade, Mr Sim said: “And now, WP totally abandoned all that ground effort to parachute into Tampines – a GRC where multiple teams had already confirmed their intentions early on, and even made public statements.”

“’Strategic move’? Sorry, but that’s a lame excuse. Letting in five seats even before the contest starts,” he said.


Besides these candidates from PPP, the secretary-general of the Singapore People’s Party (SPP) Steve Chia also issued a media response on the issue on April 23.

Mr Chia, 54, said SPP was “indeed surprised” by WP’s decision to not contest Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC, especially given WP’s active ground engagement in the constituency since the election in 2020.

He added: “This walkover, the first since 2011, marks an unexpected turn in what was anticipated to be a keenly contested race.”

“We share the disappointment felt by many residents who were looking forward to a robust democratic process with diverse voices and choices at the ballot box.”

Noting that SPP believes that every constituency benefits from active competition since it fosters greater accountability, Mr Chia said his party respects strategic choices made by other parties but regrets that voters in the constituency would not have the chance to express their preferences through the polls.

Speaking to the media regarding PSP’s candidacy in West Coast-Jurong West GRC on April 23, PSP chief Leong Mun Wai also commented that the party found it “slightly disappointing” that there was a walkover in a group representation constituency during GE2025.

“PSP believes that we should give Singaporeans a chance to experience the democratic process, we should not have (a) walkover, so that is a bit disappointing, but I suppose there are valid reasons why that happened,” he said.

Before comments from these opposition parties streamed in, WP chief Pritam Singh shared on Facebook that not contesting Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC was “a very difficult decision” for the party.

He published the post 15 minutes after nomination proceedings ended at 12.30pm on April 23.

Thanking residents in the constituency for their support, Mr Singh noted that Joo Chiat SMC was drawn out of Marine Parade GRC into East Coast GRC, while MacPherson SMC and other estates were pulled into the new Marine-Parade Braddell-Heights GRC by the Electoral Boundary Review Committee.

“It is with a heavy heart I share that The Workers’ Party will not stand in Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC for these general elections,” he added.

“As a small opposition party, we are constantly faced with difficult choices about where and how best to deploy our limited resources, particularly after electoral boundaries are redrawn.”

“After much reflection and careful consideration, we have determined that in order to continue fighting for the principles and changes we all believe in, and to give our candidates the best chance of electoral success, the Party must focus its best efforts this GE on a smaller number of constituencies than we would have hoped to contest.”
 

From navy chief to a key pillar of PAP’s 3G team: SM Teo retires after 33 years in politics​

Minister for Manpower Josephine Teo (far left) and Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean at Safra Punggol for the My Family Fiesta on Sept 8, 2019.

Minister for Manpower Josephine Teo (far left) and Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean (centre) at Safra Punggol for the My Family Fiesta on Sept 8, 2019.PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO
Chin Soo Fang
Apr 23, 2025

SINGAPORE - Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean, 70, is retiring from politics, marking the end of an illustrious career spanning more than three decades.

On April 23, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong paid tribute to SM Teo and Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat, who is also retiring.

“Both are remarkable individuals, giants in the public service with a lifetime of contributions to Singapore and Singaporeans,” he said at a press conference.

A former Navy chief holding the rank of rear-admiral, SM Teo made his political debut in December 1992, when he was part of a team that contested and won a by-election in Marine Parade GRC.

He quickly established himself as a PAP stalwart, earning re-election six times as an MP for Pasir Ris GRC and subsequently, Pasir Ris–Punggol GRC, which he has anchored since 2001.

Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Indranee Rajah has taken over from SM Teo to helm the PAP team in Pasir Ris-Changi GRC, which was carved out of Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC.

His first Cabinet appointment was as Minister of State for Finance as well as Communications in 1992. He has also been Minister for Home Affairs, Defence, Education, and the Environment.

A core member of Singapore’s third-generation political leadership team, SM Teo served as deputy prime minister from 2009 to 2019, and has been Coordinating Minister for National Security since 2011. He was appointed Senior Minister in 2019.

From Admiral to Policy Architect​

As Coordinating Minister for National Security, he strengthened Singapore’s resilience against emerging threats, such as terrorism. This includes improving intelligence sharing, strengthening border security, and conducting regular counter-terrorism exercises.

He also oversaw the development of robust cybersecurity strategies to protect Singapore’s critical infrastructure and digital assets. For example, the Cyber Security Agency of Singapore (CSA) was established in 2015 to protect Singapore’s cyberspace.

Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean speaking in an interview to mark Public Service Week.

Then DPM Teo Chee Hean speaking in an interview to mark Public Service Week in 2009.PHOTO: ST FILE
SM Teo also spearheaded efforts to transform Singapore into a Smart Nation by advancing digital government initiatives and fostering innovation.

Launched in 2018, the Digital Government Blueprint (DGB) leveraged data and digital technologies to transform public services, making them more efficient and citizen-centric. This includes initiatives to automate processes, enhance digital infrastructure, and improve the digital skills of public officers.

In 2024, Smart Nation 2.0 was announced to enhance digital infrastructure, promote digital literacy, and ensure that technology benefits all citizens.

Ms Valerie Lee, Mr Sharael Taha, Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean, Ms Sun Xueling, Mr Desmond Tan and Ms Yeo Wan Ling at the Pasir Ris-Punggol Career Marketplace 2025 D’Marquee at Downtown East on March 22, 2025. ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY

(From left) Ms Valerie Lee, Mr Sharael Taha, Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean, Ms Sun Xueling, Mr Desmond Tan and Ms Yeo Wan Ling at Downtown East on March 22.ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY
As Chairman of the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Climate Change, SM Teo also championed sustainability efforts, including solar energy deployment and electric vehicle adoption.

Under his leadership, Singapore developed comprehensive strategies to address climate change, including the National Climate Change Strategy 2012 and the Climate Action Plan 2016.

He also played a key role in the introduction of Singapore’s carbon tax in 2019, which aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by incentivising businesses to adopt greener practices.

Fighting pandemic outbreak​

One of SM Teo’s major contributions was his experience with both Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and Mindef, and wielding the authority of being Coordinating Minister for National Security.

This was especially evident when the Covid-19 pandemic rampaged through migrant workers’ dormitories in 2020. He was tasked to assemble an inter-agency Joint Task Force (JTF) by then Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to stem transmissions and protect workers.

Cases among workers living in dormitories had jumped from 31 in April 2020 to over 15,000 in May, before more than doubling to 33,000 in June. For much of the year, they made up 19 in 20 cases, and by the end of 2021, over 175,000 out of 323,000 dormitory residents had caught the virus.

SM Teo put together a team which comprised the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF), health and manpower ministries, and the Home Team from MHA.

The JTF deployed officers to all 43 purpose-built dorms (PBDs) to set up medical facilities, bring in supplies and food, and even ensured that there was Internet access and entertainment for the workers. Doctors and nurses were also sent to each dorm.

By the end of the first week of the circuit breaker, which had begun on April 7, all the dorms had been locked down. Workers who tested positive were moved to community facilities, and strict testing and isolation rules were imposed.

Marine Parade GRC by-election 1992. PAP press conference to introduce new candidates for the by-election. Commodore Teo Chee Hean: I hope to come in with an independent mind, to bring my own views, my own attitudes, feelings to the problems that we face.

Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean made his political debut in December 1992, when he was part of a team that contested and won a by-election in Marine Parade GRC. PHOTO: ST FILE
Over four months later, all the dorms were cleared of the virus and nine in 10 workers in the construction, maritime and process sectors could return to their jobs.

“Covid-19 was not a mission that our SAF and Home Team had specifically prepared and trained for,” said SM Teo in a national broadcast on Singapore’s post-coronavirus future in June 2020. “But they demonstrated their readiness and flexibility by stepping up to establish the joint task forces (JTFs) within days, to support their MOM and MOH colleagues who were already on the front lines.”

He added that the pandemic was the largest and most complex he had encountered in more than 40 years of public service.

In a Facebook post, Senior Minister Lee Hsien Loong said: “Chee Hean was a steady presence in Cabinet and a pillar of strength in my 3G team.”

He said he could rely on SM Teo to deal with the thorniest issues sensibly and even-handedly.

Whether they were responding to crises like the Covid-19 pandemic, managing complex cross-cutting topics like population policy, or conducting sensitive negotiations with Singapore’s neighbours, SM Teo spoke his mind, and never hesitated to express views that were different from his, said SM Lee.

“I always valued Chee Hean’s thoughtful reactions to my ideas, his strategic clarity, and sound judgment,” SM Lee added.


Respected Interlocutor in Defence Diplomacy​

As Defence Minister from 2003 to 2011, SM Teo served at the forefront of defence diplomacy through his interactions with international defence leaders. He was a respected interlocutor in defence diplomacy, building close ties with both his Chinese and American counterparts over his tenure.

He was a driving force behind the signing of major agreements such as the Strategic Framework Agreement with the United States in 2005, and contributed significantly in building up the annual Shangri-La Dialogue, which has become the premier defence and security forum in the Asia-Pacific.

He also oversaw critical upgrades to Singapore’s military capabilities to ensure its preparedness in an evolving global landscape. This included the introduction of new fighter jets, naval vessels, and land systems to the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF), and leveraging technology as a force multiplier.

As Home Affairs Minister, he spearheaded efforts to boost civil defence and internal security, especially in the wake of rising regional threats.

He emphasised the importance of the Total Defence strategy, which integrates military, civil, economic, social, and psychological defence to ensure Singapore’s resilience against various threats.

In a Facebook post, PM Wong called SM Teo “a strategist at heart” who brought an incisive mind to bear on complex issues, with a laser focus on effective policies that make a difference.

SM Teo was also a statesman who represented Singapore with distinction on the global stage, creating space and opportunities for Singapore internationally, he said.

“His contributions over the years allowed us to resolve complex and long-standing bilateral issues – including the agreements on extradition, airspace and defence cooperation between Singapore and Indonesia,” PM Wong said. “His leadership has enabled our little red dot to stand tall and proud in the world.”


In a 2018 speech at the Singapore Perspectives conference, SM Teo emphasised the necessity of leadership renewal to maintain vitality and energy in governance.

“You don’t want a whole nation to be held hostage by the health of a cohort of people who are already senior and are getting more and more senior with each passing year, so you need leadership renewal.”

In 2019, upon his transition from Deputy Prime Minister to Senior Minister, he said: “Senior leaders make way in good time for the next generation, share their experience and help the next generation of leaders to succeed.”

Key Appointments​

May 2019 to Current: Senior Minister

May 2011 to Current: Coordinating Minister for National Security

April 2009 to April 2019: Deputy Prime Minister

May 2011 to September 2015: Minister for Home Affairs

August 2003 to May 2011: Minister for Defence

January 1997 to July 2003: Minister for Education

January 1996 to July 2003: Second Minister for Defence

January 1996 to January 1997: Minister for the Environment

April 1995 to January 1996: Acting Minister for the Environment

April 1995 to January 1996: Senior Minister of State, Ministry of Defence

July 1994 to April 1995: Minister of State, Ministry of Defence

December 1992 to April 1995: Minister of State, Ministry of Finance

December 1992 to July 1994: Minister of State, Ministry of Communications

Member of Parliament​

October 2001 to Current: Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC

January 1997 to October 2001: Pasir Ris GRC

December 1992 to December 1996: Marine Parade GRC
 

Equip yourselves with the best team to take our nation forward: PM Wong​

PM Lawrence Wong said the stakes are high in this election, and in many respects the challenges are more severe than when Singaporeans last went to the polls.

Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said that the stakes are high in this election.ST PHOTO: KEVIN LIM
Chin Soo Fang and Hariz Baharudin
Apr 23, 2025

SINGAPORE - There is consensus among world leaders, businesses, unionists and experts in the field that the global conditions that underpinned Singapore’s success as a trading nation are changing and will not go back to what it used to be, said Prime Minister Lawrence Wong as he called on Singaporeans to equip themselves with the best team to take the nation forward.

At a press conference on April 23, PM Wong said the stakes are high in this election, and in many respects the challenges are more severe than when Singaporeans last went to the polls in 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Businesses already feel the slowdown in their orders, are cutting back on investments in this uncertain environment, and there may even be job losses. Union leaders have also raised concerns about the impact on jobs, and the effect of trade barriers going up could stretch for quite some time, he added.

“Countries are turning inwards and trade barriers are going up. The opposition says ‘don’t fear, this is overreaction, the PAP is overdoing it’,” he said. “But I think if you truly examine the facts and ask yourself: is the world changing? Is something different? The answer is yes.”

PM Wong, who is heading into his first hustings as both Prime Minister and PAP secretary-general, said that he had in the last few weeks spoken to his counterparts from around the world. He had also spoken to union leaders, and caught up with sovereign wealth fund GIC’s investment advisors right after nomination proceedings.

“Across the board, there is a consensus that things will not go back to the way they used to be,” he said. “No one can tell what this new global order will be like...we are in the midst of a very messy and unpredictable transition.”


This means much is at risk, and more than ever who Singaporeans choose to be their elected government in this changed world is critical, he added.

“Under these circumstances, I ask Singaporeans to equip yourselves with the best team to take our nation forward.”

While some people say Singaporeans tend to vote for the PAP during difficult times, PM Wong said he did not take this for granted, as it did not happen at the 2020 General Election that was held in the midst of a pandemic.

The opposition is better organised than before and, aside from the walkover in Marine Parade-Braddell Heights, every area will be fiercely contested, he added. “So I fully expect this election to be a tough contest.”

Asked about the belief among some voters that the PAP will still be able to form the government even if a few more opposition MPs are voted in, PM Wong said he understood the sentiment and that there is a role for a constructive and responsible opposition in Singapore.

The reality is the opposition is here to stay and their numbers in the House have increased over the years, he added.

“But at the end of the day in an election, Singaporeans must decide who they want to serve them as their elected government - that’s what elections are about,” he said.

PM Wong said he had “worked extra hard this time around” to bring in fresh faces to strengthen his team, which includes a number who have the potential to take on political office, if they are elected.

He urged Singaporeans to consider the stakes - not just in terms of tactical voting, but what the election fundamentally means for their families and the future of the country.

“Choose who you believe are the right individuals that you want to represent you in your constituency and in Parliament in our country,” he said.

“They ought to be individuals who are capable, people with integrity, people of good character, and may Singaporeans choose the best candidates amongst the slate of candidates that we are presenting.”

  • Chin Soo Fang is senior correspondent at The Straits Times covering topics such as community, politics, social issues, consumer, culture and heritage.
  • Hariz Baharudin is a correspondent at The Straits Times covering politics.
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Nomination Day showdown: Flags, fans and the future of Singapore​

PAP and WP supporters swarmed the parade square at Poi Ching School after a light shower.

PAP and WP supporters swarmed the parade square at Poi Ching School after a light shower.ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG
Cherie Lok, Carmen Sin, Elizabeth Law and Shawn Hoo
Apr 23, 2025


SINGAPORE - The wait begins over an hour before the first candidates are expected to arrive, along a sleepy road in the heart of Tampines. Reporters are on one side, packed like sardines under a sheltered walkway, curious residents on the other.

In the tide of black lapping against the gates of Poi Ching School – media personnel decked out in one of the few “neutral” shades – bobs a single flash of light blue.

Mr Loh, a mask-wearing, baseball cap-donning WP supporter who asked to be identified by his surname alone, does not live in the area, but made the early morning trek down from his home in Bishan-Toa Payoh to catch a glimpse of the party he has been supporting since he was 13.

Now 60, his belief has not wavered.“I want to see a balanced parliament that reflects ideas from across the board. It’s good for Singapore. What would we be without checks and controls?”

Having secured his spot on the edge of a curb, he begins his long and solitary wait outside the candidates’ gate. The other supporters trickle in slowly via another entrance, dressed mostly in the crisp white attire that is the PAP’s trademark.

With minimal fanfare, the first candidates descend on the nomination centre. First comes the People’s Power Party (PPP) shortly after 10am, followed by the PAP, and the National Solidarity Party (NSP). Last to arrive is the WP, its buses pulling into the school to loud cheers from the hitherto-silent surrounding crowd of residents.

In the middle of the media scrum, Mr Loh catches a glimpse of party chief Pritam Singh. He snaps his photo and turns to leave, satisfied. “I was correct. He’s here. Game over.”

Inside the school, the light rain drives supporters to a narrow walkway, now cloven into two distinct sections: one white, the other blue. A few brave souls spill into the parade square, but they are reminded not to open their party umbrellas just yet.

The same goes for posters and banners – none of it is to be unveiled until the candidates make their speeches. A PAP volunteer has been designated guardian of one such stack of paraphernalia; he says he doesn’t know what’s hidden within its folds.

But the Hougang resident, who wants to be known only as Mr Kwok, says he is ready for a change this election.

“My family has always voted PAP. We can tell there’s a difference between the estate management in our township and other parts of Singapore,” says Mr Kwok who works in facilities management. For instance, the landscaping and flooding control in his ward, which is currently run by WP’s Dennis Tan, leave much to be desired.

“Let’s not even talk about the cost of living or any sort of grand policies if the basic needs of residents are not met. I get it, I’m a young person too, but let’s get the basics right first.”

On the contrary, freelance designer Sargunan’s vote hinges on the policies each party is proposing. And so far, the WP’s call for smaller class sizes resonates with him.

“I was one of those kids who fell behind in a large class,” says the 36-year-old, who pledged his allegiance with a blue shirt.

He also stresses the need for more alternative voices in Parliament, a call echoed by his fellow WP supporters.

For Mr Lee, however, that is not enough, especially if none of those voices speak up for what he believes in. The 30-year-old who works in IT is among a small handful of voices cheering for the PPP – a pair of purple flags amid the blanket of white banners.

But he is not demoralised. “What’s wrong with fighting for what you believe in, even if it’s not the most popular party?”

For one supporter, the meat of the manifesto matters not at all. Ms Jasmine Chen, mother of NSP’s Tampines candidate Eugene Yeo, is here out of maternal affection. Says the 76-year-old retiree: “I can’t help out with his walkabouts, so I can only show my support here.”

And her son will need all the moral encouragement he can get, given the four-cornered fight that looms ahead of him: “He’s in a smaller party, so sometimes he faces greater hardship. But he still believes in the party and trusts in his experience, so I think he’ll know what to do.”

Promises ring out from the balcony once the candidates reappear to deliver their speeches. Vows for a better life, in a changed Singapore, made in a variety of languages, all greeted by alternating cheers from the blue and white sections of the parade square.

On each side, confidence crackles like electricity.

Slug: pixnomination23ST PHOTO: Chong Jun LiangPPP supporters cheering during Nomination Day at Poi Ching School in Tampines Street 71, on April 23, 2025. #poi

PPP's pair of supporters at Poi Ching School. ST PHOTO: CHONG JUN LIANG

A different rhythm in the West​

If Tampines buzzes with the energy of long-time supporters and newcomers, the West Coast-Jurong West GRC nomination centre pulses with a different rhythm.

It was the tightest race of the last election but here, there is a sense of the action lying elsewhere. As cheerleading contingents from the PAP and PSP take their posts at either end of the Nan Hua High School square, the talk in both camps is firmly on other towns - the shock walkover in Marine Parade, the showdown in Punggol.

Chalk it up to experience. The rival factions are of the same profile: silver-haired and liver-spotted, genial retirees trading gossip while waving party flags. Umbrellas double as walking canes and, in the women’s washroom, “bad knees” rule out the squatting stall for most.

But like the returning patriarch of Ayer Rajah, PSP’s Dr Tan Cheng Bock, they seem to say “don’t count me out”.

Their numbers are formidable. For the 50 or so PSP supporters at the centre, there must be some 200 from the PAP.

With a younger man’s bravado, 63-year-old PSP volunteer Ramli Mohamed brushes off the ruling party’s vigorous turnout. Part of the island of red shirts in a sea of white, the handyman leads a small group of PSP men past “enemy” lines to the PAP corner of the parade square.

“Who are we? PSP!” they roar, with a thunder to match the “lightning risk” alerts intermittently issued over the speakers.

Nan Hua High School Nomination Centre on April 23, 2025 Assigned Electoral Divisions • Jurong East-Bukit Batok GRC (5-MP) • West Coast-Jurong West GRC (5-MP) • Jurong Central SMC • Pioneer SMC

PSP supporters are seen chanting and waving the flags at Nan Hua High School nomination centre on April 23, 2025.ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG
Not to be outdone, the PAP swarm blow on shrill whistles, in a friendly exchange of fire.

When finally, the candidates from Pioneer SMC, Jurong East-Bukit Batok GRC, Jurong Central SMC and the closely watched West Coast-Jurong West GRC appear to greet the people, it is boisterous all around.

Though only Dr Tan Cheng Bock is cheered by name, no one can best the volume of the massive PAP crowd, not least when Minister for National Development Desmond Lee steps out. Armed to the hilt with clappers, poms poms, banners and LED signs, the men and women in white drown out the half-hearted hectoring of a Red Dot United supporter.

The gauntlet thrown by the PSP leaders Leong Mun Wai and Hazel Poa - challenging the incumbent West Coast PAP team to a debate on national policies - is the big finish, delivered in English, Chinese and Malay. In a few hours, it will be dubbed the first shot fired but it barely registers in the moment, with the red shirts whooping at the usual pitch and the PAP supporters watching quietly, arms behind backs.

Nan Hua High School Nomination Centre on April 23, 2025 Assigned Electoral Divisions • Jurong East-Bukit Batok GRC (5-MP) • West Coast-Jurong West GRC (5-MP) • Jurong Central SMC • Pioneer SMC

PAP supporters are seen chanting and waving the flags at Nan Hua High School nomination centre on April 23, 2025.ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG
Curious onlookers dot the sidelines, amused by the charge in the air. Some, like neighbours Choo Meng Foo, 60, and Phillip Lim, 75, are there to “document” the human drama of an election with their cameras.

It is an occasion of some import for Mr Lim, who is leavening his depression with this new hobby of street photography. He bought his $1,600 camera two days ago specially for the hustings.

For all the bluster of competition, there are still moments of friendship across the political aisle.

During a brief but intense early afternoon downpour, a group of PSP stragglers walked unsheltered into the centre. A woman in white rushed to meet them with umbrellas. A man in red accepted gratefully.

For an instant, they stopped to chat.

Heart of the drama​

Meanwhile, in the northeast, Yusof Ishak Secondary School stands as the epicentre of Nomination Day drama.

In the exuberant crowd is a wide range of curious onlookers including students who got the day off, a clutch of live streamers and several retirees offering their take on local politics to all who would listen.

“I think some people are taking pictures of me… Aiyoh,” says one white-clad supporter while taking selfies at a nearby bus stop.

Inside the compound, the quadrangle has been divided into two, with mostly white-clad supporters on one side, and those in other colours on the other.

A ripple of excitement sweeps through the crowd with the arrival of Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong, and the surprising news that he is leaving his long-time Chua Chu Kang ward to become anchor minister for Punggol GRC.

Not long after, fellow DPM Heng Swee Keat appears alongside the East Coast GRC team, only to drop a political bombshell - announcing his retirement in a heartfelt Facebook post - later in the day.

The excitement isn’t limited to politicians. Olympic champion Joseph Schooling is spotted among the PAP contingent, waving to the crowd and lending star power to the proceedings.

Students who return to school out of curiosity find themselves at the heart of the action. “It’s so strange because today it’s like that, bustling with all these people here, and tomorrow we’re going to come back and it’ll be normal,” says 16-year-old Yong Wing Ben, gesturing at the makeshift stage where candidates will soon address the nation. “You know, even being out here with a lightning alert in effect, it’s surreal.”

His friend, Miguel Marquez, 15, is more excited to see former Sengkang GRC MP Jamus Lim, who represented his constituency.

Having made an unsuccessful run for Student Council President – he is now the vice president – Miguel wants to see how a General Election is run so he could better improve his future campaign.

The boys later wave to their vice principals Mr Teddy Lin and Ms Loh Sein Ling, who are on the second floor serving as election officers.

WP Party flags at Deyi Nomination Centre on April 23, 2025.

WP Party flags at Deyi Nomination Centre on April 23, 2025.ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY
As the drizzle fades and the midday heat sets in, the crowd thins, but the die-hards remain — older men in the shade, trading theories, livestreaming to their handful of followers, and waiting for the official word.

Among them is Peter Goh, 65, who has taken two buses from Siglap, wearing a lime green shirt from his volunteering days. He has very fond memories of his retiring MP Dr Maliki Osman.

“I helped out for many years and he was always very nice to me, so even if Maliki is retiring, I want to come and show my support for Hazlina Abdul Halim since she’s new,” he says with a toothless grin.

By 1pm, impatience grows. At 1:09pm, the deputy returning officer finally appears, confirming a contested election.

Cheers erupt as candidates in light blue — WP colours — emerge, red flags with yellow hammers unfurl, and chants of “Workers Party! Workers Party!” echo across the quadrangle.

Punggol GRC candidate Harpreet Singh Nehal’s speech is met with a roar.

Not to be outdone, the white-clad PAP supporters, led by retiring Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean, rally with a spirited “Majulah PAP! Majulah Singapura!”

Petals and plot twists​

Yet, not every corner of Singapore throbs with the same intensity.

Tucked away on a secluded stretch of Pang Sua Park Connector, the supporters’ gate at Jurong Pioneer Junior College opens to a gentle start on Nomination Day. Two enthusiastic PAP supporters walk in when the police remove the barricade at about 10am . The calm morning sets the tone for the day as the three constituencies – Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC, Chua Chu Kang GRC and Bukit Gombak SMC – are not touted as fierce contests.

Retirees Mr Ng Kee Chew, 72, and Mr Lim Ah Choong, 77, have come bearing four orchid garlands they bought at a nearby Marsiling flower market in support of Prime Minister Lawrence Wong, who is leading the PAP team in Marsiling-Yew Tee against the SDP.

“I don’t think it will be a tough fight here because it is the Prime Minister’s territory,” says Mr Ng, who is a Marsiling-Yew Tee voter.

shcolour24 - Retirees Mr Ng Kee Chew, 72, and Mr Lim Ah Choong, 77, were the first two supporters to arrive at 9.40am carrying four orchid garlands they bought at a nearby Marsiling flower market in support of Prime Minister Lawrence Wong.ST PHOTO: SHAWN HOO

Retirees Mr Ng Kee Chew, 72, and Mr Lim Ah Choong, 77, were the first two supporters to arrive at 9.40am carrying four orchid garlands they bought at a nearby Marsiling flower market in support of Prime Minister Lawrence Wong.ST PHOTO: SHAWN HOO
The air turns energetic when hundreds of PAP supporters finally arrive. Decked in full white, they carry banners and clapping hand toys into the stadium. Mrs Marina Nawi, 71, says she is there with a “bus” of her exercise buddies at her RC to support Ms Low Yen Ling who is contesting in Bukit Gombak SMC against veteran technologist Harish Pillay from the PSP.

Adding a splash of colour and cheer to the scene is Mr Victor Ronnie Lai - also known as Mr Sunflowr- who is decked in a yellow singlet, bright yellow shoes, a sunflower in one hand and a little earth mascot on the other. He quips: “I’m an independent – I respect all politicians if they are good.”

The Chua Chu Kang resident had wanted to compete in Pioneer SMC in 2020, but failed to get enough assentors. The retired financial accountant is not contesting this election but says he has turned up because the Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister were here.

“I hope that, after the elections, I may consider applying to be a climate Nominated Member of Parliament,” says Mr Lai who is passionate about climate change issues.

In a surprising turn, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong did not appear at the nomination centre, having been moved to Punggol GRC instead. Minister for Manpower and Second Minister for Trade and Industry Tan See Leng will now anchor the PAP team in Chua Chu Kang GRC, setting up a high-stakes face-off against the Progress Singapore Party.

Many are caught off guard by the reshuffle including PSP member Khush Chopra who reckons the party’s odds in the GRC are now probably better.

“You bring in a new face at the last minute – I’m not sure how helpful it is. But the PAP will have its reasons.”

pixnomination23 ST20250423_202566400285/Desmond Foo/ Nomination Day at Methodist Girls School for SDP supporters waving their flags at Methodist Girl's School on April 23, 2025.

SDP supporters waving their flags at Methodist Girl’s School on April 23, 2025.ST PHOTO: DESMOND FOO
Meanwhile, despite braving the torrential rain and enduring four hours without nearby toilets, Mr Ng and Mr Lim are not successful in presenting their garlands personally to the prime minister and his team. They could only watch from the bleachers when PM Wong came out briefly to make a speech to his Marsiling-Yew Tee residents.

“We won’t try to see him anymore today, we’re told there won’t be a chance to,” says Mr Ng. The four orchid garlands lay unused in two red plastic bags, as the duo make their way back home.
 
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GE2025: Political service not about shouting slogans, says Chan Chun Sing​

Education Minister Chan Chun Sing (centre) said that political service is also not a once-in-five-year exercise, but a daily effort to listen to residents.

Education Minister Chan Chun Sing (centre) said that political service is also not a once-in-five-year exercise, but a daily effort to listen to residents. ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG
Theresa Tan and Lim Min Zhang
Apr 23, 2025

SINGAPORE - Responsible political leaders will not resort to shouting slogans, but they will let Singaporeans know the considerations behind every policy decision.

Education Minister Chan Chun Sing said at a press conference on April 23 that political service is also not a once-in-five-year exercise, but a daily effort to listen to residents, and understand and resolve their challenges.

Mr Chan, who helms the Tanjong Pagar GRC, was responding to questions including his views on proposals by the opposition People’s Alliance for Reform (PAR) for free healthcare and education.

Mr Prabu Ramachandran, a commercial banker who leads the PAR slate for the constituency, had proposed free healthcare for the lower-income, and free education - initiatives which he said can be funded with existing tax revenues without tapping the reserves.

The PAR team comprises Mr Prabu; Mr Nadarajan Selvamani, a 59-year-old director of a private school; Mr Rickson Giauw, 67, a site safety adviser and officer; Ms Han Hui Hui, a 33-year-old human rights fellow at a foreign university; and Mr Soh Lian Chye, 60, a senior logistics assistant.

Mr Chan said that while free education and healthcare are desirable, the million-dollar question is who would foot the bill.

He added that as a responsible ruling party, the PAP should let Singaporeans know the considerations behind every policy decision, as well as their pros and cons.

“This is what a responsible political leader does, compared to (simply) being a politician,” said Mr Chan during the hour-long press conference at Tanjong Pagar Plaza.

“Politics is not about shouting slogans; it’s about how to take care of residents well every day.”

The PAP’s Tanjong Pagar GRC team, as well as incumbent Melvin Yong of Radin Mas SMC and Mr Eric Chua, who is contesting the new Queenstown SMC, were speaking to the press shortly after the electoral slate was confirmed on Nomination Day.

Political newcomer Foo Cexiang, who was initially spotted at events in Punggol GRC, is joining the Tanjong Pagar team.

He replaces Ms Indranee Rajah, who moved to helm Pasir Ris-Changi GRC, taking over from Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean.

Ms Indranee has been a Tanjong Pagar MP since she joined politics in 2001.

Another newcomer to the GRC is Ms Rachel Ong, whose Telok Blangah ward under the former West Coast GRC is now part of Tanjong Pagar GRC.

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The other two incumbents for the constituency are Ms Joan Pereira and Mr Alvin Tan.

Mr Chan, who described his team as “a mix of both continuity and stability with some fresh perspectives”, said Ms Indranee was like a big sister who had many good ideas and was dedicated to serving residents and Singaporeans.

Asked about Mr Foo’s unexpected move to Tanjong Pagar GRC, Mr Chan said that the PAP would place potential candidates in multiple places, to expose them to residents of different backgrounds and for them to be exposed to different ideas.

Mr Chan said: “Having done this exposure, as we are nearing to deployment, of course there will be different considerations because the PAP has candidates across the entire island, unlike the other parties.

“So we have to make sure that the portfolio of candidates across the different parts of Singapore will be able to best serve residents and respond to their needs in different parts of Singapore.”

Mr Foo told the media that he had attended several community events in Tanjong Pagar, where he spoke to residents, even as he spent “a lot of time” in Punggol.

Over at Radin Mas SMC, incumbent MP Melvin Yong will be in a contest with Mr Kumar Appavoo from PAR and independent candidate Darryl Lo.

Mr Yong, NTUC assistant secretary-general, said his team works very hard every day, and not just “for a certain period of time”, to address residents’ needs and listen to their feedback.

He said he even gives residents his phone number, so that they can contact him directly.

“We treat every election and every candidate very seriously in Radin Mas, just as in the broader Tanjong Pagar team,” he added.

At the press conference, Mr Chan also responded to Mr Lo’s assertion that if elected, he would be more effective as a full-time MP.

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Mr Chan said that full-time politicians in other countries are criticised for not being able to relate to the struggles of working parents, for instance, in caring for their elderly parents.

He said MPs who have to juggle multiple responsibilities are in a better position to empathise with Singaporeans, who are similarly doing so.

“We are all Singaporeans, and we all come from different walks of life.

“We have to juggle work, whether in a ministry or union or even companies. It allows us to deeply appreciate what fellow Singaporeans are also facing in their day-to-day living,” he added.

Mr Chan refused to be drawn into discussing the vote share that would signal a strong mandate for his team and the party.

“We would let the results take care of itself, because I’m quite sure - I’m very confident - that my residents, having seen our track record, would take care of the results for us,” he added.
 

GE2025: ‘No credible opposition’ party in Radin Mas, says independent candidate Darryl Lo​

Independent candidate Darryl Lo will be up against incumbent PAP MP Melvin Yong and People’s Alliance for Reform’s Kumar Appavoo.

Independent candidate Darryl Lo will be up against incumbent PAP MP Melvin Yong and People’s Alliance for Reform’s Kumar Appavoo.ST PHOTO: NG SOR LUAN

Vanessa Paige Chelvan
Apr 23, 2025


SINGAPORE – Independent candidate Darryl Lo, who is contesting Radin Mas SMC, will not hold physical rallies, will distribute 15,000 fliers and will put up 200 posters with a team of 12 volunteers.

And while he acknowledged he has no political presence, he said he is going solo as there is no credible opposition in his constituency.

Mr Lo is one of two independent candidates when Singaporeans go to the polls on May 3.

The other is Mr Jeremy Tan, who is contesting Mountbatten SMC.

Both men are first-time candidates, and plan to be full-time MPs if elected.

On Nomination Day on April 23, Mr Lo, 28, told The Straits Times: “I always have the belief that sometimes an underdog may emerge successful. And I hope the residents see my perseverance and hard work.”


He will be up against incumbent PAP MP Melvin Yong, 53, and People’s Alliance for Reform’s (PAR) Kumar Appavoo, 56.

There are 25,497 voters in Radin Mas.

At the 2020 general election, Mr Yong, the assistant secretary-general of the National Trades Union Congress, secured 74.01 per cent of the vote against businessman Mr Kumar, who was then with the Reform Party (RP).

Mr Lo said: “My impression of him (Mr Kumar), and I voted last time around, was that he’s not serious enough (about standing for election).”

Mr Kumar, who was RP’s treasurer, contested West Coast GRC in the 2011 general election. He was also a member of Singapore People’s Party’s central executive committee before joining PAR.

RP had to apologise to Radin Mas voters in 2020 after Mr Kumar did not turn up to record the constituency political broadcast.

Mr Lo quit his tech job in January to focus on his campaign, because he feels the issues Singaporeans face are getting more challenging, and MPs need to dedicate their time and energy to them.

His campaign slogan is “Your voice, Our future”.

Mr Lo, who has a law degree from SMU, said he will campaign for harsher penalties for drink drivers, as he feels the laws are too lax.

And he wants to help more low income families in Radin Mas qualify for the Education Ministry’s financial assistance scheme.

Mr Lo added that singles aged 21 and above should be allowed to buy HDB flats.

ST20250423_202566400649 Desmond Wee_pixnomination23/Independent Candidate Mr Jeremy Tan, 34 is contesting for Mountbatten SMC during Nomination Day at  Kong Hwa School on April 2025.

Independent candidate Jeremy Tan’s campaign slogan is “Be retired, Not tired”, and he is up against PAP’s Gho Sze Kee.ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE
Mr Tan, 34, is retired and chose to run as an independent out of a sense of duty.

He said: “Concerned citizens that believe in a better (Government) should take action, and that’s what I’ve done.”

His campaign slogan is “Be retired, Not tired”, and he is up against PAP’s Gho Sze Kee, 46.

This is the first time Ms Gho, a maritime lawyer, is contesting, taking over from incumbent PAP MP Mr Lim Biow Chuan, who stepped down after four terms.

He secured 73.82 per cent of the votes in 2020.

There are 22,754 voters in Mountbatten for this general election.

Mr Tan might hold one to two physical rallies, including one on May 1 if he secures a permit.

He plans to walk around Mountbatten to distribute about 5,000 flyers and put up 100 posters with the help of five volunteers.

He said he will campaign on issues like removing land costs from the cost of HDB flats.

And will argue for a more robust CPF scheme that is “inflation-proof”, and for Bitcoin to be incorporated into Singapore’s financial system.

Mr Tan also intends to increase artificial intelligence literacy in schools so that future generations of Singaporeans will not be left behind.

He said: “This is the industry that will change the world, and we need to be a part of it.”

PAR secretary-general Lim Tean recently commented about independent candidates, like Mr Tan, having no chance of being elected.

To this, Mr Tan said: “It is not a matter if I win. I will be trying because I believe that Singapore deserves better.”

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Singapore Management University law don Eugene Tan said looking at Singapore’s election history, independents do not have a good record, particularly after the establishment of town councils.

He said: “MPs were not only just representatives in Parliament, but they also had to be responsible for estate management and upkeep.

“If without the backing of a party, would that independent be able to establish a town council? Voters know the independent doesn’t even have experience in running something similar. I don’t think it inspires confidence.”

He added: “It takes a certain courage to say, okay, I’m gonna run on my own. And I’m sure they are realistic enough to know that the odds are stacked against them.”
 

‘A better distribution of our senior leadership’: PM Wong on deploying DPM Gan to Punggol​

DPM Gan Kim Yong (second right) with Ms Sun Xueling mingling with residents during a walkabout on April 23.

DPM Gan Kim Yong (second from right) with Ms Sun Xueling (left) mingling with residents during a walkabout at Punggol Waterway Point on April 23.ST PHOTO: AZMI ATHNI

Deepanraj Ganesan
Apr 23, 2025


SINGAPORE – Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong was deployed to Punggol GRC as the PAP needed a “senior office holder of similar stature” to take over from Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean, said Prime Minister Lawrence Wong.

The PAP had made a surprise last-minute switch on Nomination Day to shift DPM Gan from Chua Chu Kang GRC to the new four-member GRC, which was carved out of Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC.

Manpower Minister Tan See Leng was moved from Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC to lead the PAP team in Chua Chu Kang.

Explaining the rationale behind the moves at a press conference on April 23, PM Wong noted that SM Teo is retiring from politics after anchoring Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC for many years.

SM Teo, 70, is a core member of the PAP’s third-generation leadership team and served as deputy prime minister from 2009 to 2019.

“It’s really not easy to have a senior office holder of a similar stature to take over from him,” PM Wong said.


“And that’s why I considered it very carefully and eventually decided to deploy DPM Gan Kim Yong there.”

DPM Gan’s move led to Dr Tan’s switch to Chua Chu Kang. The Marine Parade-Braddell Heights team is anchored by Speaker of Parliament Seah Kian Peng instead, PM Wong said.

“And if you look at the overall picture, I will be in the west in Marsiling-Yew Tee, Senior Minister Lee (Hsien Loong) will be in the centre at Ang Mo Kio and DPM Gan would be in Punggol, which is in the east,” he added.

“That’s a better distribution of our senior leadership for the campaign, and if we are elected, that’s also a better spread of leadership to make sure that we can cover the whole of Singapore and make sure that we do our best to serve all residents.”

The five-member PAP team in Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC was returned to power on Nomination Day via a walkover, in another Nomination Day surprise.

The WP had been expected to contest the group representation constituency, having fielded a team in Marine Parade to challenge the PAP in the 2015 and 2020 elections. The opposition party’s decision to not do so resulted in the first walkover in a general election since 2011, when Tanjong Pagar GRC went uncontested.

Asked if he had expected that WP would not contest Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC, PM Wong said he had been informed by party members that there was no presence of WP at the nomination centre at Kong Hwa School in the morning.

“We heard it, but... we would have never been able to confirm whether there would be a contest. So we were surprised that the WP had decided not to contest Marine Parade,” said PM Wong.

He added that if there were to have been a contest there, he had “confidence that Seah Kian Peng as Speaker will be able to anchor the Marine Parade team” and the team can “hold their own in Marine Parade”.

On how voters will take to the strategy of last-minute swaps and if there are concerns about candidates’ familiarity with the ground, PM Wong replied: “We try our best not to have too many movements, but from time to time, we have to make some of these, and we have done so in this election.”

“The ministers may be new, but they are not the only ones who are in the team. There are others in the GRC who will be familiar, and the ministers, I’m sure, will be able to hold their own wherever they are fielded,” he added.

“They will do their best to engage residents in the constituency that they are deployed in, and do their best to win the confidence and trust of Singaporeans and voters.”

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Asked which constituency would have the toughest fight, PM Wong said “there will be tough tests everywhere”, adding that he has fielded a strong team to “take us forward into the future”.

“I hope Singaporeans consider what this election means, not just in terms of tactical voting, but what this election means fundamentally, for your families, for your children, for the future of our country, and then choose who you believe are the right individuals that you want to represent you in your constituency and in Parliament in our country,” he said.
 

News analysis​

GE2025: PAP keeps opposition guessing with last-minute deployments on Nomination Day​

DPM Gan Kim Yong (left) was moved to the newly-formed Punggol GRC while Manpower Minister Tan See Leng was his replacement at Choa Chu Kang GRC.

DPM Gan Kim Yong (left) was moved to the newly-formed Punggol GRC while Manpower Minister Tan See Leng was his replacement at Choa Chu Kang GRC.ST PHOTOS: KEVIN LIM, ARIFFIN JAMAR

Goh Yan Han
Apr 23, 2025

SINGAPORE – It was yet another deputy prime minister surprise switch as DPM Gan Kim Yong appeared at Yusof Ishak Secondary School at about 11.20am.

It signalled his potential filling of the vacant anchor minister slot in the newly-formed Punggol GRC, one of the hottest constituencies of this general election.

Back in 2020, DPM Heng Swee Keat was the one pulling off the surprise, when he was a Nomination Day switch from Tampines GRC to East Coast GRC.

Those watching the PAP’s candidate deployments closely over the past few months would have already raised an eyebrow at how many times new faces were switched from ward to ward, sometimes from the West to the East.

These changes continued right up to the last hour on Nomination Day itself, with full-fledged ministers moving in a calculated fashion.

Manpower Minister Tan See Leng, who had earlier appeared at 9.30am where the Marine Parade-Braddell Heights team was meeting, later emerged at Jurong Pioneer Junior College, the nomination centre for Chua Chu Kang GRC.

Both men had been announced last week as returnees to the constituencies they had contested in 2020 – MPBH for Dr Tan and CCK for DPM Gan.


New face and former SAF brigadier-general Goh Pei Ming, who had been missing all morning, ended up as the missing name for the MPBH slate.

Through all the smoke and mirrors, the PAP kept everyone – the residents and the opposition – guessing right to the last minute.

It had already pulled off some surprise moves before Nomination Day, by switching Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Indranee Rajah from Tanjong Pagar to helm Pasir Ris-Changi GRC, and completely overhauling the Nee Soon GRC team, with Law and Home Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam leading a team of four rookies.

Confident read of the tea leaves​

The Nomination Day moves – done in secrecy and with changes up to the eve of the hustings – suggest a quiet confidence in their reading of the opposition’s movements.

Each change appeared to go toe to toe with the movements of the Workers’ Party, the second-biggest political party in Singapore with decades of parliamentary experience among its members.

Both Punggol and East Coast GRCs had been highlighted by political observers as hot wards to watch since the release of the electoral boundaries report in March.

In both areas, the PAP had its plans ready.

It had DPM Gan up its sleeve, while publicly dangling DPM Heng and Senior Minister Teo Chee Hean as pieces still in play.

On April 23 morning, both DPM Heng and SM Teo appeared at the PAP’s Punggol West branch, where the teams that were heading to Yusof Ishak Secondary School were meeting.

As nomination proceedings closed, it was revealed that DPM Gan was moved to Punggol, bolstering the slate there. His name was handwritten on the nomination papers displayed at the centre, while his teammates’ names were printed on the forms.

This move brings him head-to-head with the WP, who fielded newcomer senior counsel Harpreet Singh and three other new faces in Punggol.

While DPM Gan is not the PM-in-waiting that DPM Heng was in 2020, he has a national profile upped by his co-chairing of the multi-ministry task force amid the Covid-19 pandemic and almost 25 years of political experience.

He was recently named to chair a new Singapore Economic Resilience Taskforce that aims to help businesses and workers navigate the uncertainties arising from the US tariffs and global uncertainty, at a time when many economists expect a slowdown in growth globally.

In East Coast, the PAP fielded a line-up that was not that surprising: Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Edwin Tong, Senior Minister of State for National Development Tan Kiat How, four-term backbencher Jessica Tan and new candidate Hazlina Abdul Halim that had been present at constituency events in the last few weeks.

It switched out one new face for another - moving out Mr Goh Pei Ming, who had been present on the ground recently, and brought back former Agency for Integrated Care chief executive Dinesh Vasu Dash who was seen in East Coast early in April but had been quiet as of late.

Those who had speculated WP’s Harpreet Singh or even party chief Pritam Singh to contest East Coast would have also expected PAP to deploy extra firepower to East Coast.

But the party read the tea leaves correctly – most of the senior WP leaders stayed put in Aljunied GRC – and the opposition slate sent to contest East Coast is instead led by party veteran Yee Jenn Jong.

While Mr Yee’s team will still put up a respectable contest – Mr Tong had called Mr Yee a “strong opponent” and said the “WP has a credible team” – the deployment decisions show where the PAP team has calculated its risks in this general election.

It was so assured in its assessment that it deviated from its usual tradition of fielding a minister in every GRC.

The MPBH GRC slate was left to be anchored by Speaker of Parliament Seah Kian Peng – and as it turned out, there was a walkover.

Will the tactical decisions pay off?​

These last-minute switches appear to have given the PAP a strong hand as it heads into the hustings.

The party has stated repeatedly that it does not take it for granted that it will form the next Government. Prime Minister Lawrence Wong has caveated multiple times that he does not know if he will remain as head of government after the election.

At an evening press conference after the nomination proceedings, PM Wong stressed this point: “I fully expect this election to be a tough contest… My team and I will work very hard to make our case to Singaporeans and to win every vote in this changed world.”

With the troops deployed, the real battle is now on, with nine days of campaigning in the days ahead.

Candidates who have been switched or introduced at the last minute will have to work extra hard over the next week and a half to make their presence known and connect to the voters.

For now, PAP has played its cards well. On May 3, we’ll find out if it can cash out.

 

Power breakfasts, secret switches and first salvos - let the hustings begin​

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The 14th general election officially got under way on April 23.ST PHOTOS: CHRISTINE TAN, NG WEI KAI, WONG PEI TING, ZAIHAN MOHAMED YUSOF

Clement Yong
23 Apr 23, 2025

SINGAPORE – The 14th general election of independent Singapore officially got under way on an intermittently rainy but otherwise nondescript morning on April 23, setting the stage for a flurry of political activity that the 60-year-old island state is unused to.

Outside the nine nomination centres – where the finalised slates of candidates would be confirmed by noon – suited office-goers continued their morning commutes; cleaners kept up their day-to-day duties; an uncle rolled up the shutters at his neighbourhood store in Hougang with minimum fuss.

Yet beneath this calm veneer was an undercurrent of electric restlessness. An unusual number of people were instinctively refreshing their phones. Belying Singapore’s reputational reticence, there was open chatter about politics in hawker centres. Not to mention decked-out supporters beginning to chant in processional indecorum at 9am.

But this is to get ahead of proceedings: It all, as with the best days, began with breakfast, on this occasion a morning ritual transmuted into a blunt instrument for a show of force. There were no rules against candidates going to the centres themselves and meeting up with colleagues there, but understatedness is not for veteran politicians and parties; critical mass is what is called for in a public exercise where optics are necessarily the name of the game.

At shopping mall Link@896 in Dunearn Road, a throng of PAP supporters congregated in a holding room that had drinks and snacks prepared – a common theme everywhere with the ruling party’s busloads of grassroots volunteers and supporters transported to centres.

PSP’s supporters ended up cheek by jowl queueing for “a cup of joe” – PSP candidate Lawrence Pek’s Americanism for coffee – with those from the Singapore Democratic Party at the same coffee shop near Jurong Pioneer Junior College.


The WP, as has been its modus operandi, was more clandestine, with even this routine bread-breaking largely taking place behind closed doors. From 7.30am, blue-clad volunteers and members began gathering at the party’s Aljunied-Hougang Town Council office in Hougang Avenue 2 – its traditional flag-off point for the hustings.

This cloak-and-dagger operation would continue until the eleventh hour. Even at 9.40am, its rumoured candidate and long-time central executive committee member Tan Kong Soon would tease a Straits Times reporter: “See you at Yusof Ishak (Secondary School)”. An hour later, he was striding into Deyi Secondary in Ang Mo Kio – a red herring for actual candidate Andre Low, the unexpected pick for a straight contest against the PAP’s Ng Chee Meng in Jalan Kayu SMC.

By noon, the headlines were confirmed – PAP’s last-minute gambit to relocate its Chua Chu Kang GRC anchor, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong, to protect Punggol GRC, a ploy kept secret even from the PAP team; the WP’s abandonment of Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC, resulting in the first walkover in a general election since 2011, causing some disquiet among other opposition parties; and the four-way showdown in Tampines GRC, where WP had chosen to throw some of its brightest new faces behind a team led by vice-chair Faisal Manap.

But there were the potential moments for virality too, after the generally mediocre singing the public has been subjected to for weeks by candidates. To whoops of delight, PAP’s Sengkang GRC candidate Bernadette Giam made the extra effort to deliver parts of her speech in Tamil. On the balcony of Poi Ching School, Mr Goh Meng Seng of the People’s Power Party repeatedly emerged to survey the crowd, hands in pockets in almost louche judgment, now and then shaking his head at a conspicuously unfriendly audience.

Slug: pixnomination23ST PHOTO: Chong Jun LiangPPP?s Goh Meng Seng looking at WP?s supporters Nomination on Day at Poi Ching School in Tampines Street 71, on April 23, 2025. #poi

PPP’s Mr Goh Meng Seng looking at WP supporters on Nomination Day at Poi Ching School. ST PHOTO: CHONG JUN LIANG
And what is an election without its first salvo? A keyed-up PSP chief Leong Mun Wai threw down the gauntlet against his PAP opponent in West Coast-Jurong West GRC for a policy debate. More muted, PSP chairman Tan Cheng Bock leaned into his age where others might have demurred. He put down the PAP team as “quite young”, adding for good measure: “I’m not too sure whether they are as knowledgeable about the constituency as us because we (have been) there for a pretty long time.”

After that, it was straight off to the races, though the rumour mill has it that the WP Punggol GRC team might have found time for a quick rest and shower. PAP teams in Tampines and East Coast GRCs launched their constituency-specific manifestos via press conferences, while PAP Sembawang West SMC candidate Poh Li San and Sembawang GRC anchor minister Ong Ye Kung embarked immediately on house visits.

The latter found some time for levity.

“One down, 166 more to go,” he was heard as he adjusted a knee brace after completing visits to a block of flats in Canberra. Reporting on an interaction with a resident to an ST reporter, he said good-naturedly: “She said Inshallah (god willing in Arabic)...means that’s a 70 per cent chance she’ll vote for us.”

In Bukit Panjang SMC, both the PAP incumbent Liang Eng Hwa and SDP chairman Paul Tambyah initiated their war of attrition, an individual face-off in the heartland of Fajar. The WP zeroed in on bus interchanges and MRT stations for maximum exposure, with its personable Tampines GRC candidate Eileen Chong reaching out to residents, and Punggol GRC candidates Harpreet Singh and Alexis Dang also proving popular.

ST20250423_202582600978/ajbkpj23/Jason Quah SDP candidate for Bukit Panjang SMC Paul Tambyah on house visits in Fajar on April 23, 2025. ST PHOTO: JASON QUAH

SDP candidate for Bukit Panjang SMC Paul Tambyah on house visits in Fajar.ST PHOTO: JASON QUAH
For the political parties, this is in some ways still the calm before the storm, with physical rallies to return after the relative quiet of the previous Covid-19 general election. Those stretched for resources must feel that the next nine days are both too short and too long.

Political observers in the coming days will parse candidates’ phrases. Residents will scrutinise the minutiae of their manner, perhaps seeing shadows where there are none. No one can be certain of the considerations that go into a vote.

All these unknowns, however, will have to wait. For now, let the hustings begin.
 

GE2025: 5 parties to hold election rallies on April 24​

Police said attendees are strongly encouraged to take public transport, owing to large crowds expected at the rallies.

Police said attendees are strongly encouraged to take public transport, owing to large crowds expected at the rallies.ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY

Raul Dancel
Apr 23, 2025,


SINGAPORE - Five political parties are set to hold election rallies on the evening of April 24, with large crowds expected at several police-approved venues.

Police said on April 23 that permits were issued to the People’s Power Party (PPP), Progress Singapore Party (PSP), People’s Action Party (PAP), Workers’ Party (WP) and the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) for rallies scheduled from 7pm to 10pm on April 24.

The PPP, which is contesting seats in Tampines GRC, will hold a rally at Temasek Junior College; the PSP (Marymount SMC) at Catholic High School; PAP (Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC) at Woodlands Stadium; WP (Sengkang GRC) at a field along Anchorvale Crescent next to The Vales condominium; and, SDP (Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC) at Choa Chu Kang Stadium.

Police said attendees are strongly encouraged to take public transport, owing to large crowds expected at the rallies.

They should also be prepared for traffic diversions, lane closures and slower traffic in general that may likewise affect the pick-up and drop-off points for ride-hailing services.

Police said use of carparks near the election rallies sites has been restricted to season parking holders.

Vehicles found illegally parked or causing obstruction may be towed, police said.


The Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore has prohibited the flying of unauthorised drones and other unmanned aircraft, as well as kites and captive balloons over the rally sites from 6pm to 11pm.

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Police listed a slew of items banned at the rallies. These are:

  • Firearms/parts of firearms, including empty magazines and spent cartridges
  • Live and blank bullets
  • Air pistols and rifles or parts
  • Spear guns
  • Explosives, blasting caps, dynamites and corrosive substances
  • Fireworks and firecrackers
  • Parangs and machetes
  • Bearing scrapers
  • Walking sticks with daggers
  • Antique pistols and guns
  • Stun guns
  • Batons and t-batons
  • Night sticks
  • Signal flares and other flammable materials
  • Handcuffs
  • Tear-gas and pepper sprays
  • Nanchakus
  • Knuckle dusters
  • Crossbows
  • Industrial acid
  • Bulletproof vests
  • Keychains in the shape of a bullet or gun
  • Wooden or metal spears
  • Lighters in the shape of a gun, pistol, bullet or grenade
  • Toy guns that resemble actual guns
  • Kirpans
  • Sharp or long objects, such as knives, that can be used as a weapon
  • Glass bottles
  • Laser pointers

 
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