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Yes, she had herself, the Facebook era and Tin Pei Ling combined to create the effect. Glenda had only herself to fall on, but I recall that she created a stir before the internet era. We will see what effect can Nicole create in 2016, as more new Nicoles, Glendas and Angelas will always appear.
Let's not get our dates confused. The first elections of the internet era was 1997. By 2001, this forum was already quite active, in case your memory isn't that long ago. 2006 was the elections of the blog, when the internet started affecting the elections in a big way. Glenda Han made her debut long after the internet era, in the elections of the blog. She was part of the suicide squad whose claim to fame was not losing to Lee Hsien Loong 20% to 80%. People were talking about Glenda Han in the blogs. 2006 was the debut of the "new WP", in some way, and the elections where Sylvia Lim entered the public consciousness.
And it's not right to compare the two, she never created as much of a stir as Nicole Seah, even with the blogs talking about her. The Nicole Seah phenomenon would not have taken place if she were just a pretty face with a more pleasant personality than Tin Pei Ling. People could see that she spoke intelligently, and they knew what she stood for. (OK, volunteering at a tuition centre for the poor is not going to change the world but the fact is I wouldn't be able to name what it is Glenda Han stands for if you asked me).
LLL didn't win in 2011, and she wasn't close to winning either, although she was closer than Nicole Seah. In 2013, there was a big swing against the PAP, and if Nicole Seah ran for elections again, the same swing would have gotten her voted in. It's not only about the WP. Somebody from any other party would have benefitted from the same swing against the PAP. Guess we'll find out in 2016 what happens when you take away the WP factor and the Michael Palmer factor.
No, that's not what I said. The star and the boat are 2 different things. It depends on which one you want if you can take either only one.
You didn't understand what I wrote and you should go back and read it. Long story short, she probably didn't want either one before 2011.
At the fundamentals, Chee and SDP will always be the same. He's in-charge of the bizarre works that undoes 100 times the good efforts. Compare the similarities of 1993 glucose hunger strike and the 2013 Punggol East horseplay 20 years later. A number of people do take note of this.
In the 2011 elections he did behave himself well mostly, except for the incident that he shook hands with supporters at a rally and the newspaper picked up on this. Later on there was a heated argument behind doors. What this tells me is that it's not true that SDP is run like a one man dictatorship. Although maybe it is more like one now that the alternate power centres are gone.
Chee Soon Juan in 2008 organised a protest, and you could say that Singaporeans don't do this protesting thing, until one actually took place a mere five years later. The protesting culture has caught on, and you can see it everywhere on the internet, although the protests are more muted these days.
And how the SDP has changed, is that it's also shifted the emphasis away from protesting to formulating new policy and debating issues. Now CSJ has always done that, because back then he wrote a book called "Dare to Change" which I bought mainly for the novelty value back in the day. But the protesting aspect has always overshadowed the policy aspect. Now the Punggol East debacle has cost him: his stock has fallen because of a few dumb things he did and said during the build up. Wijeysingha may have gone as a result of Chee's mistakes, but who knows, he would have gone anyway.