BORN MERDEKA GENERATION ......FIRST CLASS ECONOMIST.....BUT CANNOT GIVE SPEECHES.
Kenneth Jeyaretnam
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Kenneth Jeyaretnam

Jeyaretnam at a
Reform Party rally at
Speakers' Corner on 15 January 2011
2nd Secretary-General of the Reform Party of Singapore
Incumbent
Assumed office
10 April 2009
Chairman Andy Zhu
Preceded by Joshua Benjamin JeyaretnamPersonal details Born
Kenneth Andrew Jeyaretnam
1959 (age 59–60)
Colony of SingaporeNationality SingaporeanPolitical party Reform Party (2009–present)
Spouse(s)
Amanda Jeyaretnam (m. 1995)
Children Jared Jeyaretnam (son)
Mother Margaret Cynthia Walker
Father Joshua Benjamin JeyaretnamRelatives Philip Jeyaretnam (brother)
Education Queens' College, Cambridge;
Amsterdam Institute of Finance;
Charterhouse School;
United World College of South East Asia;
St Andrew's SchoolOccupation Politician
Known for son of
Joshua Benjamin Jeyaretnam
Kenneth Andrew Jeyaretnam (born 1959) is a
Singaporean politician. He is the
Secretary-General of the
Reform Party and the eldest son of
J. B. Jeyaretnam.
[1]
Contents
Early life[edit]
Jeyaretnam was born in 1959 in Singapore. He is the elder child of
J. B. Jeyaretnam (sometimes known as "JBJ") and Margaret Cynthia Walker. His parents met in the United Kingdom in 1950 while studying law at
University College London. J. B. Jeyaretnam, a barrister, became one of Singapore's most well-known opposition politicians and democracy advocates and was the first opposition member ever to be elected to Singapore's
Parliament in 1981. Margaret Walker was a lawyer originally from England was later one of the first women lawyers in Singapore and Registrar of the Diocese of Singapore and Malaysia. Jeyaretnam was followed by a brother who died at birth, and then by
Philip Jeyaretnam who was born in 1964.
Education[edit]
In Singapore, Jeyaretnam attended
St Andrew's School, followed by the
United World College of South East Asia. He attended
Charterhouse School in England from 1975 to 1977. From 1978 to 1980 he returned to Singapore for
compulsory military service, officially known as National Service (NS) in Singapore. From 1980 to 1983, he attended
Queens' College, Cambridge, where he read economics and graduated with Double First Class Honours. Jeyaretnam is also an alumnus of the
Amsterdam Institute of Finance[
citation needed].
Early career[edit]
Upon graduation, Jeyaretnam returned to Singapore where he took up his first employment with
Wardley (the merchant banking arm of
HSBC in the 1980s), working as an Assistant Manager in the Lending Department. In 1984 Wardley decided to transfer him overseas and he was sent to work in their
Hong Kong branch. This move by his employer coincided with the time of his father's second election victory in 1984. Whilst declining to join his father's
Workers' Party (WP), he contributed by writing sections of the party's manifesto dealing with economic policy and articles for the party newsletter
The Hammer.
From 1987 to the early 1990s, Jeyaretnam worked in London and Tokyo for Continental Bank,
Banque Indosuez and
Lehman Brothers. He then moved to
Nomura International in London as head of Japanese warrants and later as proprietary trader.
He met his wife-to-be Amanda while working there. They married in 1995 and had a son in 1997.
[2]
In 1998, Jeyaretnam moved on from the Asian derivatives markets to become a
hedge fund manager specialising in event-driven investing. He managed his own fund from 2004 to 2008. During this time in London, he was a member of the Singapore UK Association (SUKA) and later served on the association's committee working with fellow expat Singaporeans[
citation needed].
Prominence following J. B. Jeyaretnam's death[edit]
Kenneth Jeyaretnam lacked prominence in Singapore until the media attention after his father's death. Jeyaretnam's eulogy at his father's funeral was broadcast over
YouTube and other new media sites. Subsequently, he arranged a memorial event and exhibition, working closely on the project with his father's supporters and civil rights groups.
Joining and leading the Reform Party[edit]
In 2007, his father
J. B. Jeyaretnam formed the
Reform Party. The survival of the new opposition party seemed to have been in question when he suffered a heart attack and died on 30 September 2008.
[3] With the demise of his father, Jeyaretnam began an active role in Singaporean politics. He started contributing articles on economic themes to the Singaporean online blog,
The Online Citizen. He gave his first public "political" speech alongside other prominent opposition politicians at a memorial event held in memory of his father in
Hong Lim Park on New Year's Eve 2008. It was here that Jeyaretnam spoke of his belief that it was possible for Singapore to have both prosperity and liberty. During this period he also started working with prominent non-partisan groups in their campaign to have a chair elected in his father's name and in establishing a foundation for study which will sponsor Singaporean students in human rights law and politics.
On 10 April 2009 it was announced in
The Straits Times and other sources that Kenneth Jeyaretnam had joined the Reform Party.
Eugene Tan, a law lecturer at
Singapore Management University, was quoted as saying: "Mr Jeyaretnam has given the Reform Party a tremendous boost given his academic achievements, professional background and political pedigree". Before long, Jeyaretnam was co-opted into the party's Central Executive Committee (CEC) and voted into the vacant position of Secretary-General.
Privatization policies[edit]
Jeyaretnam in a February 2010 statement available on the
Reform Party's website indicated that "The Reform Party would go much further though in dismantling or privatizing the whole GLC (Government-linked companies) structure starting with the privatization of GIC (
Government of Singapore Investment Corporation) and Temasek (
Temasek Holdings) and giving Singaporean citizens a direct stake, whether through shares, deferred shares or quasi-equity, in their assets. We would seek to sell off or break-up most of the GLCs which control such a substantial portion of economic activity (up to 60% according to some estimates) which has in our view a detrimental effect on the growth of a vibrant private sector in Singapore."[
citation needed]
Election rally speeches[edit]

Jeyaretnam speaking in the rain at a Reform Party rally at
Speakers' Corner,
Hong Lim Park on 15 January 2011
In his maiden election speech in late April 2011, Kenneth Jeyaretnam said the objective of the
Reform Party is to win a few seats in the May 2011 general election, adding that competition in politics will lead to better and more intelligent policies. He also sounded a warning that the ruling
People's Action Party (PAP) will likely open the floodgates to more foreigners to enter Singapore again once they form the government. "Already you can see that. The Reform Party was the first to talk about how the government's track record was hollow. They always talk about the high rate of economic growth, but the economic growth is created just by bringing in cheap foreign labour. It is not created by raising the incomes of Singaporeans," he said.
Jeyaretnam criticized the PAP for failing to improve the lives of ordinary Singaporeans as their median incomes have remained stagnant over the last few years.
Return Our CPF protest[edit]
Jeyaretnam participated as a speaker during the
"Return Our CPF" protest in 2014 at Hong Lim Park.[
citation needed].
References[edit]
- ^ J. B. Jeyaretnam: Politician and activist who fought all his adult life for greater democracy in Singapore
- ^ migration (2013-01-21). "Rally goes on despite threats to RP chief's son". The Straits Times. Retrieved 2018-04-21.
- ^ [1]
External links[edit]
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