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stupidporeans accept PM Lee apology forgetting that Govt never forgives them

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Alfrescian
Loyal
never forgives them

- when they got a parking fine
- when they owned SPservices money
- when drink and drive
- when they default mortgage loans
- when they overstay at tents on the beach
- when they owned service and conservancies charges
- when they owned telco money
- when they couldn't top up their medisave
- when they couldn't pay their income taxes
- when they couldn't pay their medical fees
- when they quarrel in the public they are charged
.......................


PM: Why apology was important
Govt wants to connect emotionally with people, he says
By Lynn Lee & Lydia Lim

THE Prime Minister believes it is important for the Government to connect emotionally with people and that is why he said sorry on Tuesday, during a lunchtime rally at UOB Plaza.

Mr Lee Hsien Loong explained the thinking behind his apology yesterday, saying: 'We considered carefully and I thought this was a suitable message to Singaporeans at this stage of the campaign, to focus minds on key issues.

'So one set of issues is the policies - education, housing, health care - but the other set of issues is the politics of it, and also the emotional connection, which is very important, between the Government and the people.'

'Admitting our mistake is the first step towards correcting it,' he added.

He was speaking to reporters after greeting morning commuters at Ang Mo Kio MRT station and bus interchange.

Foreign Minister George Yeo said he believed Mr Lee's apology had helped to shift the ground in the People's Action Party's favour in fiercely contested Aljunied GRC.

'PM's apology has helped a lot. For many people, it is important they feel the Government is listening,' he said.

Mr Lee apologised for mistakes made by the Government in the last five years and pledged that he and his team would learn from their mistakes and tackle the problems vexing Singaporeans.

He acknowledged that the Government did not ramp up its HDB building programme fast enough, contributing to high prices. It also did not expand the MRT network fast enough to cope with an influx of foreign workers.

Mr Lee's own sense is that the apology went down well, he said yesterday. His Tuesday audience received it well and he hoped other Singaporeans would feel the same way.

Last night, Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports Vivian Balakrishnan also focused on the ruling party's relationship with the people, saying that was ultimately what this election was about.

Speaking at a rally in Holland-Bukit Timah GRC, he said: 'We're facing a tough election, aren't we? There are people who are angry, there are people who are even stirring hatred. There are people who are scared. Why? Despite all our success, despite everything that we've achieved as Singapore and Singaporeans, there is an unsettled mood among our people.'

Political observers were divided on whether the Prime Minister's apology achieved its intended effect.

Independent consultant Azhar Ghani said it was a tactical move to calm voters and get them to refocus on the issues, which the PAP typically seeks to do in the second half of each election campaign.

Former Nominated MP Zulkifli Baharudin disagreed, saying Mr Lee was 'leading from the front, and this shows that he has the strength of character to admit his government's shortcomings'.

The Prime Minister also held his first live chat on Facebook yesterday evening as part of the party's push to reach out to and engage young voters.

Mr Yeo, meanwhile, uploaded to Facebook a 2 1/2-minute video in which he promised to speak up for young Singaporeans in Parliament and Cabinet.

Yesterday, Mr Lee was also asked if he had chosen to focus on middle-income and young Singaporeans in his latest speeches because they were swing voters. He said the PAP had to reach out to all sectors of society.

Beyond the policies to benefit specific groups, he said: 'It's also important for us to signal that we recognise people's concerns, that we understand what they are anxious about and we have a sense of what they're thinking and what they would like Singapore to be, and we empathise with them.'

'From time to time,' he added, 'it's useful for us, instead of just making a general broadcast to all Singaporeans, to focus the message and talk about certain target groups, and I think we have not talked quite enough about the middle class in this campaign, we have not talked enough about young people, and that's why I decided to focus on them on Monday and Tuesday.'

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Apology cuts both ways, political watchers say
PM's move impresses some; seen as election ploy by others, they say
By Aaron Low

SO, DID saying 'sorry' work?

That is the question on the minds of many political observers after Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong made a surprising apology to Singaporeans on Tuesday.

The answer, it seems, depends on what the Prime Minister had intended with the apology.

At a lunchtime rally in Boat Quay on Tuesday, he surprised many people when he acknowledged that the Government could have moved faster to address shortfalls in housing and transport.

Mr Lee, who is also secretary-general of the People's Action Party (PAP), also apologised for two other slip-ups: the escape of terrorist Mas Selamat Kastari and the flooding in Orchard Road.

'We are trying our best on your behalf. And if we didn't quite get it right, I'm sorry, but we will try and do better the next time,' he said.

Analysts say that if the apology was aimed at defusing voter anger over these issues, then it has worked to some extent.

And it was especially timely, given that just last Saturday, Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew had said Aljunied GRC voters would have 'five years to repent' if they voted an opposition slate into Parliament.

Political risk consultant Azhar Ghani says the move was right out of the PAP's election playbook.

He notes that in past elections, the gloves would also come off in the first three days of the election period.

'But by the half-time mark, the PAP would stop and tell the voters to focus on the issues,' he says.

'This is the same. The apology is targeted at calming voters down, removing the emotions and getting people to study the long-term issues.'

The timing of the apology has led some cynics and opposition parties to call it nothing more than an election ploy to win back angry voters.

'Coming just four days before Polling Day, the timing lends itself to cynicism,' says former Nominated MP Siew Kum Hong. Still, the apology is likely to make an impact on some of the voters, says another former NMP, Mr Zulkifli Baharudin.

'Some of my friends, who are angry voters, said they were really quite impressed that the PM had apologised,' he says.

Political scientist Derek da Cunha points out that much of the discontent seems linked to high ministerial pay, so such an apology may not suffice.

'It may appear to some that there is a disconnect between the way the Government operates and has carried itself on the one hand, and the way many voters view the Government on the other,' he says.

But Mr Zulkifli reckons that voters will see the apology more positively.

He says: 'Let's be honest. Mr Lee will be Prime Minister after Polling Day, and he doesn't necessarily need to say sorry.

'But he is leading from the front, and this shows that he has the strength of character to admit his government's shortcomings.'

Beyond the current campaign trail, however, the bigger question PM Lee's apology raises is whether it signifies a change in the ruling party.

Is a new, more humble PAP image emerging?

Singapore Management University law lecturer Eugene Tan believes so, and adds that the PAP has no choice but to adapt in this way.

'More humility will help them repair ties with the electorate,' he says.

'I am unsure if all the PAP leaders will agree to that, but Mr Lee, as secretary-general of the party, is already signalling that change is inevitable.'

The reality of governing in an increasingly complex world is that there is no 'silver bullet' or perfect policy any more.

Says Institute of Policy Studies senior research fellow Gillian Koh: 'We will probably need to all temper our expectations, but politicians also have to temper what they should promise and think they can deliver.'

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Spock

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More than anything, an apology given during elections is especially scary given the track record of PAP. Only a naive person will believe there will be no vengeance extracted after the elections if PAP wins an absolute majority.

If the apology was issued at other times, it would have been more believable. It is always easy to force someone begging for your mercy to give you an apology.
 

cooleo

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Sinkaporeans are gong cheebyes one. Just say sorli, then can screw them for another 5 years. I think they need to REPENT!
 

Windsor

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The apology was unprecedented and would work in the Party's favor as it was also sincere.

If a boss admits to his employees' failures when the employees INSIST THAT they have done nothing wrong,
what does it say about the company and the boss?
 

hillary888

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Confession of sin does not come easy, with cries of CasiNOs! - PM Lee says Sorry

Mr Lee defended the government’s move to allow Integrated Resorts with casinos into Singapore. He said if the PAP had not seized opportunities, the country would not have achieved growth.


If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness. 1 John 1:8-9
 

Patriot

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An obvious election ploy!

He was forced to reluctantly say sorry cos he don't want to lose even more votes for the PAP on 7 May or else like his father said, he will have to repent for the next 5 years.
 

myfoot123

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
He may openly apologised but he has not shown us the sharp hatchet under his sleeves (his ancestor gift). He wanted to wait until polling day result is out to show his true color once more.
 

RK85

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Loyal
So is he slapping himself in the face when MBT continue to insist that HDB flats are still affordable?


"He acknowledged that the Government did not ramp up its HDB building programme fast enough, contributing to high prices."
 
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