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What International Media Say About the GE

makapaaa

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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-...-keeps-parliamentary-majority-state-says.html

Singapore’s Lee Retains Power With Smallest Margin Since 1965

<CITE class=byline>By Shamim Adam and Weiyi Lim - <SCRIPT type=text/javascript>document.write(dateFormat(new Date(1304798714000),"mmm d, yyyy h:MM TT Z"));</SCRIPT>May 8, 2011 4:05 AM GMT+0800 <NOSCRIPT></NOSCRIPT></CITE>
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Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore's prime minister and leader of the People's Action Party (PAP), waves to supporters after winning the general elections in Singapore. Photographer: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg



Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s People’s Action Party retained power with the smallest margin of popular votes since independence amid a record turnout that tripled the number of opposition members in parliament.
The party that has ruled Singapore for more than five decades won 81 out of 87 parliamentary seats and 60.1 percent of the popular vote in yesterday’s polls, according to the Elections Department. A record 2 million ballots were counted.
The run-up to the election brought out tens of thousands of Singaporeans to rallies in support of the PAP and the opposition parties, which resonated with citizens complaining about the rising cost of living and competition with foreigners for jobs and housing. The result adds pressure on Lee, 59, to reach out to the growing number of Singaporeans who have questioned government policies.
“The political landscape has changed forever,” Suzaina Kadir, a senior lecturer at Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. “There’s serious questioning of the PAP’s continued dominance. Now the work begins for the opposition.”
Politicians competed in single-seat wards or multiple-seat districts called Group Representation Constituencies, or GRCs. The party that gets the most number of votes in a district sends all its members to parliament. The PAP lost a GRC for the first time in this election. A record 82 parliament seats were contested by six opposition parties.
Opposition Advances

The Workers’ Party won the five-seat district of Aljunied and the single-seat Hougang constituency, the only wins by opposition parties. Secretary-General Low Thia Khiang and Chairman Sylvia Lim, who called for a stronger voice in parliament and more affordable public housing, led the Aljunied effort, while Yaw Shin Leong won in Hougang.
“Your votes tell the world that you want Singapore to mature as a democracy, and you want to tell the government that you want a more responsible, inclusive, transparent, accountable government,” said Low, who has been in parliament since 1991.
The Workers’ Party also fielded lawyer Chen Show-Mao, who advised on deals like Agricultural Bank of China Ltd.’s $22.1 billion initial share sale, in Aljunied.
The only uncontested constituency was that of Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew, 87, the Cambridge University-trained lawyer who led the island from British rule and was its first premier. He’s also the father of the current prime minister.
Popular Vote

The parliament dissolved last month had 82 PAP lawmakers, two elected opposition politicians and 10 non-elected members. The PAP won about 66.6 percent of the votes cast in 2006, down from 75.3 percent in the 2001 elections. The worst showing for the PAP before yesterday was 1991, when it won 61 percent of the popular vote.
The PAP has ruled Singapore for more than five decades and delivered a 41-fold jump in gross domestic product, combining a focus on education, homeownership, business friendliness and strict laws to boost the wealth of citizens. Lee’s more recent efforts to spur the economy include the opening of two casino resorts, bringing Formula One races to the island and attracting foreign workers. GDP grew a record 14.5 percent last year.
The party encountered a more vocal electorate than before, prompting a rare apology from Lee for failing to build enough public housing and expand transport links as the population grew. “If we didn’t quite get it right, I am sorry but we will try and do better the next time,” he said at a rally on May 3.
“While voters have given the PAP a strong mandate, many voters including some of those who have voted for us have also clearly expressed their significant concerns, both on issues and on our approach to government,” Prime Minister Lee said in a speech after the victory. “We hear all your voices.”
Ministerial Casualties

Foreign Minister George Yeo, who lost his seat in Aljunied, had promised to lead a push for reform within the party. He was one of two cabinet ministers who lost power in the election, the other one being Lim Hwee Hua.
“There is considerable resentment against the government and its policies and some of them run deep,” Yeo said in an interview with the Straits Times on May 5. “We have to listen harder to what people say.”
Singapore’s economic success has widened the income gap, with the world’s highest share of dollar-millionaire households contributing to higher property and consumer prices, leaving some citizens behind.
Singapore’s Gini coefficient, a gauge of income inequality, rose to 0.48 last year from 0.444 in 2000, according to the statistics department. A reading of zero means income equality, while a reading of one means complete inequality. Inflation accelerated to a two-year high of 5.5 percent in January.
Foreign Workers

The growth and widening income gap has also been fueled by an influx of foreign workers to expand industries such as construction, shipbuilding, hospitality and banking. Foreigners make up more than a third of the population, with only 3.2 million citizens out of 5.1 million inhabitants.
Singapore’s gross domestic product was about S$285 billion ($231 billion) last year, compared with S$6.9 billion in 1960, based on 2005 market prices. The government plans to spend S$6.6 billion on benefits for citizens in this year’s budget to ease the burden of inflation.
“Policies will still be on track, except the big difference is the government will have to articulate them better and communicate them to the citizens better,” said Song Seng- Wun, an economist at CIMB Research Pte. in Singapore.
To contact the reporter on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at [email protected] Weiyi Lim in Singapore at [email protected]
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephanie Phang at [email protected]
 

makapaaa

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Ruling party returned to power in Singapore

<!--endclickprintinclude--><!--startclickprintexclude-->By the CNN Wire Staff<SCRIPT type=text/javascript>cnnAuthor = "By the CNN Wire Staff";</SCRIPT>
<SCRIPT type=text/javascript>if(location.hostname.indexOf( 'edition.' ) > -1) {document.write('May 8, 2011 -- Updated 0304 GMT (1104 HKT)');} else {document.write('May 7, 2011 11:04 p.m. EDT');}</SCRIPT>May 8, 2011 -- Updated 0304 GMT (1104 HKT)

<!-- google_ad_section_end --><!-- google_ad_section_start --><!-- CONTENT --><SCRIPT language=JavaScript type=text/javascript>var clickExpire = "-1";</SCRIPT><!-- REAP --><!--startclickprintexclude--><!-- PURGE: /2011/WORLD/asiapcf/05/06/singapore.election/t1larg.elation.afp.gi.jpg --><!-- KEEP --><!--===========IMAGE============-->
t1larg.elation.afp.gi.jpg
<!--===========/IMAGE===========-->
<!--===========CAPTION==========-->Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, center, of the People's Action Party joins hands with some of his candidates as they celebrate victory in the general election in Singapore early on Sunday.

<!--===========/CAPTION=========--><!-- /PURGE: /2011/WORLD/asiapcf/05/06/singapore.election/t1larg.elation.afp.gi.jpg --><!--endclickprintexclude--><!-- /REAP -->STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • <!-- google_ad_section_start -->
  • NEW: The ruling party won 81 of 87 parliamentary seats
  • NEW: The opposition took six seats
  • The People's Action Party has ruled Singapore for more than five decades
  • The opposition mounted its strongest challenge to date<!-- google_ad_section_end -->


<SCRIPT type=text/javascript> var cnnRelatedTopicKeys = []; </SCRIPT>RELATED TOPICS
  • <SCRIPT type=text/javascript> cnnRelatedTopicKeys.push('Singapore'); </SCRIPT>Singapore

<!--endclickprintexclude--><!--startclickprintinclude-->(CNN) -- Singapore's ruling party was returned to power in general elections Saturday, despite the strongest challenge to date from the opposition.
The People's Action Party, in power since 1959, won 81 seats, while the opposition Workers' Party took six, according to the Elections Department.
Saturday's voting in general elections were to determine 82 seats of the incoming parliament; five seats were already decided as that slate ran unopposed in one district.
The economy took center stage in the election in the Asian city-state. Many voters said they were worried about the relatively high cost of living and the rise of low-wage immigrant workers.
Singapore is a prosperous nation but it remains an authoritarian nation with curbs on freedom of expression, assembly and association. Political activities are tightly controlled by the government, according to human rights monitoring groups.
A record 2.2 million people are eligible to vote, many for the first time, the government-backed Straits Times newspaper reported. In the last parliamentary election in 2006, 1.22 million people voted when 47 out of 84 seats were up for grabs, the newspaper said.
CNN's Claudia Dominguez and Moni Basu contributed to this report.
 

makapaaa

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<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR id=trHeadline><TD class=articleTitle vAlign=top>Singapore opposition makes gains in vote </TD></TR><TR><TD class=Tmp_hSpace10><!----></TD></TR><TR><TD>Workers' Party cuts into decades-long dominance of ruling People's Action Party in hotly contested general election.
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Last Modified: 07 May 2011 01:47

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<!-- -->
</TD></TR><TR><TD id=tdTextContent class=DetailedSummary><TABLE style="WIDTH: 33px; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 borderColor=#ffffff cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR><TD>
20115711410730734_20.jpg
</TD></TR><TR><TD align=center>The PAP has dominated Singapore politics for 52 years and the opposition had never won a group constituency [EPA]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Singapore's ruling party has won an overwhelming parliamentary majority in elections, but the opposition has made historic gains.

The government's elections department said early on Sunday that partial results showed the People's Action Party (PAP) winning at least 75 of 87 seats in parliament. The opposition Workers' Party won six seats, the most since independence in 1965.

The opposition more than doubled its presence in the previous parliament, in which the ruling party controlled 82 of 84 seats in the previous parliament.

Lee Hsien Loong, the country's prime minister, was among the winners. George Yeo, the foreign minister, was among the losers as part of the team that lost a five-member constituency to the Workers' Party.
The Workers' Party, which took all the seats going to the opposition, held a victory celebration at a stadium in one of the constituencies it clinched.

Supporters dressed in the party's blue colours chanted "Ole, Ole," and threw confetti on each other, shouting and clapping.
"You have made history tonight," Low Thia Khiang, the party's head, said. "This is a political landmark in modern Singapore.

"Your votes tell us that you want Singapore to develop as a nation. Your votes tell the government you want a more responsive, inclusive, transparent and accountable government."
The PAP has dominated Singapore politics for 52 years and the opposition has never won a group constituency.
This year the opposition contested 82 of 87 seats in parliament, the most ever, with the PAP returned unopposed from one five-seat constituency. In 2006, just over half the seats were contested.

Several complaints
The elections department earlier said an opposition party had made several complaints, including an allegation that a PAP candidate had updated her Facebook page on Friday, contravening a 24-hour "cooling-off" period before the start of polls when parties were not allowed to campaign.

"We had responded to National Solidarity Party that they may wish to lodge a police report," a spokesperson for the department said.
Voting is compulsory in Singapore, a former British colony which in 1965 became a republic after breaking up with neighbouring Malaysia.
A total of six opposition parties contested the monopoly of PAP, which has been taken aback by the depth of voter resentment against it.
In a rare admission of concern during the campaign, Lee, the prime minister, apologised for policy mistakes and blunders since the last poll, including the 2008 escape of a suspected "terrorist", failure to prevent floods in 2010, high home prices and crowded metro trains.

"We're 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.
Ills of growth
Singapore, one of the wealthiest and fastest-growing nations in Asia, has been ruled by the PAP since independence in 1965. But groups like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch say the government restricts political freedoms and clamps down on dissent.
The opposition had focused its campaign on the ills brought by Singapore's growth - rising income inequality, high prices and an unwelcome influx of foreigners. The PAP pointed to its stewardship that had transformed a sleepy colonial port to a gleaming financial hub.
Despite the shake-up, analyst said no policy shifts were anticipated and that the PAP remains firmly in control.

"Given Singapore's parliamentary system, the ruling party has the ability to pass comfortably key legislation, including constitutional amendments," Prasenjit Basu, chief regional economist at Daiwa Capital Markets, said in a report.

"The PAP government will thus continue to have an unfettered ability to make and implement policy - particularly on economic and money matters.”

PAP backers said there were lessons to be learned.

"It is definitely good for Singapore, but I think the leaders and government realised that there's a gap between them and people on the ground," Jagjit Singh, a 72-year-old, said.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Bigfuck

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Ruling party returned to power in Singapore

<!--endclickprintinclude--><!--startclickprintexclude-->By the CNN Wire Staff<SCRIPT type=text/javascript>cnnAuthor = "By the CNN Wire Staff";</SCRIPT>
<SCRIPT type=text/javascript>if(location.hostname.indexOf( 'edition.' ) > -1) {document.write('May 8, 2011 -- Updated 0304 GMT (1104 HKT)');} else {document.write('May 7, 2011 11:04 p.m. EDT');}</SCRIPT>May 8, 2011 -- Updated 0304 GMT (1104 HKT)

<!-- google_ad_section_end --><!-- google_ad_section_start --><!-- CONTENT --><SCRIPT language=JavaScript type=text/javascript>var clickExpire = "-1";</SCRIPT><!-- REAP --><!--startclickprintexclude--><!-- PURGE: /2011/WORLD/asiapcf/05/06/singapore.election/t1larg.elation.afp.gi.jpg --><!-- KEEP --><!--===========IMAGE============-->
t1larg.elation.afp.gi.jpg
<!--===========/IMAGE===========-->
<!--===========CAPTION==========-->Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, center, of the People's Action Party joins hands with some of his candidates as they celebrate victory in the general election in Singapore early on Sunday.

<!--===========/CAPTION=========--><!-- /PURGE: /2011/WORLD/asiapcf/05/06/singapore.election/t1larg.elation.afp.gi.jpg --><!--endclickprintexclude--><!-- /REAP -->STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • <!-- google_ad_section_start -->
  • NEW: The ruling party won 81 of 87 parliamentary seats
  • NEW: The opposition took six seats
  • The People's Action Party has ruled Singapore for more than five decades
  • The opposition mounted its strongest challenge to date<!-- google_ad_section_end -->


<SCRIPT type=text/javascript> var cnnRelatedTopicKeys = []; </SCRIPT>RELATED TOPICS
  • <SCRIPT type=text/javascript> cnnRelatedTopicKeys.push('Singapore'); </SCRIPT>Singapore

<!--endclickprintexclude--><!--startclickprintinclude-->(CNN) -- Singapore's ruling party was returned to power in general elections Saturday, despite the strongest challenge to date from the opposition.
The People's Action Party, in power since 1959, won 81 seats, while the opposition Workers' Party took six, according to the Elections Department.
Saturday's voting in general elections were to determine 82 seats of the incoming parliament; five seats were already decided as that slate ran unopposed in one district.
The economy took center stage in the election in the Asian city-state. Many voters said they were worried about the relatively high cost of living and the rise of low-wage immigrant workers.
Singapore is a prosperous nation but it remains an authoritarian nation with curbs on freedom of expression, assembly and association. Political activities are tightly controlled by the government, according to human rights monitoring groups.
A record 2.2 million people are eligible to vote, many for the first time, the government-backed Straits Times newspaper reported. In the last parliamentary election in 2006, 1.22 million people voted when 47 out of 84 seats were up for grabs, the newspaper said.
CNN's Claudia Dominguez and Moni Basu contributed to this report.

Come, old man and PAP, sue CNN! We the citizens of Singapore challenge you. Bring out that hatchet of yours and do your cul de sac thingy with CNN! This is a good year!
 
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