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11 July 2020

Singapore Election 2020- Opposition Wins Record 10 seats in PAP's Second Worst Performance Ever



Singapore election latest: Opposition wins record 10 seats

Workers' Party cements position as PAP's strongest rival with all votes in
Workers' Party Secretary-General Pritam Singh speaks with voters in a campaign that earned the opposition group 10 seats. © Getty Images

SINGAPORE -- Singaporeans on Friday chose their next government in a general election overshadowed by the coronavirus pandemic and its dire economic consequences.

Voting was compulsory for citizens aged 21 or older, and some 2.65 million people were eligible.

The PAP's vote share comes in at 61.2%, down from 69.9% in 2015. This is the party's second-worst performance on record, after the general election in 2011, when it garnered 60.1%. 

The party has also lost a cabinet member in Ng Chee Meng, minister in the Prime Minister's Office and head of Singapore's umbrella labor union, the National Trades Union Congress.

 The PAP has won 83 seats, while the Workers' Party has taken an unprecedented 10. This is the first time an opposition group has won two group representation constituencies, where candidates run in groups and the winning team takes all seats.

Source: Asian Nikkei Review


11/07/2020 08:24 AM



By Massita Ahmad

SINGAPORE, July 11 -- The People's Action Party (PAP) retained power in Singapore's intensely-contested general election Friday, winning 83 of the 93 parliamentary seats at stake.

The party garnered 61.24 per cent of the popular vote, prompting secretary-general Lee Hsien Loong, the caretaker prime minister, to describe the victory as “mandat yang jelas” (a clear mandate).


This is the second consecutive general election in which the PAP had fielded candidates in all 31 electoral divisions.

In the 2015 general election, which saw all seats contested for the first time since independence in 1965, PAP swept 83 of the 89 seats, winning 69.9 per cent of the popular vote.

This 18th General Election for Singapore, and the 13th since its independence, was held in the “new normal” with safe-distancing regulations and restrictions amidst the prevailing COVID-19 situation.


In a virtual press conference held early Saturday, Lee said: “Overall, I am satisfied with the results of this election.

“We (PAP) have obtained a clear mandate; 61 per cent of the popular vote. We garnered 83 of the 93 seats contested.

“The results reflect the wide support for PAP. Singaporeans understand what is at stake and why we must unite for the sake of Singapore.”


This election was dubbed “critical” for the republic in facing the challenge of COVID-19.

Lee called on Singaporeans to set aside their differences and work together to take Singapore safely out of the pandemic crisis.



“The serious challenges that we face require a nationwide response. Let us move forward together as one Singapore team for our lives, our jobs and our future,” he said.

Lee congratulated the Workers’ Party for retaining its six seats in the five-member Aljunied GRC (group representation constituency) and Hougang SMC (single member constituency) and winning the new four-member Sengkang GRC.

PAP won all the four new SMCs.

A solo independent candidate and 11 political parties, including the PAP, competed for 17 GRCs and 14 SMCs.

At the close of polling, a total of 2,535,565 votes were cast, inclusive of the 45,772 rejected votes, according to the Elections Department.

The votes came from 95.63 per cent of the 2,651,435 registered electors and was slightly lower than the figure reported at 8 pm Friday, which was based on the summation of estimates received from 1,100 polling stations, it said.

As at 8 pm Friday, the department said the turnout was higher than that of the 2015 General Election, which saw votes cast by 2.3 million voters or 93.56 per cent of the registered voters.

The polling hours were extended until 10 pm because there were still a number of polling stations with long queues, attributed to the COVID-19 precautionary measures put in place to ensure a safe general election.

What was seen as the popularity of the newly-formed Progress Singapore Party (PSP) failed to bring to Parliament any of its 24 candidates, the second largest group after the Workers’ Party’s 21 candidates.

None of the other parties, namely the Singapore Democratic Party, Peoples Voice, National Solidarity Party, Reform Party, Singapore People's Party, People's Power Party, Red Dot United and Singapore Democratic Alliance, are represented in Parliament either.

-- BERNAMA

 


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