GE2025: A vote for WP is a vote for the future, say its candidates

GE2025: A vote for WP is a vote for the future, say its candidates | Singapore Breaking News & Latest Updates

GE2025: A vote for WP is a vote for the future, say its candidates

GE2025: A vote for WP is a vote for the future, say its candidates — Follow our live coverage here. SINGAPORE –A vote for the WP will not just determine the results of this election, but will also shape the future of Si...

Follow our live coverage here.

SINGAPORE –A vote for the WP will not just determine the results of this election, but will also shape the future of Singapore, party candidates said on May 1 as they made a final plea to voters.

“Let us build on what we have achieved in Aljunied, Hougang and Sengkang and take the next step to send a clear message from Punggol, Tampines, East Coast, Jalan Kayu and Tampines Changkat, that Singapore wants a Parliament that listens and a rational, responsible and credible opposition,” said the WP’s Aljunied GRC candidate Gerald Giam.

Party chair Sylvia Lim, who is also on the Aljunied slate, said: “You may only have one vote, but together, our votes can chart the future.”

At the party’s last rally at Anderson Serangoon Junior College, candidates spoke about the party’s achievements in Parliament and at town councils.

WP MPs have “punched above (their) weight”, asking more than 2,300 parliamentary questions in Parliament and bringing up issues including leaked NRIC numbers on the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority website and the Income-Allianz deal that was eventually aborted, said Mr Giam.

The party’s town councils are also directly managed and on solid financial footing, he added.

Now, the party was ready to do more, he said, calling on voters to vote for the WP for a more balanced Parliament and to chart a better course for Singapore.

Several candidates spoke about how the PAP has lost its way.

Mr Michael Thng, a WP candidate for Tampines, referred to the authorities spending $400,000 to consult an external agency to rebrand Marina Bay, only to end up reusing its original name. This was in 2004. He also cited the $40 million budget to support the continued use of older ez-link cards after the Land Transport Authority shelved its plans for SimplyGo.

He likened the PAP to a multinational company that was once at the top of its game but has now “stopped imagining boldly, and has started protecting what (it) has”.

“They are not able to deal with the challenges that lie ahead, or creative enough to find new ways to solve them. This is not the PAP of big, bold, forward-looking ideas,” he said.

Aljunied GRC candidate Kenneth Tiong, meanwhile, criticised the Government’s willingness to sell “strategic national assets built over decades” to foreign players, pointing to this as a reason Singapore has not produced what he called domestic growth engines.

This mentality was apparent in the sale of Chartered Semiconductor Manufacturing in 2009 and shipping company Neptune Orient Lines in 2016, and the attempted sale – later stopped by an Act of Parliament – of Income Insurance to German insurer Allianz in 2024.

Associate Professor Jamus Lim, an incumbent WP MP for Sengkang GRC, said it was the WP’s “longstanding” ideas adopted by the Government that have made Singaporean lives better – among others, better financial support for unemployed workers, higher pay for national servicemen and better protection for scam victims.

“Without an opposition presence in Parliament, far fewer inconvenient questions would have been asked, and mistakes made by the Government would not have been held to account in the same way,” he said.

The candidates also took the chance to address voters’ concerns about voting for the opposition, with some like Tampines GRC candidate Faisal Manap arguing that voting for the WP would result in more parties serving residents.

In Aljunied, residents now have the WP serving them, in addition to the PAP continuing to labour in the wards to win back votes and the People’s Association organising events during festivities.

WP-held wards have already enjoyed this windfall, such as double celebrations on occasions like Christmas, Chinese New Year and Deepavali, Mr Faisal said.

Mr Giam, who has contested four general elections, meanwhile, assured voters that their vote is secret.

He said he had followed the entire voting process until the incineration of the ballot papers and guaranteed that safeguards are in place.

His fellow Aljunied GRC candidate Fadli Fawzi added: “Last election, almost one million Singaporeans courageously voted against the PAP in hopes of seeing genuine change. Do you think the Government can monitor everyone in times of global uncertainty?”

Urging voters to give their vote to the WP on Saturday, Ms Lim said: “Let’s make a promise that come Saturday, we will vote not out of fear but with conviction and hope for the future that we deserve, that years from now, we can proudly say that we stood up and worked for Singapore as we passed the baton to the next generation.”

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