Saturday, April 29, 2006

Channel NewsAsia: WP's Low slams PAP for comments over Gomez's minority certificate issue

SINGAPORE VOTES 2006

By Joanne Leow



The Workers' Party (WP) has criticised the People's Action Party (PAP) for raising the issue of Mr James Gomez's minority certificate application to the Elections Department.

Both WP Secretary-General Mr Low Thia Khiang and Mr Gomez responded for the first time on the issue at a rally on Saturday night.

Mr Low said: "If the PAP thinks that I will be intimidated by their big guns and will duck the issue, they have made a wrong judgement. I have spoken to James Gomez and found out what had happened."

He said the PAP was trying to use the issue to discredit the WP's candidates especially the Aljunied team.

Mr Gomez also read out a statement during the rally to set the record straight.

He said: "I have a statement to read - I refer to my claim for the submission of my application for a minority certificate at Elections Department on 26th Apr 2006. I wish to confirm I did not submit the said application on the 24th Apr 2006 due to distractions caused by the busy sechedule leading up to Nomination Day. Please accept my sincere apologies if my actions on 26th Apr 2006 caused any distress or confusion to the staff or the elections department. I thank you."

During the same rally, WP chairman Sylvia Lim rebutted the PAP's comments that the opposition does not have tried and tested candidates - including those who can take on an international role.

Ms Lim, who is part of the WP team for Aljunied GRC, says potential and sincerity matters too.

She said: "As for myself, he asked whether I can negotiate Free Trade Agreements like George Yeo. First question we should ask is how important negotiating free trade agreement is to becoming a good MP to your residents. The first argument which they always like to use is - don't vote for untested Workers' Party candidate - vote for an incumbent, experienced MP. Now ask yourself - does this mean you should never vote for new candidate? What if the new candidate is good, is full of potential and is sincere?" - CNA/ch

Channel NewsAsia: WP's Gomez admits he did not submit form to Elections Dept

SINGAPORE VOTES 2006


James Gomez (L) and Low Thia Khiang (R)

SINGAPORE : Workers' Party candidate James Gomez has admitted that he did not submit the minority certificate application form to the Elections Department as claimed earlier.

He read out a prepared statement on this during the party's rally at Nee Soon East.

"I have a statement to read. I refer to my claim for the submission of my application for a minority certificate at Elections Department on 26 April 2006. I wish to confirm I did not submit the said application on 24 April 2006 due to distractions caused by the busy schedule leading up to Nomination Day. Please accept my sincere apologies if my actions on 26 April 2006 caused any distress or confusion to the staff or the Elections Department. I thank you," said James Gomez, WP candidate for Aljunied GRC.

Mr Gomez had come under attack by PAP leaders in the past few days for his silence on the issue. They had criticised him for his lack of accountability.

Saturday night's admission came a day after the Elections Department released a transcript and footages from a security camera recording of his visit to the department.

These were filmed on the day Mr Gomez insisted he had submitted his application.

"If the PAP thinks that I will be intimidated by their big guns and will duck the issue, they have made a wrong judgement. I have spoken to James Gomez and found out what happened," said Low Thia Khiang, Secretary-General of Workers' Party.

He said the PAP was trying to use the issue to discredit the WP's candidates especially the Aljunied team.

After the rally, Mr Low was asked if he thought this issue had been settled.

"I think it has been settled. We came out clean and we made it clear. James has sincerely apologised for causing this distress to the Elections Department. I think we are fair people, we are not someone who is trying to make things difficult. It's an unfortunate misunderstanding, it’s an incident and we are open about it," said Mr Low. - CNA/ls

Weekend TODAY: Young, bilingual Lian banks on WP's coin

GE2006

TOR CHING LI
chingli@newstoday.com.sg


WORKERS' Party (WP) candidate Lian Chin Way, 36, knows the odds are stacked against him in the single member ward of Nee Soon Central.

"I know it's going to be a very steep uphill battle, but I will do my best to offer voters a choice," said Mr Lian, an election debutant, who joined the WP last September.

The business manager is now pit against election battle veteran and incumbent People's Action Party MP Ong Ah Heng after a last-minute change in plans.

Mr Lian, who had been working the ground in Aljunied GRC, said the swop was part of his party's election strategy.

He said: "I may be relatively new to the ground myself but my party is not. We have been active in Nee Soon for three years now."

He has been actively working the ground for the "past couple of weeks". Mr Lian sees his bilingualism and "humble grassroots background" as qualities that will put him in relatively good stead for the working and lower-middle class electorate at Nee Soon Central.

One of the things the University of London graduate hopes to bring about is a waiver of the Goods and Services Tax for some basic food items such as rice, milk powder, flour and oil.

Does he think his youthful image will help him? Said Mr Lian: "I hope people don't vote for me because I am younger but because of the values of the WP. We are offering Singaporeans a choice, for the long term prospects of Singapore."



NEE SOON CENTRAL

WHO WILL LEAD THE WAY?


TREVOR TAN
PAP's Ong Ah Heng (right), 62, and his Workers' Party opponent Lian Chin Way (left), 36.


FACTS ABOUT NEE SOON CENTRAL:

• Number of voters: 23,152, mostly working-class.

• Last election: 2001. This would be its fifth consecutive election contest.

• PAP's Ong Ah Heng took the ward back from Singapore Democratic Party's Cheo Chai Chen in the 1997 GE. In 2001, he beat SDP's Ling How Doong with 78.52 per cent of the vote.

Weekend TODAY: WP's 'suicide squad' volunteered for the job

GE2006

THE Workers' Party (WP) line-up that will vie for votes with Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong's team in Ang Mo Kio GRC were volunteers and were not "assigned" the battleground, party chief Low Thia Khiang said on Friday.

"I managed to convince my party to send a team to Ang Mo Kio. More importantly, we managed to get a team who are prepared to go to Ang Mo Kio," Mr Low said. "Every candidate must have the motivation and must be prepared to go. I didn't assign."

He also countered Mr Lee's comments that his team in Ang Mo Kio is a "suicide squad".

A "gan si dui" is better than a "pa si dui", he quipped in Mandarin. Translated, it means: A suicide squad is better than having a team that is afraid of dying.

To those who felt that the WP candidates for the People's Action Party stronghold have a "defeatist attitude" because they have already conceded they would lose, Mr Low said that just because they are contesting in constituencies that are ruling-party fortresses - where they have no real chance of winning - does not make them defeatist.

"We have a mission and they will execute the mission to provide a choice to voters in Ang Mo Kio and residents of the former Cheng San (where some voters have been absorbed by AMK GRC)," he said of his Ang Mo Kio team.

Mr Low, who is defending his Hougang seat this election, was speaking to reporters at a coffeeshop in Aljunied GRC - just across the road from his Hougang ward - where he and his party colleagues took a break after a 90-minute walkabout through both constituencies. - ANSLEY NG

Weekend TODAY: It's about checks & balances: WP

GE2006

LEE CHING WERN
chingwern@newstoday.com.sg



COMPARING NOTES: Workers' Party chairman Sylvia Lim and WP secretary general Low Thia Khiang confer with each other at a rally on Friday night.

THE Government is made up of humans and humans have weaknesses, which is why Singaporeans cannot issue the Government a "blank cheque", said Workers' Party (WP) secretary-general Low Thia Khiang, at his party's rally at Aljunied on Friday night.

"Let the WP have a chance to check the Government, to tell the People's Action Party (PAP) that they had better do the job properly or come election time, the people will hold them accountable," he said.

Citing the scandals that have plagued the National Kidney Foundation, China Aviation Oil and Accord Customer Care Solutions, Mr Low said that the most important governance is not internal but external.

"The Workers' Party is a responsible party. We do not oppose for the sake of it," he said. "If we disappoint you, never mind. The PAP will surely send their candidates back to contest the next election and you can give (the ward) back to them. But first, you must give us a chance to see if we can deliver or not."

Aljunied GRC team leader Sylvia Lim added that sincerity is what drove WP candidates to contest in the GE.

"Above all, nobody had to persuade us to enter politics. We did not have to attend tea parties. We are not reluctant," she said. Ms Lim also defended the WP manifesto, which asked for a non-conditional social safety net, which the PAP had termed a "time bomb".

Said Ms Lim: "The PAP minister said they would only be able to do this if they have a surplus. So why is it that in an election year, they can run a deficit to give out money?"

Mr Low also said that people do not give the WP enough credit for its ideas. He pointed out that in its 1994 Manifesto, the WP had recommended that the Ministry of Education cut class size. Former Education Minister Lee Yock Suan then dismissed the idea, he said.

The WP had also suggested that Medisave and MediShield were not the answers to healthcare and proposed an insurance scheme instead. Mr Low said that it has taken the PAP 10 years to do this.

WP's Aljunied GRC team member, Mr James Gomez, has taken up the issue of a First World opposition raised by Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew.

Mr Gomez maintained that the government is not of First World standard even though Mr Lee had pointed out that under the PAP, Singapore had been ranked highly by many international economic agencies.

Mr Gomez said: "Singaporeans and Singapore are First World. There is no doubt in my mind, but it does not mean that the Government and the PAP are First World. Don't claim credit. Singaporeans and Singapore are First World, and this is the message I want to leave with you today: You are First World, Singapore is First World but the PAP government is not."

Channel NewsAsia: WP candidate tells voters to vote for opposition in GRC

SINGAPORE VOTES 2006

By Joanne Leow

SINGAPORE : Workers' Party candidate for East Coast GRC Eric Tan has told voters that it is safe to vote for the opposition - even in Group Representation Constituencies (GRCs).

Mr Tan says: "If we win a GRC, you got nothing to lose. You know why? Because a GRC has at least 110,000 people, alright? Can they afford to punish 110,000 people? ... Very difficult. They will try to win you back because it is so important, and guess what? We will try to retain our seats, you will be king of the road." - CNA/de