Sunday, April 30, 2006

Channel NewsAsia: Workers' Party unfazed by James Gomez incident

SINGAPORE VOTES 2006

By Augustine Anthuvan



SINGAPORE : The Secretary-General of the Workers' Party has said he does not feel anything significant or negative towards the WP over the James Gomez incident.

Mr Low Thia Khiang was asked during a WP walkabout in Nee Soon East if the incident has hurt the image of the opposition party - which has made accountability a key campaign platform.

Mr Low is a WP candidate for Hougang.

Mr Low says: "I don't feel anything significant or negative towards the Workers' Party over the incident. I think people do understand and people do.

"Singaporeans are intelligent enough, sophisticated enough to look at the thing. I mean the footage, the apologies, my explanation and decide for themselves." - CNA/de

Sunday Times: PAP's upgrading strategy divisive: WP

ELECTION '06
PARTY POLITICAL BROADCASTS



WORKERS' PARTY CHAIRMAN SYLVIA LIM

Dear Fellow Singaporeans,

The Workers' Party has fielded 15 new candidates for this election.

Sunday Times: 'Give me chance to run town council'

ELECTION '06


NEE SOON EAST CANDIDATE Dr Poh appeals to the rally crowd to give him a chance, promising to speak up for residents if he wins.
PHOTO: EDWIN KOO


WORKERS' Party candidate in Nee Soon East Poh Lee Guan said he was ready to run a town council and urged voters to give him a chance.

Sunday Times: Low Thia Khiang: It's an innocent mistake

ELECTION '06

AT A Workers' Party rally in Nee Soon East last night, party chief Low Thia Khiang accused the People's Action Party of making a "mountain out of a molehill" over his colleague James Gomez's missing form episode.

The Sunday Times interviewed him briefly after that:

Q Why has it taken your party so long to come out and talk about this issue?

A Because to us it is not really an issue. I suppose it is something administrative, and we want to move on from there.

Q Do you think it has affected your team's chances?

A I don't think so.

Q Did you investigate what happened?

A I've spoken to Gomez, of course, to understand what it is about, how it happened and I'm satisfied. He's not actually trying to be funny or doing it on purpose.

Q Second time it has happened to James Gomez?* (In Mandarin)

A Different issue altogether.

Q This honesty issue - how will you deal with it? (In Mandarin)

A It's not an honesty issue. This is something that happened during a busy period and it was an innocent mistake. It's not an issue about honesty.

*In 2001, Mr Gomez was in the WP's Aljunied GRC team that was disqualified as it did not complete its statutory declaration forms.

Sunday Times: WP chief Sylvia Lim defends Aljunied slate

ELECTION '06

Sue-Ann Chia

WORKERS' Party (WP) chairman Sylvia Lim last night responded to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong's comparisons of the five WP candidates in Aljunied GRC

Sunday Times: Govt must account to voters, says Low

ELECTION '06

WP chief says plans for HDB lifts and public transport short-sighted

Nicholas Fang


WORKERS' PARTY candidates (from left) Lian Chin Way, Mohammed Rahizan Yaacob, Sylvia Lim and Low Thia Khiang facing voters at the Yishun rally yesterday - issues ranging from public transport to a national unemployment insurance plan were raised.
PHOTO: EDWIN KOO


WORKERS' PARTY chief Low Thia Khiang last night questioned why so much money was now being spent to upgrade lifts in HDB flats and make public transport more disabled-friendly.

If these facilities had been better designed at the start, the funds now being spent could have been saved, he said, asking who should be held accountable for the waste.

Speaking at a rally in at an open field at Yishun Avenue 11, he emphasised the need for the Government to be accountable to voters for the things it has done over the past few years.

On the issue of lift upgrading in HDB flats and how it is good for residents, he said: "My question is, who was responsible for building flats without lifts stopping at every level in the first place?"

He also said that when the MRT system was first built, there had been calls for it to be made user-friendly for the disabled and the aged but these calls were ignored.

"Now, so much money is being spent to put in...fixtures like lifts and ramps. Who is accountable for such short-sightedness in planning?"

If voters were unhappy about such issues, voting an opposition contesting the General Election gives them another option, said Mr Low.

"At the end of the day, it's about having a choice, just as you know that competition in a market gives consumers a better choice.

"I ask you to vote for the WP. We will ask hard questions in Parliament."

A total of 11 speakers spoke at the rally, including WP chairman Sylvia Lim, Mr Gopal Krishnan, Mr Abdul Rahim, Mr Yaw Shin Leong, Mr Lian Chin Way, Dr Poh Lee Guan and Mr James Gomez.

First-time candidate Brandon Siow suggested introducing a national unemployment insurance plan.

Such a plan, which he said in the party manifesto, would provide retrenched workers with a regular payout from an insurance company while they were looking for another job.

Mr Siow, who is contesting in the East Coast GRC, said: "Today in Singapore, there is no such thing as job stability. Many of us are paid daily on contract and are lucky to be employed.

"Singaporeans are not lazy. We want to work, we want money to feed our families and pay our bills. But what happens when we can't pay our bills?

"A national unemployment insurance plan means we will still have money to pay bills and feed our families," he said.

He added that the plan could be funded from Central Provident Fund deductions or co-funded by employees and employers.

Mr Low wrapped up the 2 1/2 hour rally by saying that no government was above making mistakes and hence needed to be balanced and checked by a credible opposition.

Sunday Times: PM: Come clean; Gomez: I'm sorry

ELECTION 06

Workers' Party candidate finally admits he did not submit minority candidate form to Elections Dept

Sim Chi Yin


PHOTO: EDWIN KOO
'Please accept my sincere apologies if my actions on April 26 caused any distress or confusion to the staff of the Elections Department.'
- MR GOMEZ, at the Workers' Party rally last night (above)


MR JAMES Gomez admitted last night that he had not submitted his minority candidate form and apologised to the Elections Department for suggesting that he had done so.

He gave the statement after the People's Action Party (PAP) repeatedly asked him and his party to come clean on the matter.

At a rally in Nee Soon East, the Workers' Party candidate for Aljunied GRC read out a prepared speech, saying that he failed to hand in his form on Monday because he was distracted by his busy schedule leading up to Nomination Day.

"Please accept my sincere apologies if my actions on April 26 caused any distress or confusion to the staff of the Elections Department," he said.

His party secretary-general Low Thia Khiang had invited him on stage at the rally in Yishun Avenue 11 to "set the record straight".

Mr Low said: "I have spoken to James Gomez and found out what happened. They (the PAP) are making a mountain out of a molehill."

He added that if the PAP thought he would be intimidated by its big guns and "duck the issue", they had made the wrong judgment.

The statements from the WP last night came after PAP leaders had spent the past two days urging Mr Gomez and his party chiefs to tell the full story.

At the heart of the controversy was an assertion by Mr Gomez on Wednesday to the Elections Department that he had submitted his minority race candidate form and that he had not received any confirmation. He asked the department to check and warned of "consequences".

When told later that a security camera recording showed he had not handed in his form and had instead put it in his briefcase, he said he would get back to the department if there was further information.

Then on Nomination Day, he brushed off reporters, saying he did not discuss "election administration over the media".

The Elections Department then released the recording and a transcript of his conversation to leave no doubt about the integrity of the electoral process. But Mr Gomez maintained he had not "reviewed any of these items".

Yesterday, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and the PAP team in Aljunied GRC asked Mr Gomez to take the issue seriously and urged Mr Low to view it with the "utmost seriousness".

"(The) best thing is just to come clean and tell Singaporeans what happened...was it a mistake, was it not a mistake?" said Mr Lee, speaking after a walkabout in Anchorvale Link.

"I think it's a serious matter for the Workers' Party. It's not just a Gomez matter, but a matter which the WP has to take seriously."

The PAP's first assistant secretary general Wong Kan Seng, who in his role as Deputy Prime Minister oversees the Elections Department, also stressed that the issue went beyond Mr Gomez.

"It concerns the sort of political party that the WP is, and the standards of accountability and transparency that it upholds," he said at the PAP's headquarters in Bedok yesterday afternoon.

He added that Mr Low had said, when introducing his party's candidates, that they all meet the criteria of credibility, capability and character.

But he wanted to know what WP would do now that the issue had been raised and seriou s questions were being asked.

"Singaporeans deserve answers to these important questions, from a party that aspires to become a First World opposition."

If it were a PAP candidate involved, Mr Wong said, the party would have immediately investigated, gotten to the bottom of things and directed the candidate to immediately and publicly clear the air.

And if the explanation was not satisfactory, it would withdraw the candidate and apologise immediately.

At the WP rally last night, the crowd broke in applause when Mr Low read Mr Gomez's apology in Mandarin. The WP chief said he had spoken with Mr Gomez and found out it was an oversight.

"The Workers' Party is fair. We are prepared to apologise. We are not unreasonable people."

Speaking to The Sunday Times later, Mr Low said the party did not apologise earlier because it did not think it was an issue. It was "an innocent mistake" and Mr Gomez's honesty was not in doubt, he added.

simcy@sph.com.sg

Channel NewsAsia: WP's Brandon Siow suggests co-payment, with deduction from CPF for unemployment insurance

SINGAPORE VOTES 2006



SINGAPORE : Workers' Party candidate Brandon Siow, part of the opposition party's team for East Coast Group Representation Constituency (GRC), has pushed for unemployment insurance, as mentioned in the party's manifesto.

He was speaking at the party's rally in Nee Soon East on Saturday.

He said, "This is a national unemployment insurance plan. Now what does this unemployment insurance do? What it means is that when we are retrenched, during the time it takes for us to retrain and to find another job, we will be paid a regular payout from our insurance company. This way, when we're looking for a new job, we will still have money to pay bills and feed our families.

"Now how can we pay for this insurance? There are many ways; we can deduct it from CPF, the same way we deduct our medical insurance, and why not, CPF is after all our own money. Or we could have a co-system, maybe employees pay 1 percent and employers pay one percent.

"There are many ways of looking at it. But the principle is that I would urge the government to consider seriously consider an unemployment insurance plan." - CNA/ms

Channel NewsAsia: WP team for Ang Mo Kio GRC prepared to lose to PM Lee's team

SINGAPORE VOTES 2006


Yaw Shin Leong

Worker's Party's Yaw Shin Leong, who is leading the party's fight in Ang Mo Kio GRC, has said he and his team members are prepared to lose their battle against the People's Action Party team helmed by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

He was speaking at a Workers' Party Rally on Saturday night.

"In some quarters, my team is considered as the 'dare to die' team. Let me make this clear. Life is sacred, life is precious and politics is serious. More importantly, my courageous team-mates and myself are mentally prepared to lose but that does not mean we are push-overs. It's because we have confidence in you, the people of Singapore," said Yaw Shin Leong, WP candidate for Ang Mo Kio GRC.

Meanwhile, PAP's candidate for Ang Mo Kio GRC Wee Siew Kim said PAP has delivered its promises and will continue to do so for the refurbishment of Ang Mo Kio town centre, if he is elected.

"The crown jewel of our estate renewal strategy is Ang Mo Kio Town Centre - the centrepiece of our entire town refreshment program. It will incorporate an air-conditioned bus interchange that is linked underground to the MRT station. By the first quarter of 2007, you will have a brand new mall in Ang Mo Kio Town Centre. Yes, again we have delivered on our promises, and no one else, and not the Workers' Party for sure, will deliver this," said Wee Siew Kim, PAP candidate for Ang Mo Kio GRC. - CNA /ls