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Singapore vote test for ruling party
SINGAPORE voted yesterday in its most hotly contested general election with the outcome expected to test the long-ruling People’s Action Party’s dominance of politics even though it is bound to win.
Years of strong growth have turned the island nation into an international financial hub with spotless streets and malls, well-tended parks and living standards unmatched in Southeast Asia.
But that success and an influx of foreign workers have brought high property prices, crowded public transport, and a widening wealth gap which have fueled resentment among many in a city that surveys rank as one of the world’s most expensive.
Opposition parties are hoping to take advantage of the grumbling and contested all 89 seats in parliament for the first time since independence in 1965.
Voting, compulsory for an electorate of almost 2.5 million people, ended at 8pm.
The opposition focused its campaign on the bread-and-butter issues of jobs, health care and housing.
“I want to see more opposition members in parliament from more parties,” said one voter, a lawyer in his 40s. “I hope there are enough opposition members to fill the front benches because we can then have shadow ministers to effectively suggest alternative policies.”
Voting took place amid seasonal “haze” caused by forest fires in Indonesia, but the air quality had improved from Thursday’s “very unhealthy” levels.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who voted with his wife Ho Ching, said he was confident.
“We always watch carefully, we’ve done our best,” Lee told waiting reporters.
The PAP, which has ruled since independence, has a bedrock of support and will win the bulk of parliament’s seats but opposition inroads would challenge its dominance.
“Regardless of how the PAP fares, he appreciates that the political landscape is very different today and that the results may point to the extent of change,” Eugene Tan, a political analyst and associate professor at Singapore Management University, said of Lee.
The PAP’s share of the vote dropped to 60.1 percent in the last election in 2011, its lowest yet. Nevertheless, it held 79 of 87 seats in the outgoing parliament.
The main opposition Workers’ Party held seven seats while one, that of former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, the current prime minister’s father who died in March, was vacant.
The PAP is hoping a sense of patriotism inspired by this year’s 50th anniversary and respect for the elder Lee will work in its favor.
The elder Lee drew praise for his market-friendly policies, but also criticism at home and abroad for his “strict controls” over the press, protests and opponents.
Since 2011, Prime Minister Lee has launched a health care insurance program for the elderly, introduced cooling measures for the property market and curbed the flow of foreign workers.
But the election comes as economic risks are in focus due to uncertainties stemming from China’s slowdown and wobbly markets.
DBS Bank, Singapore’s biggest lender, this week cut its economic growth forecast for Singapore to 1.8 percent, below the official 2-2.5 percent.
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