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Home News Singapore Singapore’s Minister Mentor steps down but not out
Singapore’s Minister Mentor steps down but not out Print Email
Saturday, 21 May 2011

Mark MacKinnon
Globe and Mail


After five decades as the unrivalled centre of Singapore’s tiny political universe, Lee Kuan Yew tried to cast his decision to step out of the limelight as another one of his characteristically forward-thinking manoeuvres.

A “younger team of ministers [should] connect to, and engage with, this younger generation in shaping the future of Singapore,” he said last week as he stepped down from his omnipotent-sounding post of Minister Mentor.


But it would be closer to the truth to say that – for one of few times since he pulled Singapore out of its brief union with Malaysia in 1965 – Mr. Lee wasn’t in full control of events. It was Singapore, the city-state he helped turn into one of the most affluent societies in the world, that had left Mr. Lee behind, not the other way around.

The 87-year-old’s resignation came on the heels of an election result that – although it returned the governing People’s Action Party with another massive majority – marked a watershed in Singapore’s history. While the PAP still won a convincing 60 per cent of the vote, that was down from 67 per cent in the 2006 election and 75 per cent in 2001. Mr. Lee personally helped turn voters away from the PAP by warning they would “have five years to live and repent” if they elected opposition members to parliament.

Singaporeans responded to that threat by turning to opposition parties in unprecedented numbers. Though the campaign period (the only time when political demonstrations are allowed) was just nine days long, rallies by the Workers’ Party and Singapore Democratic Party attracted enthusiastic crowds of thousands, while the PAP gatherings were far smaller and quieter affairs.

Now that opposition groups such as the Workers’ Party and the Singapore Democratic Party have finally established themselves as viable alternatives in the minds of voters, many expect an even more hotly contested vote the next time out.

“Politics in Singapore tends to change incrementally. But since the elections on May 7, politics will never be the same again,” said Eugene Tan, an assistant law professor at Singapore Management University. “One issue that arose was the question of what style of political system we should have. Behind the figures was a strong unhappiness. As the Prime Minister said, Singaporeans felt the PAP – the only government they’ve ever had – was out of touch.”

The “Singapore model” that Mr. Lee designed – an authoritarian government presiding over one of the most open economies on Earth – seems to have come to the crossroads that many predicted it must eventually reach. In pushing globalization, Mr. Lee encouraged Singaporeans to be innovative and to interact as much as possible with the outside world. The young people who followed his advice often returned to Singapore wondering why their government tried too hard to control what they said and thought.

“Lee Kuan Yew, I won’t say lost touch, but did not fully appreciate the things that came with globalization, the democratic ideas that would infuse the young,” said Allan Chong, an associate professor at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies. Prof. Chong said he could see the change happening among his graduating students, who once sought positions in the PAP but more and more often started their own businesses and openly supported opposition parties.

It was youths – mobilizing themselves online, largely over Twitter – who played the biggest part in Singapore’s tiny electoral uprising. “I voted for the first time today. I am also proud to be Singaporean for the very first time,” Melody Chia, a 23-year-old Singaporean living in Beijing, wrote on her blog after casting her ballot at the embassy there.

Globalization also brought with it a flood of foreign workers, following Mr. Lee’s assertion that Singapore needed to attract as much outside talent as possible to remain competitive. But the sight of outsiders snapping up desirable jobs and university placements – in addition to rising living costs and a widening gap between rich and poor– turned into a wellspring of support for the opposition.

The opposition charge was led by the centre-left Workers’ Party, which won 12 per cent of the vote, and six of 87 parliament seats. It campaigned on the slogan “towards a First World parliament,” a deliberate play on the greatest achievement of Mr. Lee and the PAP, who are credited with lifting Singapore’s economy from the Third World to the First World.

While he will no longer be in cabinet, Mr. Lee retained his seat in parliament and will likely continue to have the ear of his son, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, even as the latter seeks to stand fully outside his father’s shadow for the first time. The elder Mr. Lee will also remain a senior adviser to the Government Investment Corporation, a role that gives him wide influence over the economic side of Singapore’s development, where his greatest achievements lie.

But it will now be the younger Mr. Lee who will be the new face of Singapore, along with an almost completely new cabinet that he will swear in on Saturday. The Minister Mentor’s retirement from cabinet was matched by that of his successor as prime minister, Goh Chok Tong (who like Mr. Lee had lingered in his own ill-defined post of “Senior Minister”). Three other veteran cabinet ministers were left out of the new cabinet.

Suddenly, the average age of Singapore’s cabinet has dropped to 53 from 59. The 59-year-old Lee Hsien Loong has gone from the fresh face surrounded by elders, to the oldest and most experienced person at the table.

But many Singaporeans doubt whether the retiring Minister Mentor will really be able to stay away from the politics of a state he has spent his life constructing.

“Everybody says [Lee Kuan Yew] is still going to be the power behind the throne. He’s still going to have that clout, that influence,” said Chee Soon Juan, leader of the Singapore Democratic Party, who has been repeatedly jailed for his outspoken opposition to the ruling party and was barred from standing as a candidate in the election because he declared bankruptcy after being convicted of libeling Mr. Lee and his son in a magazine interview. “Nobody expects he’s really going to go away.”

But to the other 60 per cent of Singaporeans, that’s likely fine for now. On the streets, in cafés and on subways, there’s a bit of swagger to the citizens of this tiny country that long lived in an atmosphere of silent fear and compliance. In Mr. Lee’s sterile and orderly Singapore, you couldn’t spit on the streets, let alone speak your mind.

The $300 fine for spitting remains in place, but most here have lost their worries about saying what they think. “We still prefer the ruling party, but in a true democracy you need some opposition,” said Patrick Lee, a retired communications consultant. “Lee Kuan Yew did a very good job in the past. But there comes a time when everybody outlives their usefulness.”

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/asia-pacific/singapores-minister-mentor-steps-down-but-not-out/article2030582/page1/

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Comments (6)
  • Prime Citizen
    In Mr. Lee’s sterile and orderly Singapore, you couldn’t spit on the streets, let alone speak your mind.

    Another place with similar "sterile and orderly" venue: cementary . But there visitors may "pui" & speak their mind to heart contented:freedom of speech .
  • Prime Citizen
    Until the draconian Internal Security Act (ISA) be removed from our nation constitution, I see only a handful of courageous citizens will dare to speak out the reality in our country. With political party as Singapore Democratic Party vision for our nation future , I have boundless energy to blog. I can release here, the pressure of my soul's upheavals, the personal suppression, the unspoken pain, and the uncharted dreams my lack of self-worth have not permitted me to follow. This year 2011 I witness the rising full glory of the birth of the new Singapore when the hatchet-character step out from cabinet (but not yet out of the Singapore Story totally). After the euphoria of the GE2011 result subsided, Singaporeans in general find that it's problems , unever political field being one of them, did not leave with the Mentor now turn Advisor. This is just another PAP joke for our nation my home. If the real PaP political manipulations seemed disingenuous, its politics corruption is downright reprehensible . I always believe the best society is a pure democratic society without fear or favor. More citizens are being encouraged now by SDP to show and express their Fremont about the senselessness of the Lees regime's PAP actions at home and foreign policies.


  • Robox
    Of course the lowly backbencher Lee Kuan Yew has merely stepped down but not stepped out. Singaporeans are not fools.

    In 1991 when he stepped down as PM, some Singaporeans thought that he was surely out of the way and the elections of that year saw the previous high of 4 opposition MPs elected. Then the truth dawned on them: while Singaporeans were given the "kinder and gentler" persona in the person of Goh Chok Tong to fool them that true was change was underway, the remaining period showed that the PAP`s fascist agenda remained in full swing with Lee Kuan Yew sending orders `down` to what was officially his superior, Goh Chok Tong.

    Then there was the Magnificent Seven - still waiting for the first glimpse of their magnificence - and with them, PAP MPs like now Jamban Minister Vivian Blakhrishnan and Irene Ng all trotted out to declare that `they didn`t agree with the PAP on everything:`we were told that a revolution was underway.

    Then Remaking Singapore and Singapore 21 later, we have this: yet another promise of change, much like the abusive man who takes it out on his wife promises her change, she accepts, and then he goes on to resume his abuse of her.

    This is how the PAP intends to create a population of people as dysfunctional as themselves.

    As I said in another post, the most obvious change that needed to have taken place, hasn`t: Lee Hsien Loong`s resignation or sacking by his party for the fact it was under his watch that the PAP governmnet messed up big.

    This would have happened in another country.

    But it hasn`t because the Lee family believes, and it has made hundreds of thousands of other Singaporeans believe, that Lee Hsien Loong has some kind of heriditary right to be the PM because his family is the one that owns Singapore.
  • SBG - 狼来了说一次就好了
    最近听张副总理说1995年的时候,执政党政府曾修改部长的薪金,就在那时退休金的增长就被冻结。

    大家记得95年时又多少个反对党议员?4个 - 民主党3个,工人党1个(刘程强先生就是在91年当选)。当时老的刚把政权“移给”吴作栋,那时民意沸腾,根基不稳,暂时平息民怒。接着一个一个打压反对党,几年里把反对党整的死去活来,把他们的小学成绩都翻出来,告到破产。 结果后来反对党就没落15年,执政党就用“整个配套”来奖励自己,到2011年,这“整个配套”竟然还加八个月的花红!拿了八个月的花红(估计2百40万)却搞到人民连片瓦遮顶都没有的部长竟然还说接受全部责任退休!应该是接受全部花红退休。

    这就是老的带给人民的部长,这就是老的带给人民的“未来”。我们看到了,极度失望。 老的活在那个部长错一次,人民五年后才知道的年代。所以这次他还在做和人民赌他们五年后会“反悔”的傻事。老的,这是一个你逃了一个恐怖份子,四个小时后才公布,人民就质问你为何这么久才通知人民,恐怖份子炸了一个shopping mall怎么办的年代!

    老的91年大力介绍的“新二代领袖”,结果2011年大都两袖金凤,满载而归,拿8个月花红退休再拿退休金享福去了。01年顶力支持的自己的儿子从来不是富二代是数学天才,但是从来没有搭过巴士的“第三代领袖”,人民是不是要等到他们把反对党全搞死,再在2021年给自己18个月花红荣休呢?

    请用健康为理由退下吧。象伟大的邓小平那样退到幕后。邓曾说过“我都九十岁了,如果越来越健康,不成了妖怪吗?” 退到幕后吧,连议员都不必了,你还能每个星期见人民吗? It is not necessary. 让丹戎巴葛补选,那你就伟大了。

    狼来了说一次就好了。
  • firepower
    Seems like this will in fact be LKY's last election after all!

    Well a least we managed to send him to an early political grave. However, his ghost will most likely live on ... haunting his son in parliament.
  • Merdeka
    Many Singaporeans are earning less than S$1000 per month. They have to slaught day and night to make ends meet. Yet our ministers are getting multimillion dollars salary with pensions.http://yoursdp.org/index.php/news/singapore/1617-registration-for-comments
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