I BELIEVE the Socialist road is the only road for our people,” stated
David Marshall, the English-educated Jewish lawyer who became Singapore’s first
elected chief minister in 1955. “Our unique position as a heavily populated
entrepot port without natural resources calls for considerable adaptation of
socialist methods while maintaining socialist ideals.” Scholar Carl Trocki
writes in Singapore: Wealth, Power, and the Culture of Control that in the
1950s and 1960s, “it seemed almost certain that Singapore would adopt a
socialist if not a communist form of government” and that “except for a small
group of conservative lawyers and businessmen backed by British firepower,
there seemed to be no serious obstacle to such an outcome.”
How then did Singapore over just one generation become the capitalist
metropolis one sees today? The multiracial, managed, middle-class society is,
indeed, an adaptation of socialist ideals to Singapore’s unique position, as
well as an adapted product of the polity’s negotiations for independence and of
Lee Kuan Yew’s drive for control, reform, and implementation of what scholar
John Clammer describes as “quasi-Marxist materialism.”
Colonial
Britain, as it prepared to exit Malaya, weakened and humiliated by the swift,
easy, and complete Japanese victory over their forces in 1942, had arranged for
Singapore to remain a crown colony for an indefinite period, while Malaya would
become independent. Yet independence in Malaysia was put on hold due to Malay
opposition to Britain’s Malayan Union scheme, which would have given all
citizens equal status. Eventually the British helped put in place a system of
racial domination under the United Malays National Organization (UMNO) party in
favor of its erstwhile colonial clients/allies that assured the Malays their
ethnic domination over the Chinese, Indians, and other constituents.
Meanwhile,
in Singapore, as parties prepared for the first time for free elections under
the British, the People’s Action Party (PAP), the party of Lee Kuan Yew that
since 1959 has governed Singapore, articulated a much more radical stance than
the other parties, proposing immediate independence and a democratic socialist
system. According to Trocki, they seemed almost as far left as the communists,
who were not allowed to participate in the elections, but who supported the PAP.
As the PAP developed alliances with the left and prominent Chinese labor union
leaders filled their ranks, Lee Kuan Yew emerged as an effective legal defender
of workers’ and students’ rights. Later, after he had arrested them, Lee would
boast that these left-wing activists and organizers were the ones who had
originally brought the PAP into power.
Once in
office thanks to the left’s grassroots organizing in favor of the PAP’s
democratic socialist platform and “open united front” with the communists, the
PAP made no room for the left nor for an independent labor movement both in
Singapore and within the party’s own ranks. Lee Kuan Yew’s clique used its
legislative domination to outmaneuver and isolate the left, and formulated a
more conservative economic policy that stressed the need for “industrial peace”
in order to execute industrial expansion. As Trocki recounts, Operation Cold
Storage took place on February 3, 1963—security forces, in the middle of the
night, arbitrarily detained almost 150 student leaders, labor activists,
opposition politicians, and journalists; they held no trials, filed no charges,
and in many cases didn’t even acknowledge the detention. Kept in jail for many
years under inhumane conditions, the PAP even subjected some detainees to
torture. However, the path for PAP domination of mainstream politics was now
cleared, and the party dominated politics when Singapore separated from
Malaysia in 1965.
Without a
single opposition member in Parliament over 1965-1983 (and only nominal opposition
position holders thereafter), with opposing voices within the party
relentlessly silenced and marginalized, local media strictly controlled, the
formation of alternative political organizations hindered through legislation
mandating deliberately impossible financial requirements, and all forms of
civil society coopted or enervated, Lee Kuan Yew had a free hand to act upon
what he saw as a tabula rasa. From a small island with no natural resources,
high unemployment, and fewer than two million people, he and his right-hand men
in the PAP built the Singapore we know today. The cost was high—the
deracination of civil society and destruction of true democracy, full freedom
of speech, plural discourse, and political participation—but the results are
real. Even in the realm of foreign policy, as Trocki notes, Sinnathamby
Rajaratnam steered a brilliant course, forming military alliance with Israel
that afforded Singapore world-class advice and training and international
positioning among the contingent of pro-US, anti-communist countries without
making Singapore directly reliant on military and security aid from the US
itself.
Lee Kuan
Yew effected his managerial, technocratic vision of governance through deep
meritocracy, employing a corporate model of headhunting. Strict screening,
psychological and academic, preceded party membership, and those who could not
live up to Lee Kuan Yew’s exacting, rigorous standards of performance were
immediately dismissed. What this ultimately meant was that a strictly professional
technocratic elite came to power that did not represent the people governed,
but instead a positivist commitment to “rationality” and “professionalism.” In
Trocki’s words, “they represented no one but themselves and their own
ever-changing interpretation of those standards of which they were the sole
custodians.”
Lee Kuan
Yew was an outright elitist; he had little faith in the masses of the
population whom he considered mere “digits,” and even practiced a kind of
eugenics. Believing that talent was genetic, he organized weekend retreat
gatherings through the Social Development Unit to encourage marriageable
university graduates to meet and mix, while instructing them in dance classes
and social skills. Yet, Trocki notes that Lee was influenced by Fabian
socialist ideas when he studied at Cambridge, and indeed the PAP adopted
Fabianism’s paternalistic and managerial ethos.
Singapore
now boasts free education, a self-funded pension plan, and a self-funded public
housing program (over 1 million people have moved from substandard housing to
clean, new, high-rise apartments). The PAP argued that the goal of economic
growth required central planning and control, and assumed that the people could
not be trusted to make decisions. Trocki writes: “This paternalism pervaded the
social order and was reproduced in the bureaucracy, education, public
enterprises and community centers. It has been sustained by the provision of
material rewards and technocracy, with the primary goods being economic in
nature.” This, in total, is the PAP’s quasi-Marxist materialism.
As Trocki
summarizes, the city has reached full employment, eradicated poverty, solved
its housing shortage, and maintained one of the lowest crime rates in the
world, and few governments can match the Singaporean government’s reputation
for honesty and integrity. Yet, besides the costs previously mentioned, there
is also the cultural, intellectual, and social malaise, the stifling of
initiative (entrepreneurial as well as artistic), and the ill treatment of migrant
workers as non-citizens with few protections and few rights.
Viewing
Singapore from the Philippines, this kind of “benevolent dictatorship” often
seems deeply attractive, but Singapore is idiosyncratic, and the road to its
creation was contingent, and could have been so easily undermined or corrupted
at each turn. It has taken an extreme path that has yielded extreme results,
good and bad. Singapore is a model of good governance and prosperity in
Southeast Asia, particularly for the Philippines, but it is a complicated one.
Nicole
Del Rosario CuUnjieng is a PhD Student in Southeast Asian and International
History at Yale University.
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