As Singapore goes to the polls
in a general election on 11 September 2015, the contending parties appear to be
heading for a showdown over the timeframe by which the government should be
judged. The government wants voters to judge it based on its record over 50
years or more; the opposition says it should be judged based on the last decade.
The reason for the differing
perspectives is not difficult to understand.
Judging the government over
50 years leads to a narrative of success: how the ruling People’s Action Party
(PAP) government took Singapore from its starting point as a post-colonial city
that had recently been expelled from Malaysia and turned it into a successful,
modern capitalist city-state with one of the highest standards of living in
Asia. This is the story of a stable, peaceful, harmonious, multiracial
Singapore, where the people provide helpful feedback to the government through
the government’s official outreach programs.
But judging the government
over 10 years leads to a narrative of failure: how the PAP opened the
floodgates to more than a million foreign workers (on top of a population of
less than four million Singaporeans); failed to lift a finger to upgrade
infrastructure; failed to consider the social implications of 40 per cent of
the resident population being non-Singaporean; and created a housing shortage.
It is a government that cannot even make the trains run properly. A 10-year
narrative is a story about the high cost of living, aloof cabinet ministers,
arrogant civil servants and an insular, unaccountable government.
In this battle of the
narratives, the government has a strong head start. So far the opposition
parties have barely been able to make their voices heard. Meanwhile, the PAP
has spent the entire period since the death of founding father Lee Kuan Yew on
23 March ramping up the story of the Singapore government’s achievements over
the last 50 years or more. The week-long mourning period after Lee’s death was
very overtly a celebration of the government’s achievements over more than 50
years. And the litany of important foreign guests at Lee’s funeral was
presented as a public acknowledgement of the high esteem in which Lee was held
by world powers.
This theatre proved to be a
down payment on the August celebrations of Singapore’s 50th anniversary of
independence — a government-funded extravaganza that dwarfed anything that the
island had ever seen. This celebration concluded with the prime minister’s
annual National Day Rally Speech a week later. Its focus on Singapore’s 50
years of achievement fitted the theme that had been building for the past five
months, and it sounded just like an election pitch. Unsurprisingly, the
election was called two days later.
At first glance this account
must read as if the PAP government holds all the cards, but this would be a misleading
interpretation. Because everyone knows how strongly the deck is stacked against
the opposition. Any slippage at all in government support is interpreted
(correctly) as slap in the face for the PAP.
This is exactly what
happened in the 2011 general election, when the elected opposition presence in
parliament increased from two seats to six (out of a total of 89) and the PAP
vote slipped to a record low of 60 per cent. This result was compounded by more
government defeats and near-defeats in another three electoral contests held
since the 2011 election, meaning that the stakes for the government are now
even higher.
Support for the government
is sitting at such a low level and the string of government defeats and
near-defeats has been so consistent that anything less than improving the
government’s vote and share of seats will be considered a defeat for the prime
minister.
A bad result is not going to
disempower the government, but it does have the potential to disempower Lee
Hsien Loong within cabinet. Lee has every reason to be confident that he will
be able to step down from the post at a time of his own choosing, whether next
year or in 10 years’ time, since the imperatives within Singapore’s political
culture mean that it is vital to maintain the appearance of stability. Yet he
also knows that if this election goes badly for him, he risks losing authority
within cabinet and being a ‘lame duck’ prime minister for the rest of his term,
however long that might be.
There are strong precedents
for both of these assumptions — and Lee helped set them while he was deputy
prime minister to then prime minister Goh Chok Tong. As I detailed in my 2014
book, The Ruling Elite of Singapore, the combined might of Lee Kuan Yew and
Lee Hsien Loong outmanoeuvred and defeated Goh in the internal machinations
within cabinet in 1996, but Goh refused to step down and simply carried on as a
figurehead prime minister for the next eight years, while his deputy, Lee Hsien
Loong, exercised the real power.
If the PAP emerges from the
current election without clawing back
at least some of the ground it has lost over the last four years, then Lee
Hsien Loong risks suffering a similar fate. If that happens, then elite
politics within cabinet are going to become very Byzantine indeed!
Michael D. Barr is an
associate professor of international relations at Flinders University and Editor-in-Chief
of Asian Studies Review.
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