Workers
Party
A revival of sorts
Better quality people sign up but long way to go. By Seah
Chiang Nee.
Feb 20, 2006
THE
approaching general election appears to have sparked off
a revival of sorts for the embattled opposition Workers
Party, whose history is almost as old as the ruling People's
Action Party.
By comparison,
it is still miles behind the latter in quantity and quality
and, of course, financial resources.
But
since he took over as secretary-general in 2001, Low Thia
Khiang, a quiet 49-year-old grassroots politician, has succeeded
in attracting a small group of able professionals into its
ranks.
Many
of these will be fielded in the coming election, which could
take place in the next few months.
His
less flamboyant style contrasts sharply with that of the
party's former leader, J.B. Jeyaratnam, a fiery lawyer who
was declared a bankrupt after defaming PAP leaders.
But
the Chinese-educated graduate has breathed some new life
into Singapore's oldest opposition political party.
A measure
of the success lies in the proposed fielding of 26 candidates
for the coming 84-seat parliamentary election - compared
to only two in 2001.
Low
was one of them, winning in Hougang constituency where he
remains a popular figure.
Just
as important is the better quality of its new recruits,
something that Jeyaratnam, with his dominant personality,
had failed to bring in during his long tenure.
Low is a collective leader, non-combative but very strong
in organisational capability. By comparison, Jeyaratnam
- or JBJ - is individualistic, opinionated and a strong
debater.
The
party's resurgence is not entirely of its own making, but
results partially from a change of circumstances.
The
previous generation of Singaporeans was generally apolitical,
content to leave things to the government to make all the
decisions.
But
after 40 years of rule, the PAP is encountering increasing
disenchantment from people who failed to climb the social
ladder. A trickle of better-educated youths, unhappy with
its policies, is joining the opposition.
It also
coincides with what could be the sunset years of Minister
Mentor Lee Kuan Yew in the Cabinet.
Several
parties are benefiting from it but none more than the Workers
Party, which has the longest claim to history. It was formed
in 1957, two years after the launch of the PAP.
Like the PAP, WP began as a poor man's party, which made
sense in early Singapore when it was a squatter colony.
Everyone was poor then.
But
as wealth spread and the island became a middle class society,
the PAP staked its ground on this broad segment while JBJ
stuck ideologically to fighting for the poorer class.
The
trouble was that it was a declining population. As its political
base shrank, so did the fortunes of the Workers Party. JBJ
succeeded in attracting large noisy crowds but getting few
votes.
Lee Kuan Yew had long realised this. He often said that
as long as the PAP occupied the broad middle-class ground,
it would not be possible for an opposition to oust it.
Despite its name, Workers Party never made inroads among
Singapore's labour unions, which instead joined the National
Trades Union Congress (NTUC), affiliated to the PAP.
The 2001 election was the party's lowest point. It could
only muster two candidates, who won 39.3% of the contested
votes.
The coming picture will be a different one. It now works
to win over unhappy professionals and businessmen affected
by PAP policies, or what one member calls Singapore's 'new
poor' middle class.
It will probably lead the opposition's biggest contingent
of candidates - a total of 26 - in three single and four
group constituencies.
Large numbers, of course, do not necessarily mean more victories.
The opposition faces an uphill battle against a powerful
incumbent with a good track record and a large array of
weapons at its disposal.
Few pundits expect WP and other opposition candidates to
create any major upset, although it will almost certainly
reduce the PAP's hold on popular votes.
This election will, however, serve as a test for the WP.
A good showing - if it could increase its single seat and
harness at least 30% to 35% of the contested votes - could
be a big stepping stone to build into a credible challenge
to the PAP.
Another opposition party, the Singapore Democratic Alliance
(SDA) led by MP Chiam See Tong, has said it will field 20
candidates (compared to 13 in 2001).
If these two parties' plans work out, their total of 46
candidates will be enough to prevent the PAP from becoming
an outright winner on Nomination Day.
The
others have not announced their plans, but if they maintain
their previous performance, the ruling party could face
a fight in as many as 60 of the 84 Parliament seats.
In 2001,
only 29 seats - or one-third - were contested, the rest
being walkovers.
The conventional wisdom is that the PAP, which was once
likened to a national movement rather than a political party,
continues to hold almost all the strong cards.
Apart from the status as incumbent, it also draws strength
from official policies that handicap the opposition.
Because
of this, the opposition's achievements in past elections
had almost always depended on voter sentiment towards the
government rather than on the popularity of opposition politicians
or parties.
If the
people were happy with the PAP, the opposition vote would
fall; if they were unhappy, it would rise. The situation
exists today.
That
so many candidates are signing up to challenge the giant
shows their confidence that the ground is a lot sweeter
for the opposition.
(This article was first published in The Sunday Star
on Feb 19, 2006)