Harman Patil (Editor)

Singaporean general election, 1997

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2 January 1997
  
2001 →

1992
  
1972

77 seats, 61%
  
1 seat, 1.2%

Start date
  
January 2, 1997

Turnout
  
95.9%

1972
  
1996

1 seat, 1.2%
  
None

Singaporean general election, 1997

Winner
  
Goh Chok Tong

The 1997 Singaporean parliamentary election was an election in Singapore which was held on 2 January 1997. 765,332 out of the eligible 1.8 million voters voted and selected their next government. The election results was released in the late evening that day and the ruling People's Action Party won a total of 81 out of 83 seats as well as a tenth consecutive term in office under the then Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong. Other major political parties contesting in the election were the Workers' Party, Singapore Democratic Party, National Solidarity Party, Singapore People's Party and the Democratic Progressive Party.

Contents

After nomination day on 23 December 1996, the People's Action Party returned to power with a total of 47 out of the total 83 seats and could form a government on nomination day. On polling day, voters voted for the election for their members of parliament with all but two seats going to the PAP. In this election, Group Representation Constituencies were increased from four members to five and six members. Housing issues were one of the issues raised during the election.

Background

This was another opportunity for Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong to score a better mandate after PAP's considerably poorer showing in the 1991 election. Two seats in PAP-held Eunos and Toa Payoh GRCs were vacated after the death of MP, Dr Tay Eng Soon and inauguration of former Deputy PM Ong Teng Cheong as Singapore's fifth and first elected President in 1993 respectively. The former GRC, which twice saw narrow wins against WP, was dispersed into neighbouring constituencies.

Meanwhile, the main opposition, the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) was facing serious internal strife.

SDP Member of Parliament and former leader Chiam See Tong sued his party's central executive committee, including its new leader Dr Chee Soon Juan and one of its MPs, chairman Ling How Doong, for defamation, and won. Prior to nomination day, Chiam resigned from SDP and crossed over to its splinter party, Singapore People's Party. Two opposition candidates who came under heaviest fire from PAP were Dr Chee and Tang Liang Hong, who was standing on the WP ticket with its secretary-general J. B. Jeyaretnam. Tang was accused by PAP of being an anti-Christian Chinese chavunist. Group Representation Constituencies (GRC) went up from four to between four and six seats each. A National Solidarity Party team was disqualified from Tampines GRC after one candidate was found to have his name struck off the electoral rolls for not voting in 1991. For the first time, a Nominated MP – listed company director Chia Shi Teck – ran in an election.

Electoral boundaries

  • Mergers
  • Braddell Heights SMC merged into Marine Parade GRC
  • Brickworks GRC split into Tanjong Pagar GRC, Bukit Timah GRC and West Coast GRC
  • Bukit Batok SMC merged into Bukit Timah GRC
  • Bukit Merah SMC merged into Tanjong Pagar GRC
  • Bukit Timah SMC merged into Bukit Timah GRC
  • Buona Vista SMC merged into Tanjong Pagar GRC
  • Changi SMC merged into East Coast GRC
  • Eunos GRC merged into Aljunied GRC, Marine Parade GRC and East Coast GRC
  • Jurong SMC merged into Bukit Timah GRC
  • Leng Kee SMC merged into Tanjong Pagar GRC
  • Mountbatten SMC merged into Marine Parade GRC
  • Nee Soon South SMC merged into Ang Mo Kio GRC
  • Ulu Pandan SMC merged into Bukit Timah GRC
  • Yuhua SMC merged into Bukit Timah GRC
  • New GRCs
  • Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC, created by merging Thomson GRC and Toa Payoh GRC
  • Bukit Timah GRC, created by merging Bukit Batok SMC, Bukit Timah SMC, Jurong SMC, Ulu Pandan SMC and Yuhua SMC.
  • East Coast GRC, created by merging a section of Eunos GRC and the whole of Bedok GRC
  • Kreta Ayer-Tanglin GRC, created by merging Kreta Ayer SMC, Tanglin SMC and part of Kampong Glam GRC
  • Pasir Ris GRC, created by splitting Pasir Ris division and Tampines North portion of Eunos GRC
  • West Coast GRC, created by splitting Telok Blangah division of Tanjong Pagar GRC and part of Brickworks GRC
  • New SMCs
  • Kampong Glam SMC which was created after Kampong Glam GRC was removed from the electoral boundary map.
  • MacPherson SMC, carved out from Marine Parade GRC
  • Changes in electoral seats within GRCs
  • Aljunied GRC, Ang Mo Kio GRC, Cheng San GRC, Hong Kah GRC were increased from four -member GRCs to five-member GRCs.
  • Marine Parade GRC, Sembawang GRC and Tanjong Pagar GRC were increased from four-member GRCs to six-member GRCs.
  • New Divisions
  • Changi-Simei (renamed from Changkat South)
  • Marsiling (split from Bukit Panjang)
  • Nanyang (split from Hong Kah West)
  • Pasir Ris Central (split from Pasir Ris)
  • Pasir Ris Elias (split from Pasir Ris)
  • Pasir Ris Loyang (split from Pasir Ris)
  • Punggol Central (split from Punggol)
  • Punggol East (split from Punggol)
  • Punggol South (split from Punggol)
  • Whampoa (split from Kallang)
  • Woodlands (split from Sembawang)
  • Yew Tee (split from Choa Chu Kang)
  • Dissolved Divisions
  • Boon Teck (merged into Toa Payoh Central)
  • Brickworks (split into Pasir Panjang & Queenstown)
  • Cairnhill (split into Tanglin and Moulmein)
  • Changi (split into Siglap & Changi-Simei)
  • Changkat South (renamed into Changi-Simei)
  • Kim Keat (merged into Toa Payoh Central)
  • Kuo Chuan (merged into Toa Payoh East)
  • Pasir Ris (split into Pasir Ris Central, Pasir Ris Elias & Pasir Ris Loyang)
  • Punggol (split into Punggol Central, Punggol East & Punggol South)
  • Toa Payoh (split into Toa Payoh Central and Toa Payoh East)
  • New candidates

  • Ahmad Magad, 43
  • Ang Mong Seng, 47
  • Chan Soo Sen, 40
  • Chin Tet Yung, 45
  • David Lim Tik En, 41
  • Hawazi Daipi, 42
  • Heng Chee How, 35
  • Inderjit Singh, 36
  • Lim Hwee Hua, 37
  • Lim Swee Say, 42
  • Ong Ah Heng, 52
  • Peter Chen, 58
  • R Ravindran, 36
  • Seng Han Thong, 46
  • Tan Boon Wan, 48
  • Teo Ho Pin, 36
  • Toh See Kiat, 42
  • Yaacob Ibrahim, 41
  • Yeo Guat Kwang, 35
  • Zainul Abidin bin Mohammed Rasheed, 48
  • Retiring candidates

  • Ho Kah Leong (Jurong), 58 since 1966
  • Ch'ng Jit Koon (Tanjong Pagar GRC), 62 since 1968
  • Yeo Toon Chia (Ang Mo Kio GRC), 55 since 1970
  • Chin Harn Tong (Aljunied GRC), 59 since 1972
  • Lee Yiok Seng (Sembawang GRC), 57 since 1972
  • Ahmad Mattar (Brickworks GRC), 57 since 1972
  • S Dhanabalan (Toa Payoh GRC), 59 since 1976
  • Lau Teik Soon (Thomson GRC), 59 since 1976
  • Teo Chong Tee (Changi), 54 since 1976
  • Koh Lip Lin (Nee Soon South), 60 since 1979
  • S Chandra Das (Cheng San GRC), 57 since 1980
  • Yeo Ning Hong (Kampong Glam GRC), 53 since 1980
  • Lau Ping Sum (Ang Mo Kio GRC), 55 since 1980
  • Zulkifi Mohammad (Jalan Besar GRC), 48 since 1984
  • Arthur Beng (Bedok GRC), 47 since 1984
  • Peter Sung (Buona Vista), 56 since 1988
  • Umar Abdul Hamid (Ang Mo Kio GRC), 36 since 1991
  • Election results

    With the Housing Development Board (public housing) upgrading scheme dangled as a pricy stake for voters, PAP reversed its electoral decline for the first time in four elections and since 1963, won back an opposition ward, recapturing the two SDP seats out of the four it had lost the last round. The PAP's share of the vote rose by 4 percentage points nationally. With Chiam See Tong's defection, SDP had no representation in Parliament since 1984. Low Thia Khiang, now WP assistant secretary-general, and Jeyaretnam as a Non-Constituency MP, returned to the legislature, the latter's last presence was previously in 1986.

    Election aftermath

    In June 1997, when Nominated MPs were re-appointed, the number was increased from six to nine.

    Tang Liang Hong's self-imposed exile

    After the election, Worker's Party candidate for Cheng San Group Representation Constituency, Tang Liang Hong was sued for defamation by several of the PAP's leaders, including Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong, Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew and Deputy Prime Ministers Lee Hsien Loong and Tony Tan, who accused him of making statements during the campaign which falsely questioned their integrity. A total of 13 judgements were entered against Tang for defamation.

    Tang left Singapore shortly after the election and eventually found refuge in Australia.

    References

    Singaporean general election, 1997 Wikipedia