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SINGAPORE – The PAP has in the past criticised the Singapore Democratic Party’s (SDP) policy proposals, only to adopt several of them later, said SDP chief Chee Soon Juan.
“During elections, the PAP will slam the opposition for its alternative proposals, and after elections, it will adopt our ideas – but it won’t give (us) any credit,” he told the party’s supporters on April 30.
Speaking at a rally for Sembawang GRC near Sun Plaza just days ahead of the May 3 General Election, Dr Chee laid claim to three proposals by the SDP that have since become policy.
The first is an unemployment insurance scheme to provide retrenched workers with temporary financial assistance.
Initially criticised in 2016 by then Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam as a “populist policy”, Dr Chee said that eight years later, a very similar policy – the SkillsFuture Jobseeker Support scheme – was announced by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong in 2024.
Second, the SDP had proposed a higher income tax for Singapore’s top earners to offset a reduction of the goods and services tax for basic goods.
In 2015, the Government announced during the Budget that it would increase taxes on the rich, raising marginal tax rates for the top 5 per cent of income earners.
Dr Chee pointed out that the SDP had also called for a minimum wage policy from as early as 2001. However, the policy was rejected by former manpower minister Lim Swee Say “as a policy that would erode Singapore’s competitiveness”.
“Then, in 2012, the PAP introduced a progressive wage model, which is similar to our proposal. It just set the minimum wage of $1,000 for low-income workers in selected sectors,” he said.
He added that Health Minister Ong Ye Kung is now doing the same by criticising the SDP’s policy proposals for healthcare and housing, claiming they are not feasible or realistic.
Mr Ong is helming the PAP team in Sembawang GRC against the SDP and National Solidarity Party in a three-cornered fight.
During a PAP rally at the same venue on April 28, Mr Ong had scoffed at the SDP’s proposals, saying: “When something sounds so good, it is usually fake.”
Said Dr Chee, who is contesting in Sembawang West SMC: “So may I remind you… first they criticise, then they copy.”
Earlier in the night, SDP’s five-member Sembawang GRC slate – party vice-chair Bryan Lim, 49; treasurer Surayah Akbar, 42; deputy head of policy James Gomez, 60; as well as party members Damanhuri Abas, 54; and Alfred Tan, 59 – also took turns to rebut Mr Ong’s remarks on April 28.
They took issue with Mr Ong’s claim that the SDP’s housing policies appeared to be borrowed from the Progress Singapore Party’s playbook, particularly the proposal to remove land costs from the prices of Build-to-Order (BTO) and Sale of Balance flats.
Ms Surayah, Mr Damanhuri and Mr Tan pointed out that the SDP had proposed the non-open market BTO flat scheme much earlier, in 2019.
Non-open market BTO flats are Housing Board flats that are priced based on construction and administrative costs only, and exclude inflated land costs.
“To accuse the SDP of imitation is not only inaccurate, (but) it also distracts from the real housing issues facing Singaporeans today – runaway resale prices, housing insecurity for young families, and financial burdens on working citizens,” said Ms Surayah.
Dr Gomez said that young people want affordable housing to start families sans worries about costs and other expenditures.
“Increasingly, for young people, a home is a place to live, not just to be a stock to flip down the line,” he said.
“For young Singaporeans, what matters most is affordable housing to start their independent lives.”
Dr Gomez also reiterated SDP’s call for mental health to be a critical component of Singapore’s healthcare system.
He was backed by Dr Chee, who outlined a vision of Singapore that prioritises happiness and well-being over “GDP growth at all costs”.
He said Singapore should be a place “where success is not measured by how many foreign billionaires we can attract, but by how secure and supported every Singaporean feels”, and where the Government listens and responds beyond election periods.
Dr Chee added that the PAP’s path is one that “leads us right back to the problems we are drowning in – an unbearable cost of living, crushing mental stress, (and) a government that gerrymanders instead of listens”.
At the rally, SDP chairman Paul Tambyah also shared a vision for a Singapore that includes a mandatory national health insurance scheme, a nationalised pre-school education programme, the removal of the PSLE exam, and greater freedom for individuals to pursue interests beyond traditional pathways, such as in the arts and culture.
SDP is the only party to have held rallies every night since they kicked off on April 24.
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