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Thunberg condemns climate inaction as Trump joins Davos

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Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg attends a session at the Congres center during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos, on January 21, 2020. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP)

by Alex PIGMAN and Sebastian SMITH

Swedish teen activist Greta Thunberg on Tuesday slammed the business elite for doing “basically nothing” on climate change, as the Davos forum braced for an address from US President Donald Trump hours before his impeachment trial begins.

The 50th meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in the Swiss Alps resort got under way seeking to thrash out dangers to both the environment and economy from the heating of the planet.

Trump, who has repeatedly expressed scepticism about climate change, is set to give the first keynote address of Davos 2020, on the same day as his impeachment trial opens at the Senate in Washington.

Before his appearance, Thunberg underlined the message that has inspired millions around the world, saying “basically nothing has been done” to fight climate change.

“It will require much more than this. This is just the very beginning,” the 17-year-old said.

Speaking calmly and with a wry smile, Thunberg acknowledged that her campaign which began with school strikes had attracted huge attention without yet achieving concrete change.

“There is a difference between being heard to actually leading to something,” she said.

“I am not the person who should complain about not being heard,” she said to appreciative laughter.

“I am being heard all the time. But the science and the voice of the young people are not at the centre of the conversation.”

While the WEF and individual business leaders have been detailing their own concerns about climate change, Greenpeace complained in a new report that some of the world’s biggest banks, insurers and pension funds have collectively invested $1.4 trillion in fossil fuel companies since the Paris climate deal in 2016.

“Pretty much nothing has been done as global Co2 emissions have not been reduced. And that is of course what we are trying to achieve,” said Thunberg.

– Davos showdown? –
There are no expectations that Trump and Thunberg, who have exchanged barbs through Twitter, will actually meet, but the crowded venue and intense schedule mean a chance encounter cannot be ruled out.

When Trump and his entourage walked through UN headquarters last year at the annual General Assembly, a photo of the teenager staring in apparent fury at the president from the sidelines went viral.

Tweeting before arriving in Davos aboard his Marine One helicopter, Trump appeared in bullish mood, writing he would “bring Good Policy and additional Hundreds of Billions of Dollars back to the United States of America!”

Although Trump’s Republican party holds a majority in the Senate and is almost sure to acquit him on charges of abusing his power and obstructing Congress, the impeachment adds volatility to an already tense 2020 presidential election.

– ‘Governments continue to fail’ –
Sustainability is the buzzword at the Davos forum, which began in 1971, with heel crampons handed out to participants to encourage them to walk on the icy streets rather than use cars, and the signage paint made out of seaweed.

Trump’s opposition to renewable energy, his withdrawal from the Paris accord negotiated under his predecessor Barack Obama, and the free hand extended to the fossil fuel industry puts him at odds with this year’s thrust of the event.

“People are playing a lot more attention to” climate, Eurasia Group president Ian Bremner told AFP at Davos, adding there was “genuine action by some big players”, after investment titan BlackRock said it was partially divesting out of coal.

“But let’s be clear — a big part of this is because we failed for a very long time and governments continue to fail,” he added.

Business leaders are likely also to be concerned by the state of the global economy whose prospects, according to the International Monetary Fund, have improved but remain brittle.

The IMF cut its global growth estimate for 2020 to 3.3 percent, saying that a recent truce in the trade war between China and the US had brought some stability but that risks remained.

“We are already seeing some tentative signs of stabilisation but we have not reached a turning point yet,” said IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva.

Activists meanwhile will be pressing for much more concrete action to fight inequality, after Oxfam issued a report outlining how the number of billionaires has doubled in the past decade and the world’s 22 richest men now have more wealth than all the women in Africa.

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Death toll from SARS-like China virus rises to 6: official

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A man wearing a protective mask takes pictures on the promenade of the Bund along the Huangpu River in Shanghai on January 21, 2020. - The number of people in China infected by a new SARS-like virus jumped to 291 on January 21, according to authorities. There have been nearly 80 new confirmed cases of the virus that has so far killed four people, with over 900 still under medical observation, said the National Health Commission. (Photo by HECTOR RETAMAL / AFP)

Update: The death toll from a new China virus that is transmissible between humans rose to six, the mayor of Wuhan said in an interview with state broadcaster CCTV Tuesday.

According to Zhou Xianwang, the central Chinese city — believed to be the epicentre of the epidemic — has seen a total of 258 cases, including 227 patients who are still receiving medical treatment.

China says number of confirmed virus cases jumps to nearly 300

The number of people in China infected by a new SARS-like virus jumped to 291 on Tuesday, according to authorities.

There have been nearly 80 new confirmed cases of the virus that has so far killed four people, with over 900 still under medical observation, said the National Health Commission.

The new confirmed cases are mostly in Hubei province where a seafood market in the capital city Wuhan has been identified as the epicentre of the outbreak.

The statement did not confirm if the new cases are in Wuhan or other areas across the province.

The commission said there are five confirmed cases in Beijing, 14 in the southern province of Guangdong and two in Shanghai.

It added that there are over 50 suspected cases under observation in 14 other provinces and regions across China, including the northeastern Jilin province, eastern Zhejiang and southern Hainan.

Countries across Asia have ramped up measures to block the spread of the new virus which can be transmitted between humans, raising fears of a massive outbreak during the upcoming major holiday travel rush.

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Signs of life at ‘no-man’s land’ around Philippine volcano

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A bird's eye view of mud-covered houses at the foot of Taal volcano as seen from a Philippine airforce helicopter during an aerial survey on January 21, 2020. - Philippine authorities ordered a crackdown on January 20 on evacuees' daily visits to homes in the danger zone around Taal volcano, amid a warning it could be "recharging" for a more powerful explosion. (Photo by Ted ALJIBE / AFP)

A desolate landscape of ash dunes and bare trees left by the eruption of the Philippines’ Taal volcano lay in contrast with a few signs of life at ground zero of the disaster on Tuesday.

The island site was buried by massive deposits of ash when Taal erupted last week and remains under a mandatory evacuation order due to a feared bigger blast.

Yet about a dozen white cows milled near dust-blanketed homes, and several brightly coloured boats were docked at the shore on Tuesday, according to an AFP reporter taken on a rare military flight around the area.

Thin plumes of steam rose from the crater.

Authorities have said any outward signs of an imminent eruption have been weak over the past several days.

But scientists warn the volcano is still at risk of a major blast, and more than 110,000 people have taken refuge in shelters away from danger.

At least 3,000 who lived on the island were ordered out, though many have made trips back to rescue livestock or fetch items from their homes.

Houses were flattened or buried under the ash, though AFP saw at least one with a roof swept clean.

Many families previously offered services catering to the tourists who visited the volcano — a popular attraction in the Philippines despite the risk of eruption.

The government has said it is now working on a plan to permanently relocate them, and turn the island into what officials have called a no-man’s land.

bur-rbl/jm/axn

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Historic Trump impeachment trial to begin in earnest

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Donald Trump - Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP

by Francesco FONTEMAGGI

President Donald Trump’s historic impeachment trial begins in earnest Tuesday in the Senate, with Democrats calling for his removal from office and Republicans determined to acquit him — and quickly, if possible.

Four months after the Ukraine scandal exploded and went on to overshadow the end of Trump’s term, and 10 months before Americans go to the polls to decide whether to re-elect him, the 100 members of the Senate will gather at 1 pm (1800 GMT) with Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts presiding over the trial.

The job of these lawmakers, sworn in last week as jurors, is to decide if Trump abused his office and obstructed Congress as charged in the two articles of impeachment approved last month by the House of Representatives.

They state that Trump tried to pressure Ukraine into interfering in the 2020 US election to help him win, and then tried to thwart a congressional probe of his behavior.

It will be only the third time a president has endured an impeachment trial, after Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton in 1999.

Part of the scandal centers on a July 25 telephone call in which Trump pressured Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to announce an investigation of former Vice President Joe Biden, Trump’s potential opponent in the November vote.

Democrats, who control the House of Representatives and led the investigation, accuse Trump of manipulating Ukraine by withholding nearly $400 million in military aid for its war against Russian-backed separatists and a White House meeting for Zelensky until the latter announced a Biden probe.

– ‘Nothing wrong’ –
“The president did nothing wrong,” Trump’s lawyers responded in a 110-page brief submitted to the Senate on Monday.

This echoes the repeated assertions of the 73-year-old real estate magnate that the saga is a political witch hunt and a hoax, and that his phone call with the Ukrainian leader was “perfect.”

In the president’s brief, his 12-man legal team contested the very idea of his impeachment.

They called the two articles of impeachment — approved largely along party lines in the Democratic-controlled House — the product of “a rigged process” and “constitutionally deficient on their face” because they involved no violation of established law.

That team, which has recruited high-profile lawyers such as Kenneth Starr, who tried to bring down Clinton over his affair with Monica Lewinsky, said in the brief: “The Senate should reject the Articles of Impeachment and acquit the president immediately.”

– ‘Worst nightmare’ –
“President Trump abused the power of his office to solicit foreign interference in our elections for his own personal political gain, thereby jeopardizing our national security, the integrity of our elections, and our democracy,” the House managers said Saturday in a memorandum.

They said the president’s behavior “is the Framers’ worst nightmare,” referring to the authors of the US Constitution, and that Trump deserves to be removed from office.

But Trump looks almost certain to be acquitted because of the 53-47 Republican majority in the Senate.

He will be abroad as his trial opens. Trump arrived Tuesday in snowy Davos, Switzerland, ahead of his scheduled speech to the World Economic Forum.

How long the trial will last is up in the air.

The first order of business Tuesday will be to set the rules, such as how long they will hear the arguments of the House managers, or prosecutors; how long they will hear the defense; the time allotted for questions, submitted by the senators but read by Roberts; and whether they will call witnesses or seek other evidence.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell late Monday proposed rules calling for each side to have 24 hours over two days to present their arguments. That makes for long trial days stretching late into the night but is a significantly quicker pace than in Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial in 1999. The chamber will debate and vote on the proposed rules Tuesday.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said McConnell is rushing the trial and also making it harder for witnesses and documents to be presented.

“On something as important as impeachment, Senator McConnell’s resolution is nothing short of a national disgrace,” Schumer said in a statement.

The Democrats want key Trump administration officials to testify, such as acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and former national security adviser John Bolton, in the belief that they know a lot about Trump’s dealings with Ukraine. Bolton has said he is willing to testify if subpoenaed.

The White House has said it expects the trial to be over in two weeks. Clinton’s trial lasted five weeks.

McConnell has said he won’t consider the witness issue until after the arguments and questioning take place, and his majority means he will likely prevail.

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

IT happens: Facebook sorry for Xi Jinping’s name gaffe

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(Photo by FLORENCE LO / POOL / AFP)

Facebook apologised Saturday for a distasteful mistranslation of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s name from Burmese language posts during his much-touted visit to Myanmar.

His two-day visit to Myanmar’s capital Naypyidaw was the first made by a Chinese leader in almost two decades.

But the historic moment was dimmed by the automatic translation feature on Myanmar’s Facebook page — which rendered Xi Jinping’s name from Burmese into English as “Mr Shithole”.

The error most notably appeared on the official Facebook page of Myanmar’s civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

“Mr Shithole, President of China arrives at 4 PM,” said a translated announcement posted earlier Saturday.

“President of China, Mr. Shithole, signed a guest record of the house of representatives,” it continued.

Facebook said it was sorry and blamed a technical glitch.

“We fixed a technical issue that caused incorrect translations from Burmese to English on Facebook. This should not have happened and we are taking steps to ensure it doesn’t happen again. We sincerely apologize for the offense this has caused,” a Facebook spokesperson said.

Facebook said it did not have Xi’s name in its Burmese translations data. In cases such as those, Facebook’s system guesses and replaces them with words that have similar syllables.

The company tested similar words in Burmese, and other words that start with “xi” and “shi” in Burmese, which use the same character, were also translated as “shithole,” Facebook said.

Tech-nascent Myanmar loves Facebook.

The platform is the most popular site for news, entertainment and chat — many even see it as synonymous with the internet.

Politicians and government agencies also use it for official statements and announcements.

The site — which has more than two billion users globally — is restricted in China.

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

DPM Heng: Having new citizens is very much part of our effort to take care of Singaporeans

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Facebook screengrab: Heng Swee Keat

Singapore—At the annual conference of the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS), Singapore Perspectives 2020, held at Marina Bay Sands on Monday (Jan 20), Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat emphasised the importance of welcoming new citizens, and resisting divisive efforts detrimental to the country.

DPM Heng, who was the keynote speaker at the conference, said during a question and answer portion, “I am very troubled that so many people are seeking to exploit these differences, instead of making the effort to integrate them. They have made this into an issue, they have made this into ‘You are not taking care of Singaporeans, you are not taking care of Singaporeans’ interests’.

On the contrary, having new citizens is very much part of our effort to take care of Singaporeans.”

TODAY Online reports that the Deputy Prime Minister spent over an hour answering questions from different people in the audience of around 1,120 people, including members of civil society organisations, leaders, businessmen, academics and public servants.

DPM Heng was asked by Goh Meng Seng, the leader of People’s Power Party, a question concerning the new citizens that Singapore accepts yearly, which number between 15,000 and 25,000, and from whom the majority are from Malaysia, China and the Philippines.

Yahoo Singapore reported that Mr Goh asked the man largely touted to be Singapore’s next Prime Minister “if you look at 2007 to 2019, we are giving out about 20,000 new citizenships, especially (to people from) mainland China, Malaysia, India and the Philippines. When geopolitics changes, with the rise of Chinese dominance in the region, where will (the new citizens) stand when we have to make a difficult decision in geopolitics? You may give citizenship to (Chinese nationals)… but their allegiances will not change overnight.”

DPM Heng answered that a “narrow, nativist approach” in matters of immigration and trade would not be to the country’s advantage, underlining the fact that one out of every three marriages in Singapore is currently between a Singaporean and a foreign national.

Of new Singaporean citizens he said,  “For those people who have become Singapore citizens, they have become citizens by conviction. They have left their country and decided that Singapore is a better place for them and their children in the future.

So we should, as Singaporeans, make the best effort to integrate them into our society, to welcome them, so that they can be part of our team. Having the foreigners in our midst adds to our strength.”

As the Member of Parliament representing Tampines GRC, he has had constituents come to him during Meet The People Sessions asking for help with citizenship for their foreign husbands or wives.

Singapore’s multiracial, multi-religious, and multi-lingual nature, DPM Heng said, is advantageous to its citizens, as it provides a “very high degree of cultural sensitivity.”

He said, “I met a group of young students the other day and a few of them have foreign students in their class, and they told me about their learnings from other countries… I felt very cheered by that — I think when they grow up, they will be in a good position to interact with ASEAN (the Association of Southeast Asian Nations) and the rest of the world, and that is the Singaporean advantage… Especially in a world where people are turning inwards, less willing to co-operate, Singaporeans can extend a hand and be bridge-builders in a more fragmented world.

The key point is that whatever we do, it must be to take care of Singaporeans. But if we take a nativist approach and say ‘Let’s keep out the world, trade, and other people’, then I think eventually, Singapore will wither.” -/TISG

Read related: As PAP’s 4G faces upcoming GE, Chan Chun Sing says his vision for Singapore is to ‘defy the odds of history

As PAP’s 4G faces upcoming GE, Chan Chun Sing says his vision for Singapore is to ‘defy the odds of history’

 

Pofma issue to be “decided by the courts, not the government”, says SDP

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Photo: Deputy Ag Hri Kumar (YouTube screengrab), Dr Chee Soon Juan (Roslan RAHMAN / AFP)

The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) has still not let the matter rest and has replied to the Attorney-General’s (AG) complaints on Monday (Jan 10). Earlier in the day, the Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) asked the High Court for a further hearing on the party’s appeal against Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (POFMA) correction orders.

In their letter, the AGC said that statements posted on SDP’s website concerning the court proceedings were misleading.

The AGC also said that the first article had been “calculated to embarrass the minister and falsely portray POFMA in a negative light.”

Responding to the AG’s complaints, the SDP wrote that they did not misrepresent what Deputy AG Hri Kumar said, adding “It is the government’s position that ‘the minister who initiates a Pofma direction will look at the article or statement in question and determine what he believes to be its meaning’”.

The SDP also wrote that it “does not believe that this is the end of the matter under the Act”.

They explained: “The fact that we’ve taken the matter to court makes clear our stand that the government does not have a final say in the matter”.

Secretary-General Dr Chee Soon Juan, Chairman Paul Tambyah and Vice Chairman John Tan concluded their letter saying “This makes it clear to readers that the matter will be decided by the courts, not the government”. /TISG

Mariah Carey and twins Moroccan and Monroe celebrate award

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Mariah Carey celebrates being part of Hall of Fame. Picture:Instagram

Pop singer Mariah Carey uploaded some photos of her 8-year-old twins Moroccan and Monroe on Saturday. The photos showed them celebrating her induction to the Songwriters Hall of Fame.

The twins were shown throwing shiny, gold confetti, while Carey posed with letter balloons forming the words “Hall of Fame”.

The Instagram post was captioned with a heart emoji and the words “Always celebrate the happy moments in life”. Netizens congratulated Carey on her success. One said that the honour was well deserved and that he loved and admired her. Carey was also called the best songwriter in the game.

Other celebrities and friends showed support over the good news, including Reese Witherspoon, who exclaimed that it was amazing.

Carey also shared photos taken on Jan 13 at the New York City premiere of Tyler Perry’s Netflix film A Fall From Grace. She had donned a monochrome sweater dress with a modern pattern and low neckline. She paired it with simple rings and oval-shaped earrings.

View this post on Instagram

Always celebrate the happy moments in life ❤️

A post shared by Mariah Carey (@mariahcarey) on

As for her hair, she had it down with a side parting. Carey’s make-up was natural with a pared-down smokey-eye. Her look was completed with a pair of black tights and boots.

The singer may be in her forties but she still looks good in anything she wears. Her former husband is showbiz personality Nick Cannon.

In other news, Carey’s Twitter account was hacked on New Year’s Eve. More than 50 offensive tweets were posted containing vulgarities, the “N” word and insults against rapper Eminem.

Gadgets quoted Fox News as saying that Twitter locked the compromised account and all such tweets were erased.

In an interview with USA Today, a Twitter spokesperson said it locked the compromised account as soon as it was aware of the issue. Twitter is investigating the matter. However, everything is now back to normal as of now.

SDP articles “misleading”, so AGC asks High Court for a further hearing

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Facebook screengrab: Singapore Democratic Party

Singapore — The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) posted two articles on its website last week about court proceedings concerning its appeal against the Correction Orders issued to it under the Protection From Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (Pofma).

On Monday (Jan 20), the Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) asked the High Court for a further hearing on the matter. It said statements posted on SDP’s website concerning the court proceedings were misleading.

The AGC has written a letter to the High Court saying it took issue with the two articles SDP posted. “It is the A-G’s case that while the minister’s interpretation is important as the minister must first form a bona fide view as to what a reasonable interpretation of the subject statement is to decide whether to take action under Pofma, it is the court (and not the minister) which ultimately decides what the subject statement means,” the letter read.

The AGC said that the first article had been “calculated to embarrass the minister and falsely portray Pofma in a negative light”.

Justice Ang Cheng Hock had told the SDP after the first article was posted that it needed  to ensure the accuracy of the statements that it posted but, according to the AGC, the party “repeated the same false and dishonest narrative” in a second article posted last Saturday (Jan 18).

According to Deputy A-G Hri Kumar Nair, the second article published “materially misrepresents the AG’s arguments”, similar to when it posted one of the original articles that came under a Pofma Correction Order.

The Straits Times (ST) quotes the AGC as saying: “The SDP’s conduct is completely unacceptable. It has acted in blatant defiance of His Honour’s reminder that any report or comment by the SDP in relation to the ongoing proceedings should be accurate and correct, and its conduct risks undermining public confidence in the administration of justice.”

The AGC added: “In view of the severity of the SDP’s misconduct and its recalcitrance, we seek leave for a hearing before His Honour. We would be grateful if this letter and its accompanying enclosures are placed before His Honour as soon as possible.”

The SDP has, in response to the AGC’s letter, written to the Supreme Court, saying that it had not misrepresented the words of Mr Nair.

“It is the Government’s position that ‘the minister who initiates a Pofma direction will look at the article or statement in question and determine what he believes to be its meaning’.

“We knew that Pofma had a provision for us to take the matter to court. This means that we knew that the court would have the final say, that is, the judge will make the final determination on the Government’s stand.

“The SDP does not believe that this is end of the matter under the Act… The fact that we’ve taken the matter to court makes clear our stand that the Government does not have a final say in the matter.” -/TISG

Read related: High Court rejects SDP’s bid to have POFMA case heard in open court

High Court rejects SDP’s bid to have POFMA case heard in open court

Opposition plays the underdog card to their advantage, says SCMP’s Zuraidah Ibrahim

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Facebook screengrab: Institute of Policy Studies - IPS

Singapore— Zuraidah Ibrahim, the Deputy Executive Editor of the South China Morning Post (SCMP), one of the panelists at the annual conference of the Institute of Policy Studies on Monday (Jan 20), said that the opposition parties in Singapore are unlikely to form a coalition, and that its underdog status is actually beneficial.

She told an audience of around 1,120 leaders, academics, businesspersons and members of different civic groups, “In their own lives, there are enough Singaporeans who feel the system favours privileged elites. So it is not surprising they identify with candidates who seem to be victims of an overbearing government. The Opposition plays the underdog card, and the government seems to know this.”

Ms Zuraidah, the co-author of a 2016 book entitled Singapore Chronicles: Opposition, is also a former deputy editor of The Straits Times (ST).

She did say, however, that she is sure of three things concerning the current state of Singapore’s opposition, according to a report from mothership.sg. These are: that there will most likely be no united alliance or coalition of opposition parties, that being the underdog is beneficial to the opposition, and that Singaporean voters have accepted the fact that what the opposition sees is not an alternative government waiting for its turn, but an entity that provides a check to PAP.

She said, “The opposition is not a government-in-waiting, and not what the voters expect from them. Instead, they serve as a check on the ruling party.”

IPS’s conference, entitled Singapore’s Perspectives, centered around politics as well as answers to the question, “How will Singapore govern itself in 2032?”

Two of PAP’s top 4G leaders, Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat and Trade and Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing, spoke at the conference, and the panelists included Dr Lam Peng Er, a senior research fellow at the East Asian Institute of the National University of Singapore and veteran diplomat Bilahari Kausikan, chairman of the Middle East Institute at NUS, along with Ms Zuraidah.

Ms Zuraidah emphasized that many things are still uncertain concerning the upcoming General Election. “Alas, as things stand, we are still trying to peer into a fog. We don’t have a date yet, we don’t have the shape of the electoral map, we don’t have a good idea of new faces, we don’t know what the domestic and international environment will be like.”

But she did express with certainty that some degree of opposition is welcomed by people, “Clearly the electorate wants some opposition, but either too much or too little makes the public nervous.”

The Straits Times (ST) reports that Ms Zuraidah evaluated several of the opposition parties during the panel discussion. Of the Workers’ Party (WP) Ms Zuraidah said that its exercise of a cautious approach “infuriates more impatient opposition supporters”.

Of the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP), she said that under the leadership of Dr Chee Soon Juan it has “consistently performed worse than the opposition average” but added that it is unclear if this is due to SDP’s platform, “style of politicking or a question of personality.”

Ms Zuraidah also called the emergence of Dr Tan Cheng Bock into the political arena as an opposition leader as “groundbreaking” and a “game-changer” and that it might possibly open doors for other “establishment types” to follow suit.

However, one thing that does not work in Dr Tan’s favour, she added, is that he may be relatively unknown to younger voters since time has passed since he served as a Member of Parliament, and they may only recall him from his candidacy for president in 2011. –/TISG

Read also: Tan Cheng Bock: PSP to work with all opposition parties but will wait and see how we ‘gel’ with them

Tan Cheng Bock: PSP to work with all opposition parties but will wait and see how we ‘gel’ with them