Singapore — In the middle of the 15-day Chinese New Year celebrations next year, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong will celebrate his 70th birthday on Feb 10.
Mr Lee has been expressing his wish to step down by the age of 70 since at least 2017.
PM Lee will turn 70 on February 10, 2022.
In an interview with American business news network CNBC in October 2017, PM Lee said that he was ready to step down, but that he needed to make sure that someone else was ready to take over.
In November 2019, during the People’s Action Party (PAP) convention, he said that while he would take the lead in the next General Election, the fourth-generation or 4G team of leaders would be the ones “in the thick of things”.
On Facebook on Sunday (Nov 13), Ex-GIC chief economist Yeoh Lam Keong re-shared a 2016 article titled: ‘Most Singaporeans would choose Tharman as the next Prime Minister: survey’.
Along with the article, Mr Yeoh commented: “IMHO the choice of Tharman as our next PM would have represented not only a move towards more adequate social protection so badly needed, but also a clear choice to move decisively towards political liberalization and the strengthening of democratic institutions, instead of new legislation like POFMA and now FICA , which is a slippery slope towards more authoritarian government”.
The article shared by Mr Yeoh were the findings from a survey conducted by market research consultancy Blackbox which was commissioned by Yahoo Singapore. It showed that 69 per cent of all 897 respondents said they would support Tharman as a candidate to be prime minister.
The 64-year-old led three other men who emerged as possible contenders: fellow DPM Teo Chee Hean (34 per cent), Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat (25 per cent) and Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Chan Chun Sing (24 per cent).
In July 2020, however, PM Lee said that the Covid-19 pandemic may have other plans for him.
During a briefing on the latest Cabinet reshuffle, Mr Lee was asked how his hope squares with the promise he made to voters during the recent election campaign that he would stay on through the crisis and hand over the country “in good shape” to the fourth generation of political leaders before retiring.
He replied: “I had expressed the hope that I would be able to hand over by the time I celebrate my 70th birthday. But I do not determine the path of the Covid-19 pandemic, and it will also depend on how events unfold.
“And all I can say is, I will see this through. And I’ll hand over in good shape as soon as possible to the next team, and into good hands.”
Senior Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam in 2016 ruled out the possibility that he might be PM, saying Singapore has a distinctive political culture where each minister contributes to the team in a way that matches his strengths.
“Just to be absolutely clear, because I know of this talk that’s going around, I’m not the man for PM. I say that categorically. It’s not me. I know myself, I know what I can do, and it’s not me,” he said.
“I’m good at policymaking, I’m good at advising my younger colleagues, and at supporting the PM – not at being the PM. That’s not me.”
In April this year, Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat stepped aside as leader of the People’s Action Party’s fourth-generation (4G) team, and pave the way for a younger person with a longer runway to lead the country when Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong retires.
Mr Heng, who turns 60 this year, cited the long-term and profound challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic, his age, and the demands of the top job, as reasons for his decision.
In response, the 4G team said: “Under these circumstances, the 4G team will need more time to select another leader from amongst us. We have therefore requested PM Lee Hsien Loong to stay on as Prime Minister until such time when a new successor is chosen by the team and is ready to take over. We are grateful that PM has agreed to our request.” Touted as frontrunners are 4G ministers Chan Chun Sing and Ong Ye Kung, both 51, as well as younger ministers Lawrence Wong, 48, and Desmond Lee, 44.
Responding, PM Lee said: “I think they will take longer than a few months, but I hope that they will reach a consensus and identify a new leader before the next general election”.
“I have no intention of staying on longer than necessary,” he added. /TISG