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13/07/2015 3:36 amI thought that dawn had come to the political landscape of Singapore Inside Story
Page 1 of 26http://insidestory.org.au/i-thought-that-dawn-had-come-to-the-political-landscape-of-singapore
F ew societies have been as thoroughly dominated by a single man as Singapore has beendominated by Harry Lee Kuan Yew. Over three decades, Lee reshaped every contour of his edgling
nation. Under his direction, the swamps of Jurong were paved over; kampongs razed; huge swathes
of land reclaimed from the sea; and the horizon crowded by towering blocks of ats. The ancient
habits and prejudices of three civilisations were broken down, one by one, and replaced with a
synthetic ideology. An entrept economy was transformed, rst into a manufacturing hub and then
into a base for multinational corporations.
His biographers, both sympathetic and otherwise, agree on Lees utter mastery of the islands
politics. In a decidedly unattering account of Lees life, long unobtainable in Singapore, T.J.S.
George, a former political editor for the Far Eastern Economic Review, concluded:
Singapore in the 1970s mirrors not the collective aspirations of a people or a generation
but the ideals, convictions and prejudices of Lee Kuan Yew. The country is the man and
the man has had to use extraparliamentary force to make it so.
ESSAYS & REPORTAGE
I thought that dawn had come to thepolitical landscape of Singapore27 MARCH 2015
11560 words
For a decade and a half, LeeKuan Yews Peoples ActionParty had held every seat in theSingapore parliament, writesChris Lydgate. Then themaverick lawyer J.B.Jeyaretnam made his sixthattempt to break the monopoly
Right:
We play clean to the end: J.B. Jeyaretnam in 1986.Robert Nickelsberg/The LIFE ImagesCollection/Getty Images
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More than a decade later, Anglican priest James Minchin penned another critical portrait of Lee,
also unobtainable in Singapore. He wrote:
[Lee] is the patriot of no fatherland so much as his own will. He has long been a formidable
speaker and debater in English, of world class among politicians on a stage where English
has only recently become the rst language. He has mastered from scratch the other tongue
needed for communication with his people. He is the patron of Singapore politics: spotting,
hiring and ring top talent; commanding the apparatus of power and various alternative
sources of information; able to choose freely when to let well enough alone or when to
intervene His star and that of the island republic have merged almost beyond distinction.
At every level, the inner core of meaning has been hollowed out from Singapores parliamentary
democracy and replaced with a state ideology now shaped almost entirely by one man.
Born in 1923 to a prosperous Hakka family, Lee enrolled in the elite Rafes Institution and
emerged as top Malayan boy in the Senior Cambridge exams in 1939. He served as a stenographer
and translator for the Japanese news agency Domei during the Japanese occupation, then sailed to
England after the war, where he obtained a rare double rst in law at Cambridge.
Returning to Singapore in 1950, he joined a local law rm, specialising in union work, and quickly
gained a reputation as a ferocious advocate. He was elected to the legislature in 1955, and became
Singapores rst prime minister in 1959 a post he held for the next thirty-one years. He ushered
Singapore into Malaysia in 1963, and ushered it out again two years later.
Lee orchestrated the islands metamorphosis from ramshackle colony to urban utopia with an iron
hand: rare indeed was the politician, academic, businessman or journalist who dared to cross him.
Scarred by the brutal and turbulent struggle for independence, he played hardball with his critics.
In 1997, he gave a revealing series of interviews to a team of local reporters:
Nobody doubts that if you take me on, I will put on knuckle-dusters, and catch you in a cul-
de-sac... Anybody who decides to take me on needs to put on knuckle-dusters. If you think
you can hurt me more than I can hurt you, try. There is no other way you can govern a
Chinese society.
It is sometimes difcult for those who have never visited the city-state to comprehend the breadth
and depth of Lees grip on Singapore. His is not a cult of personality. There are no statues, no
murals, no disembodied likenesses gazing sternly from bank notes or copper pennies. But one by
one, the sources of power in a democratic society businessmen, labour unions, lawyers,
professors, journalists, churches, mosques, temples were sucked into his orbit. Having guided
Singapore through the dangerous years immediately following the separation, writes historian
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C.M. Turnbull, the political leaders had an overwhelming popular mandate and were unwilling to
tolerate any obstruction to their dynamic programme of nation-building
[F]ew individuals or organisations voiced any criticism. Commercial bodies appreciated the
governments vigorous economic policy, radical trade unionism was tamed through far-
reaching labour laws, the universities were brought to heel, religious organisations were
told to concentrate on charity and keep out of politics, while some local government bodies
such as public utilities were hived off into statutory bodies which made decisions without
public debate The press was particularly subdued, with journalists from the Chinese-
language press often telephoning ofcial contacts before writing their stories, and young
Straits Times reporters producing bland stories that read like government propaganda.
The cumulative effect of these restrictions can be seen in the stratospheric margin achieved by
Lees Peoples Action Party, or PAP, in the 1968 general elections. The weak and divided minor
opposition parties elded just seven candidates for the fty-eight parliamentary seats all lost.
The PAPs overall vote was a thumping 84 per cent.
aced with such a formidable adversary, Joshua Benjamin Jeyaretnam, the newly elected
secretary-general of the near-moribund Workers Party, might have been expected to plan his
strategy with an engineers precision.
The forty-ve-year-old Oxford-educated lawyer had grown up on the Malayan Peninsula, the son
of Tamils from Jaffna, in the north of what was then Ceylon. Like Lee, he had studied law in
England; unlike Lee, he had fallen in love with an Englishwoman, Margaret Walker, who would
later join him in the chaotic, sprawling postwar crown colony of Singapore. There, this charming,
eloquent young newcomer, with his 1000-watt smile, would establish a busy legal practice and, for
a short time in the early sixties, serve as a judge.
But Jeyaretnams rst press conference as Workers Party leader, which took place in September
1971 at the partys rundown headquarters in Hill Street, showed few signs of political nesse.
Instead, he denounced the PAP for turning Singapore into
a fully capitalist-orientated economy with all the unmitigated evils that such a system
produces in a society. We have become an acquisitive society in which the most important
thing is money
We are fast becoming, if we have not already become, a society where money speaks
On the one hand persons with real and humanistic reasons to come into Singapore like
young children to join their parents, wives to join their husbands are refused entry
without any thought to the breakup of the family; on the other hand persons with a
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quarter-million dollars to deposit with this government can come into Singapore and bring
with them their families.
Jeyaretnams remarks reected a real outrage over the governments immigration policies. The
chaos sparked by the city-states sudden ejection from Malaysia meant that thousands of families
were split apart, with some relatives living and working in Singapore, while others remained in
Malaysia. After separation, however, the PAP had tightened immigration restrictions, making it
particularly difcult for overseas women and children to join their husbands in Singapore.
However attractive Jeyaretnams lament may have been in moral terms, in political terms it had
scant electoral appeal. Although Singapore was a nation of immigrants indeed, there was
virtually no one on the island who did not have relatives abroad most Singapore Chinese were
second- or third-generation residents, who were less likely to marry overseas. While many Malay
and Indian families retained stronger ties to the peninsula or the subcontinent, they represented a
small minority of voters.
More important, by 1971, many Singaporeans had acquired the PAPs fortress mentality. They
believed Singapore was too small and too precarious to afford the luxury of a liberal immigration
policy. They had only to look at the bloody convulsions of Indonesia and the ethnic inghting of
Malaysia to see how quickly their fortunes could ebb.
Jeyaretnam raised another point at his maiden press conference: corruption. It was, at rst glance,
an unorthodox criticism to make. One of the cornerstones of the PAP philosophy was an
uncompromising stand against corruption in the civil service, and by 1971 there could be no doubt
that Singapore was one of the least corrupt nations in Asia, if not the world. Nonetheless, no
bureaucracy in the world is completely immune from the temptations of bribery, and Singapore
was certainly no exception. As Jeyaretnam said:
Hardly a day passes without there being some report in the newspapers about corruption in
the public life.
However, we do not think that corruption can be stamped out just by prosecuting offenders.
We have got to create a climate in which corruption is no longer attractive.
This we believe can only be done by paying every man and woman an adequate living wage
and ensuring him security in his job and creating conditions in which he can take pride in
himself and so be able to resist any temptation that comes his way.
The government inherited what we think could be termed without any fear of exaggeration
a very efcient and honest civil service but what has this government done to it?
It has totally undermined the service, robbed it of its security and harried and harassed its
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members so that they no longer feel secure in the service nor pride in their work.
A man who has given a lifetime of service and looks forward to retiring on a pension can be
deprived of his dream on some imsy charge.
Is it surprising that in these circumstances corruption is on the increase?
Jeyaretnam was of course drawing on his own experience as a civil servant, and as a lawyer
representing government workers. Nonetheless, in the absence of specic examples, his remarks
struck a discordant note. One letter-writer to the Straits Times responded:
Unless Mr Jeyaretnam is specic, a vague charge without substantiation is not good for the
country. Our politicians must show depth of understanding of our problems and not merely
make a lot of statements.
To some degree, Jeyaretnams remarks about corruption and immigration policy were
misunderstood. He saw both phenomena as symptoms of an increasingly materialistic society a
diagnosis that would gain widespread acceptance in decades to come.
Politically, however, both points were duds. Why, then, did Jeyaretnam raise them at his maiden
press conference, when media exposure was practically guaranteed? One reason was his
inexperience as a politician. But the more important reason had to do with his personality:
Jeyaretnam believed in right and wrong. Time and again, his sympathy for the common man would
lead him to take the moral high ground at the expense of practical realities. However honourable
this philosophy, it was the polar opposite of the PAPs pragmatic approach. It may have won him
admirers, but it lost him votes.
n 1972, it became clear that the PAP would hold a general election by the end of the year.
Despite his short tenure as secretary-general, Jeyaretnam wanted the Workers Party to contest as
many seats as possible. The party published its rst manifesto: it called for abolishing restrictions
on newspapers, declawing the Internal Security Act, easing travel barriers to Malaysia, greater
freedom of speech, a national health care system, a national bus system, and a two-China policy in
the United Nations.
As he hammered together the partys platform, however, Jeyaretnam demonstrated his political
naivet. In July, prime minister Lee reminded Singaporeans to stand ready to defend the nation in
case of a military invasion. A few days later, Jeyaretnam responded. Nobody seems to have asked
the question whether our present way of life in Singapore is worth defending, he said.
This statement reected Jeyaretnams growing unease about the trajectory of Singapore society
and his scorn for the toadyism that was creeping into public life. In addition, Jeyaretnam felt that
the threat of invasion was essentially a bogeyman hoisted by the PAP simply to rally popular
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support. He supported dramatic cuts in defence spending to make more money available for social
programs.
But Jeyaretnam did not realise how this statement would sound when taken out of context. There
followed a series of blistering letters to the Straits Times lambasting Jeyaretnam for his anti-
Singapore stance. One read (in part):
If any aspirant to leadership in Singapore, after looking at the non-secular basis and style
of politics and societies in our immediate neighbourhood, is of the view that the principle
of multiracialism, secularism and political democracy on which our society is based, is not
worth defending, then the most decent thing he can do by Singaporeans is to take his
politics elsewhere...
Is it, perhaps, because he believes our way of life is not worth defending that Mr. J.B. Jeyaretnam
maintains a home, away from home in Johore Bahru? added this correspondent, referring to the
town just across the border in Malaysia. In which case, his initials are certainly appropriate. For
more than one eyebrow in Singapore has been raised by the latest utterances of Mr J.B. (Johore
Bahru) Jeyaretnam.
The letter, signed Singapore Sam, had all the marks of master rhetorician S. Rajaratnam, a former
journalist and essayist who was now deputy prime minister. Rajaratnam was, like Jeyaretnam, a
Jaffna Tamil, and often wrote pseudonymous letters to the Straits Times.
Another letter writer, Singaporean, criticised Jeyaretnams dovish stance and accused him of
wanting a dirty, bankrupt, defenceless and politically turbulent city. He went on to say:
Some leaders of the Workers Party are so repelled by our way of life that they send their
children not to our schools but to British army schools and expatriate schools in Singapore.
Presumably they do not want their children to be infected by the Singapore way of life.
It was quite true that Jeyaretnams sons, Kenneth and Philip did not attend government schools.
Margaret was anxious not to expose the boys, aged eight and ten, to the risk of reprisals because of
Jeyaretnams politics. At her insistence, the boys went to private schools: St Andrews, Raeburn
Park, and (later) United World College. Singapore Sams taunt about the home in Johor Bahru was
especially unfair. In fact, Jeyaretnam had bought the bungalow for his parents. Now that his
parents were both dead, his sister Emily, a schoolteacher, lived there. Jeyaretnam and his family
visited her several times a month.
As the general election loomed nearer, anonymous critics stepped up their attacks, pouring vitriol
on Jeyaretnam and the Workers Party. Bright Eyes accused the party of being a Trojan Horse
posing as an opposition party.
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For his rst parliamentary contest, Jeyaretnam selected the constituency of Farrer Park, a central
district near Little India. Farrer Park included a large number of Indian Singaporeans, but
Jeyaretnam chose it because it also contained several private housing estates, bulging with middle-
class voters.
Singapores election laws were patterned after the British model, but evolved in a unique fashion.
Elections must be held no more than ve years apart. But within this limit the actual timing
depends on the prime minister, who advises the president to dissolve parliament and call elections.
Naturally, this confers a tactical advantage on the incumbent party.
This advantage is compounded by another feature of Singapore elections: a breathtakingly brief
campaign season. Typically there are just nine days between nomination day, when candidates
declare which seats they are running for, and election day, when citizens cast their compulsory
vote. Political parties in Singapore are prohibited from engaging in a host of political activities
holding processions, organising rallies, even putting up posters until nomination day, meaning
that the entire election cycle is compressed into a period of 240 hours.
Such short campaigns certainly avoid the staggering costs (and tedium) that characterise elections
in many democracies. But they also put opposition parties at a tremendous disadvantage. There is
little time to organise, meet voters, craft platforms, hammer home messages, explain positions,
hold debates, plan strategies, or do any of the other things that help candidates get elected.
As Jeyaretnam courted voters in Farrer Park, the campaign against the Workers Party grew more
strident. The PAP planted doubts about Jeyaretnams loyalty, warning voters against foreign
proxies who wanted to drag Singapore back into Malaysia. This strategy played on the suspicion
with which many Singaporeans regarded their neighbour to the north, especially Chinese
Singaporeans who worried that Malaysias bloody anti-Chinese riots threatened the Lion City.
The PAP remained vague about the exact identity of these foreign proxies, however, until a
campaign rally at Paya Lebar on 25 August, when a PAP candidate named Tay Boon Too accused
the Workers Party of receiving funds some S$600,000 (or around A$175,000 at the time) from a
source in Kuala Lumpur, the Malaysian capital. Government radio broadcast Tays accusation
across Singapore in the islands four ofcial languages.
Jeyaretnam was furious. The allegation was a monstrous lie, he fumed the party had less than
S$4000 in its bank account, barely enough to cover its campaign expenses. Not only that, but the
attack was eerily similar to the Chew Swee Kee affair of 1959, when the PAP had accused the
Labour Front of receiving S$500,000 from a foreign source, a charge that demolished the Labour
Front and swept the PAP to power. Jeyaretnam threatened to sue Tay for libel unless he withdrew
his remarks.
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But there was no respite. The PAP questioned Jeyaretnams motives at every turn. At an election
rally in Farrer Park, Jeyaretnams opponent, Dr Lee Chiaw Meng, a high-ranking MP who was
minister of state for education, reminded voters of Jeyaretnams challenge to the Singapore way
of life:
In every conict of interests, each time that Singapore has had to defend its national
interests, Mr Jeyaretnam has leapt up in support of another country. In whose interests is
he working for?
Is it any wonder that Mr. Jeyaretnam wants national service abolished and all defence
spending stopped? He wants our Republic drastically weakened, knowing full well that
neither the foreign nor local investor will put their money into our Singapore if we are
weak and unstable.
Lee Chiaw Meng made his attack even more personal at another PAP rally at Farrer Park football
ground the next evening, just four days before the election:
Who is this JB Jeyaretnam who wants to bring us all down?
Mr Jeyaretnam was born in JB. He voluntarily adopted Singapore citizenship, taking an oath
to be loyal and to defend our Republic.
By his own admission, he goes to JB frequently. Four or ve times a month to see his sister,
he says. His sister seems to have a strange inuence on him
Our Singapore schools are not good enough for him. All children of our citizens are taught
to respect our national anthem, Majullah Singapura. And they are proud of it. When the
Singapore swimmers won the many gold medals at the SEAP Games, our competitors and
their supporters were so moved at the playing of the National Anthem, tears glistened in
their eyes. That is a measure of our pride in the anthem.
But Mr. Jeyaretnam teaches his children to stand up for God Save the Queen.
Jeyaretnam was particularly disturbed by the remark about his sister, which (he felt) implied an
incestuous relationship. Never one to shy away from combat, he accused Dr Lee and the PAP of
running a vicious personal campaign against him. The PAP is doing a dangerous and
mischievous thing, he said. Our party is dedicated to Singaporeans not to Malays, Indians or
Chinese.
Jeyaretnam was not the only Workers Party candidate battered by personal attacks. Another was
the partys candidate in Crawford, Wu Kher, characterised as a bicycle thief by foreign minister S.
Rajaratnam. In fact, Wu had been ned S$30 for attempted theft of a bicycle when he was fteen
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years old.
Jeyaretnam demanded that PAP candidate Tay Boon Too withdraw his allegation about the
S$600,000 gift by 1 September. We play clean to the end, Jeyaretnam declared. We want to
expose cheap, dishonourable tactics adopted by the PAP. But Tay refused to back down.
That evening, Jeyaretnam had a nal opportunity to put his case to the voters of Singapore. In a
four-minute party political broadcast, he made an eloquent appeal for political pluralism:
In the four minutes that I have I would like to leave a few thoughts with you this evening so
that you may think over them before you make your choice tomorrow.
The PAP says it comes to you for your votes with its record of twelve years government
and, of course, we admit it is in some ways an impressive record. But our case and which we
say is unanswerable is that in a democratic society an opposition in parliament is
absolutely necessary. Democracy without an opposition in parliament providing, as it were,
for representation of the peoples view is unthinkable. A one-party parliament wholly
subservient to the executive, rubber-stamping all decisions of the executive is not a
democracy.
For the last twelve years we have had a government that has not listened to the people and
a government that does not listen to the people is an oligarchy, not a democratic
government. We have heard from time to time our ministers saying how democratic
Singapore is and they appear to be mortally offended when someone suggests that
Singapore is perhaps not a democratic country. What bafes us is this: that our leaders in
government can resort to threats to try and deny the people a voice in Parliament.
We in the Workers Party are striving through perfectly constitutional means to ensure that
the democratic way of life nds acceptance in Singapore. We should have thought that a
democratic government would encourage this attempt by the people through perfectly
constitutional means to make the democratic system work, but on the contrary, for the last
nine days we have had false and malicious allegations made against us, we have had threats
made against us
Please remember that the rest of the world will be watching us tomorrow and how you vote
will decide whether democracy has become an accepted way of life of our people or whether
our way of life is one of authoritarianism. We have no doubt you will do your duty according
to your conscience.
It is striking that Jeyaretnam made no mention of his partys platform of trimming the defence
budget and instituting a national health program. Neither did he respond to the attacks against
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him. The broadcast was a golden opportunity to profess his loyalty to Singapore, to ridicule the
foreign proxy allegations, and to present his policies without risk of distortion. But he instead
focused his criticism on the rules of the game, a message unlikely to win new votes. Perhaps he
felt that the attacks were so absurd that to respond would only give them more weight.
Despite the odds, Jeyaretnam nursed the secret hope that he would stage an upset. Campaigning in
Farrer Park the day before the election, he canvassed one of the Indian cowherds who then plied
the streets of Little India peddling glasses of milk. Take this, the milkman grinned, handing
Jeyaretnam a glass of warm milk. Take this, and youll win tomorrow!
But polling day proved to be a bitter disappointment. The PAP swept all sixty-ve seats in
parliament, with 69 per cent of the overall vote. The dark innuendoes against the Workers Party
took a heavy toll: the WP won just 24 per cent of the votes in the twenty-seven constituencies it
contested, and none of its candidates polled more than 37 per cent. In Farrer Park, Jeyaretnam
himself drew a mere 23 per cent against Dr Lee.
Publicly, Jeyaretnam put a bright face on the outcome: after all, the Workers Party emerged from
the election as the strongest opposition party. Privately, he was devastated. The Workers Party
suffered a crippling lack of the resources that every election demands money, volunteers and
publicity and stretched those meagre assets too thinly.
fter the excitement generated by Jeyaretnams takeover of the Workers Party, the dismal
results of 1972 set off a round of internal recriminations. In December, a breakaway faction,
headed by Charlie Seow and Ng Ho, announced they were leaving to form a new left-wing party.
Seow and Ng who had been instrumental in Jeyaretnams election as secretary-general accused
Jeyaretnam of freezing them out of strategy sessions.
The split represented a major crisis. The splinter group, later known as the United Front, included
several of the partys candidates from the general election, and about 200 supporters out of a total
party membership of 554.
Clearly, the wild rumour about mysterious foreign proxies was wreaking havoc within the party. A
similar charge devastated the Labour Front in 1959, and Jeyaretnam feared the same thing might
happen to the Workers Party. It was a very serious allegation, which struck at the very life of the
party, he later wrote.
Jeyaretnam knew he had to take action. He pledged to make the partys accounts public, and
followed through on his threat to sue PAP MP Tay Boon Too for defamation. There was a problem,
however. Tay had made his speech in the Chinese dialect of Hokkien. Although the speech had
been translated and broadcast in Singapores four ofcial languages (English, Mandarin, Malay, and
Tamil) Jeyaretnam was unable to obtain a transcript of his original words.
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During the trial, attorneys for Tay and the Department of Broadcasting argued that this oversight
was fatal that the lawsuit could not proceed without Tays exact words. The judge, justice F.A.
Chua, agreed, dismissing the suit and ordering the Workers Party to pay Tays legal costs, which
amounted to S$14,000.
Jeyaretnam was outraged by the ruling. In an interview more than twenty-eight years later, the
tension in his voice still betrayed his emotions. I did nd it frustrating, yes, he said in 1998. The
case was frustrating for another reason, too: the lawyer for the Department of Broadcasting was
none other than Jeyaretnams estranged friend Tan Boon Teik, who had been promoted to
attorney-general.
The Workers Party dragged its heels about paying Tay. According to Jeyaretnam, the reason was
plain. They didnt have the money.
It may seem strange that the Workers Party would procrastinate over such a paltry sum, but
fundraising was a chronic headache. Finding monies even to pay for the day-to-day political
activities of the party was and still remains one of the biggest obstacles that confront an
opposition party in Singapore, Jeyaretnam wrote in his memoir. People are too frightened to
contribute any monies to an opposition party.
This is somewhat overstated. The Workers Party had dedicated supporters who contributed
hundreds of thousands of dollars over the years. The vast majority faced no sanction. But some
Workers Party supporters were penalised for their political beliefs. Their example persuaded
hundreds, perhaps thousands of others to keep their head down and not to risk trouble by donating
money to the opposition.
Whether the reason, the Workers Party made no effort to settle its debt with Tay a fact that was
later to have profound consequences.
eyaretnams next shot at elected ofce came in the general elections of 1976. Candidates in
Singapore need not live in the constituencies they represent. In fact, political parties frequently
shufe nominees from ward to ward in an effort to pit their strongest contenders against weak
opponents.
In the 1972 campaign, Jeyaretnam had been accused of standing in Farrer Park because of its high
percentage of Indian voters. This criticism stung him. Playing ethnic politics was regarded as a
cardinal sin in Singapore, and he was anxious to demonstrate his appeal to blue-collar voters of all
races. So in 1976 he decided to challenge the PAP in Kampong Chai Chee, a predominantly Chinese
constituency. Not only was Kampong Chai Chee a working-class ward, but Jeyaretnam also thought
he stood a good chance against the two-term PAP incumbent, Shaari Tadin, who had squeaked
into ofce in 1972 with 47 per cent of the vote in a three-cornered ght.
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Initially, he was reluctant to reveal which constituencies the Workers Party would contest, in order
to prevent the PAP from switching its weaker candidates to uncontested wards. But other WP
members argued that the party should make its plans public. Jeyaretnam eventually held a press
conference two days before nomination day to announce who was standing where.
Candidates in Singapore are required to register in person on nomination day. After Jeyaretnam
arrived at the Nomination Centre, just twenty minutes before the deadline, and signed up for
Kampong Chai Chee, he was shocked to discover that the PAP had switched its candidates. Instead
of Shaari Tadin, Jeyaretnam suddenly found himself up against Major Fong Sip Chee, a popular
PAP MP whose nickname was The Rat Catcher.
Jeyaretnam waged a much more effective campaign in 1976 than he had four years before. At the
campaigns opening rally in Fullerton Square, he demonstrated a new grasp of oratory, as can be
seen from the vivid account from the Straits Times:
Mr J.B. Jeyaretnam, WPs secretary-general, went straight for the jugular vein and drew
applause and cheers from the lunchtime crowd that packed the square.
Speaking from a makeshift stage formed by lining two lorries side by side, he was a man in
his element, striving hard to be in communion with his audience.
He spoke eloquently and with gusto his voice becoming hoarse as the modulated tones of
the courtroom lawyer gave way to the controlled fury of the street-corner politician.
He urged the crowd to join him in shouting: We want to be heard and to shout it so loudly
that Mr Lee Kuan Yew will hear it. They did. Three times.
His was essentially a well-organised rally though he did not reckon with the elements, and
a sudden downpour sent many spectators scurrying for shelter
He also spoke about the crawlers the many people in Singapore who, he said, went
crawling to the PAP begging for favours. We in the Workers Party want you, the people of
Singapore, to walk upright. We dont want you to crawl, he added...
Mr Jeyaretnam then delivered an attack on the Straits Times Group by referring to what he
described as the press lords of Kim Seng Road, Times House, as one of the institutions of
the PAP government.
He charged that the press lords, too, did not want the people to be heard. Therefore, they
distorted whatever was said by the opposition parties while whatever was said by the PAP
was given full coverage. He did not blame the reporters and journalists who tried to do an
honest job. It was the press lords sitting in their air-conditioned rooms in Times House who
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were denying the people their rights.
The Workers Party drew up a detailed manifesto for the campaign. Once again, it called for the
abolition of the Internal Security Act. It proposed a National Health Service providing free medical
care for anyone earning less than $500 a month, a program which would be funded by cuts in
military spending. It also called for the end to the rattan, or cane.
In the Western world, the term caning conjures up images of bespectacled headmasters swatting
naughty schoolboys. In Singapore, however, caning was a brutal punishment designed to scar its
victims for life.
According to a rare report published in the Straits Times in 1974, the prisoner is stripped naked and
strapped to a trestle by his wrists and ankles, his body bent like a circumex. The cane half an inch
thick, four feet long, and soaked in brine is wielded by a hefty prison ofcer who channels the
momentum of his whole body into the blow. The cane strikes the buttocks with such force that the
skin splits open. After three strokes, the buttocks are covered in blood, and most prisoners are in a
state of shock. Some pretend to faint, but seldom fool the medical ofcer. Others collapse, but are
quickly revived so that the punishment may continue. A typical sentence runs anywhere from six
to twelve strokes.
The cane was originally reserved for crimes involving unusual cruelty or violence. But gradually it
became mandatory for a range of offences, including vandalism and overstaying ones visa.
Jeyaretnam felt that this custom a legacy of British colonialism was barbaric. But, as a
campaign issue, the cane opped. Jeyaretnam didnt even mention it in his party-political
broadcast, televised a few days before polling day. Nor did he articulate the rest of the partys
platform. Instead, he focused on what he considered a more fundamental issue: the hollowing out
of the very processes that gave democracy its meaning. Just as Jeyaretnam repeated his central
message from the 1972 election, so the PAP recycled the tactics that worked for them before. Once
again, they sought to focus on the character of Jeyaretnam and the WP men, trotting out the same
personal attacks. The ercest criticism came from foreign minister S. Rajaratnam, who derided
Jeyaretnam as a pukka English gentleman.
Mr Jeyaretnam says our educational system is undemocratic. He says his party will raise the
standard of vernacular primary education. You know vernacular means the language of
home-born slaves. Mr Jeyaretnam does not want his children to mix with the hoi polloi and
the vernacular-speaking Singaporeans. How do you explain then that Jeyaretnam is
interested in education?
Shortly before polling day, Jeyaretnam issued a challenge to prime minister Lee Kuan Yew over the
question of the secrecy of the ballot. In a letter to the prime minister, Jeyaretnam described the
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constant refrain he heard from voters on the hustings, a reluctance to support the Workers Party
for fear of retaliation:
Many people have telephoned me or spoken to me on receiving their polling cards. The
fear, however irrational it may seem, is in the minds of many of our electorate, particularly
the uneducated, that your government will discover how he or she has voted in the
elections and they are terried of the consequences. You must be the rst to agree that a
vote given under these circumstances, under this fear, cannot by any stretch of the
imagination be called a free vote.
Jeyaretnam then asked the prime minister to issue a public announcement guaranteeing the
secrecy of the ballot. In one sense, this letter, which he also sent to the secretary-general of the
United Nations and to several foreign embassies, was a crafty electoral gamble. If Lee remained
silent, he would cast doubt on the integrity of the ballot. But if he stated publicly that the vote was
secret, he might allay the fear that kept many voters from casting their ballot for the opposition.
Characteristically, however, Lee rose to the challenge. He insisted that the ballot had always been
secret, and that opposition parties bore responsibility for impugning its integrity.
After the hard-fought campaign, tensions ran high on election day. On a nal walk through the
streets of Chai Chee, Jeyaretnam and his supporters encountered his opponent, Major Fong,
anked by PAP supporters.
So, you are the rat catcher, Jeyaretnam said.
I am going to have the best catch today, Major Fong replied.
The major was right. By midnight, the PAP had won every constituency except for Kampong Chai
Chee, where election workers were still tallying ballots. Exhausted by the campaign, Jeyaretnam
went home to await the verdict. When the results were announced, at 2.12am, Jeyaretnam had lost
by 7177 votes to Major Fongs 10,729 a margin of 20 per cent. Once again, the PAP had made a
clean sweep of the nations sixty-nine seats in parliament, with 72 per cent of the popular vote.
Although the Workers Party had pulled more votes than ever before, the election of 1976 showed
that the obstacles in its path were immense. Fifteen years later, Singaporean political scientist
Bilveer Singh listed several factors to explain the PAPs dominance:
Its ability to virtually incapacitate all its major political opponents through sanctions and
socialisation.
Its ability to gain control of most of the political and non-political organisations as well as
to win cooperation from organisations that are able to mobilise political support among
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the populace.
Its ability to establish and gain control of all grassroots organisations in the country,
including the Citizens Consultative Committees (CCCs), the Community Centres (CCs) and
the Residents Committees (RCs), thereby functioning as a link between the government
and the people as well as depriving the opposition of a potential source of recruitment.
Its ability to establish strict rules for the media, which in the end, enabled the PAP to use
the media almost as its own organ, as well as to deny similar visibility to its opponents.
Its ability to gain credit for all the progress and development that has taken place in the
country and hence legitimise its dominance through the performance criteria.
Its ability to present itself as more than a political party, something akin to a national
movement, thereby neutralising the need for other competing political parties in the
system that could challenge the PAPs predominance.
Its ability to gain control of the civil service and the trade union movement.
The PAPs unyielding grip on the levers of power put the Workers Party at a tremendous
disadvantage, especially in its efforts to attract candidates. While timorous voters could be
consoled by the thought that their ballots were secret, at least in theory, potential candidates for
the Workers Party knew full well that standing on the partys platform was an act of deance
towards the PAP, a declaration that could never be revoked.
In democratic nations around the globe, standing for ofce is seldom a pleasant affair. Candidates
can expect their records to come under public scrutiny, with occasionally disastrous results. But
WP candidates had more to worry about than merely losing their deposit. The threat of
imprisonment was never far away: indeed, shortly after the election, the Ministry of Home Affairs
accused WP candidate Ho Juan Thai of trying to incite violent chauvinistic reaction among
Chinese-speaking voters.
Ho had been a student at Nanyang University when the government tried to change the medium of
instruction from Chinese to English. As president of the students union, he organised a protest in
which students refused to write their exams in English, which resulted in him losing his position.
During the election, he accused the government of stripping Chinese Singaporeans of their cultural
identity. Although he only got 31 per cent of the vote, the government issued a warrant for his
arrest under the Internal Security Act. Ho ed across the causeway, and never returned to
Singapore.
ndaunted by his defeat in Kampong Chai Chee, Jeyaretnam jumped back into the political
arena to contest a by-election in Radin Mas ve months later. Vowing to stand up for all the little,
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downtrodden people mercilessly stripped of their human dignity by the PAP government, he
plunged into the campaign with renewed zeal. In his opening rally, he declared:
The people of Singapore are going to show, here in Radin Mas, that we refuse to be a
mindless people. We will show the PAP that a political party that has no respect for the
people will not get the votes of the people
The PAP government boasts of building beautiful roads, factories, and airport but this is
not what we want. It is not these things that matter, it is the people that matter. Before you
beautify these things, rst beautify our people. And our people can only be beautiful if they
are given their fundamental rights instead of being shoved from pillar to post.
Political observers began to scratch their heads. In a blistering editorial, Straits Times editor Leslie
Fang castigated Jeyaretnams high-minded talk about democracy and human rights:
We will nd him standing on a platform with his hands stretched out like a man being
crucied, talking himself hoarse about the voice of the people.
His loyal wife will be nearby, dutifully, as loyal and dutiful wives of American politicians
stand by their husbands at the hustings.
She will probably be at his side when he invites his audience to join them in prayer that
there shall be light at the end of these long, dark days and that the oppressive PAP will rule
no more.
Mr Jeyaretnam will have to pray indeed and pray very hard too if he hopes to win in Radin
Mas by merely spouting again these same high-sounding phrases.
Sure, such oratory appeals to the well-educated, the professionals and others. It makes
good reading too in newspapers just the kind of stuff of which headline writers dreams
are made.
But while I am all for standing up for human rights and justice and democracy, I wonder if
Mr Jeyaretnams going on and on about it will cut any ice with voters in Radin Mas. I
wonder if he understands that Radin Mas is essentially a lower-income group area, the
residents of which are concerned with more earthly problems.
Despite widespread scepticism in the press, the Radin Mas by-election presented Jeyaretnam with
several advantages. His thirty-ve-year-old PAP opponent, Bernard Chen Tien Lap, was a novice
campaigner. The blue-collar ward contained several kampongs slated for resettlement, which was
often bitterly resented by kampong dwellers, loath to abandon their sleepy village huts for the
impersonal apartment blocks that awaited them on the other side of the island.
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When the polls closed on 14 May 1977, Jeyaretnam hovered anxiously inside the counting centre at
Tiong Bahru Secondary School while the votes were tallied. A few minutes after midnight, he
walked out into the night.
What do you want me to say? Jeyaretnam snapped at reporters. That I am tired and upset? The
people have decided. Let the Straits Times and the New Nation say what they like.
The crowd of Workers Party supporters, mistakenly thinking Jeyaretnams emergence signalled
victory, surged forward, shouting Berjaya! (Victory!) and raised him up on their shoulders.
Put me down! he shouted, shaking his head, frustration and disappointment drawing him to the
verge of tears. Put me down! Stop it!
His supporters lowered him to the ground, and walked with him to the street. Moments later, the
results were announced. Chen had beaten Jeyaretnam by 12,053 to 5021 a margin of more than
seven thousand.
ven as he grappled with this defeat, Jeyaretnam faced two serious crises. The rst came when
Margaret was diagnosed with breast cancer. The diagnosis was a terrible blow. The existing
treatments for breast cancer a particularly lethal form of neoplasm were expensive, painful,
and ineffective. Margaret ew to England to undergo a mastectomy and radiation treatment, but
the outlook was grim.
There was also trouble on the legal front. During the run-up to the 1976 general election, prime
minister Lee Kuan Yew had ridiculed Jeyaretnam for offering to run the nations nances when he
was having trouble with his own (a sly dig at Jeyaretnams law practice, which had suffered since he
joined the Workers Party). At the campaigns opening rally, Jeyaretnam responded to this charge,
saying:
Mr Lee Kuan Yew has managed his fortune very well. He is the prime minister of Singapore.
His wife is the senior partner of Lee & Lee and his brother is the director of several
companies, including Tat Lee Bank in Market Street; the bank which was given a permit
with alacrity, [a] banking permit licence, when other banks were having difculties getting
their licence.
After the election, Lee demanded an unconditional apology: a standard manoeuvre in libel
proceedings. The demand put Jeyaretnam in a bind. If he apologised, he would be conceding that
there was something to apologise for an admission that could be used against him in court. But if
he did not apologise, Lee could argue that Jeyaretnam was aggravating the damage by refusing to
retract his remarks.
Nonetheless, Jeyaretnam did not think the case could succeed. He had simply made a statement of
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fact. If the facts were true, how could he lose a libel suit? Jeyaretnam refused to apologise, and Lee
duly led suit in court, setting the stage for a sensational trial with major political implications.
Jeyaretnam had lost an important libel suit once before: when PAP MP Tay Boon Too had accused
the Workers Party of receiving $600,000 in foreign funds. This time, however, he had an ace up his
sleeve: he engaged the famous British barrister John Mortimer, author of the popular book and
television series, Rumpole of the Bailey.
A product of Oxford and Harrow, Mortimers remarkable success as a writer, journalist and
playwright at times overshadowed his career at the bar. It is easy to forget that, as a Queens
Counsel in the 1960s, he was one of Englands most prominent defence lawyers, specialising in
free-speech issues, or what his colleagues sometimes referred to as dirty-book cases. Indeed, he
once defended a British magazine against obscenity charges for publishing an illustration of
Rupert the Bear sporting an enormous erection.
The ve-day trial, held in November 1978, made front-page headlines in the Straits Times. On the
witness stand, Lee said Jeyaretnams accusations were so grave they could have brought down the
government:
If the allegations are believed, I am destroyed. The allegations have been hanging over my
head since December 18, 1976, when all other allegations by all others have been
withdrawn.
But what were the allegations? All Jeyaretnam had done was to point out a strange coincidence and
invite his listeners to draw their own conclusions.
It is difcult to deny that the bare facts of the Tat Lee case invited speculation about undue
inuence. In 1969, the chairman of the Tat Lee Company, Goh Tjoei Kok, applied for a banking
licence from the Monetary Authority of Singapore, or MAS, proposing an initial capital of S$20
million. For almost three years, the application gathered dust in the halls of the MAS. Then, in
1972, Tat Lee hired the law rm of Lee & Lee to shepherd the banks application through the
bureaucratic maze. It was a shrewd choice: Lee & Lee was started by Lee Kuan Yew and his wife,
and had become one of Singapores most successful law rms. Although Lee himself had severed all
formal ties with the rm, it retained a formidable reputation as having access to the corridors of
power.
Tat Lee also pulled in another individual with close ties to the prime minister: Lees brother, Lee
Kim Yew, who was one of the proposed directors. Five months later, MAS approved the deal in
principle, and ultimately issued a licence in February 1974.
It is important to understand that MAS was notoriously slow to grant banking licences. The last
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licence had been issued in 1968 to the Development Bank of Singapore, which had a large
government stake.
At the trial, the managing director of MAS, Michael Wong Pakshong, strenuously denied that the
involvement of Lee & Lee or the prime ministers brother had anything to do with MASs decision
to give Tat Lee the green light. The reason for MASs change of heart, he said, was its belief that
$20 million was too small a capitalisation for a local bank, an objection that Tat Lee overcame by
raising its stake to $32 million.
Mortimer argued that Jeyaretnams remarks were fair comment and that he could not be
responsible for all the implications or innuendo that could be read into his words. Indeed,
Mortimer told the court, the ability to engage in robust debate was the essence of democracy.
Despite Mortimers oratory, Jeyaretnam lost the case. In January 1979, Justice F.A. Chua the same
judge who had ruled against the Workers Party in the Tay Boon Too case ordered Jeyaretnam to
pay Lee S$130,000 in damages and costs.
Jeyaretnam was devastated by the judgment. He appealed the decision to the High Court, and even
attempted to bring it before the Privy Council in London; but he lost both efforts. In the end, his
liability in damages and costs amounted to S$500,000. And he learned the answer to an awful
question: how does a man raise half a million dollars? He sells his house, with its swimming pool
and garden, dismisses his servants, and moves into a rented apartment.
y January 1979, Jeyaretnams political career was, to put it kindly, in a shambles. He was fty-
two years old. He had lost three times at the polls. He had lost two major libel suits. He was short of
cash, the Workers Party was struggling, and his wife was dying of cancer.
But on the morning of 31 January, at fteen minutes before noon, Jeyaretnam made a dramatic
appearance at the Victoria School Nomination Centre to declare his candidacy for parliament in a
by-election at Telok Blangah against the PAP candidate, a young accountant named Rohan bin
Kamis.
Coming so soon after judge Chuas ruinous verdict, Jeyaretnams announcement shocked reporters
covering the by-election. But, characteristically, he remained as ery as ever, saying it was the
paramount duty of opposition parties to challenge the PAP.
Jeyaretnams obvious relish for the campaign was echoed in the exuberant atmosphere of his
rallies. While he continued, as always, to focus on democracy and human rights, he had become
increasingly adept at raising bread-and-butter issues. He slammed the government for failing to
increase pensions in line with ination; for high taxes; and for sharp hikes in water, gas, and
electricity bills.
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Despite Jeyaretnams crusty accent, his British education, and his Indian heritage, working-class
Singaporeans were beginning to identify with him. His stubborn refusal to give up, even after so
many defeats, earned him grudging respect. As the Straits Times reported:
The crowds turned wild when Mr Jeyaretnam ended his delivery and held high a wooden
hammer the partys symbol. Then, to the chants of We want Jeya, the opposition leader
was chaired to his car. More than one hundred people surged round him, cheering and
shouting.
Once again, the results were a crushing disappointment: the PAP candidate, Rohan Kamis, won
12,687 votes to Jeyaretnams 8036, making Jeyaretnam now a four-time loser. However, Jeyaretnam
could not help but take note of a very signicant fact: his share of the vote was greater than ever
before. And each time he stood for ofce, it seemed to creep a few points higher.
By this time it had become clear that Margaret had only a short time to live. As her health declined,
Jeyaretnam became increasingly despondent. He was utterly devoted to her. In an interview
conducted almost twenty years later, his voice quavered with despair and frustration.
There was nothing I could do! he told me in January 2000. To see her crying sometimes, what
could I do? And it still troubles me, because theres no question that because of my political career,
she must have suffered terrible stress. Her cancer was diagnosed after Lee brought his rst suit
against me. She used to say she wanted to go back to the UK. She was very loyal. But I could see she
was worried. I wonder if I had given up politics and returned to the UK with her, she might still be
living with me today.
Margaret died of cancer on 10 April 1980, at the age of fty. They had been married twenty-three
years; Jeyaretnam was crushed. She was with me on every platform, he told the Straits Times. I
feel as if half of me has been cut off. She was my whole strength in lots of things. He kept a picture
of her above his ofce desk, and bought a fresh red rose for it every day a ritual he would repeat for
many years.
For a while, Jeyaretnam considered retiring from politics. After all, his predecessor, Workers Party
founder David Marshall, had abandoned politics and returned to a successful career at the bar. But
Jeyaretnam would not and could not abandon the struggle. Ironically, Margarets death was the
nal catalyst that cast him irrevocably on his long crusade against the PAP. As he wrote in his
memoirs:
After her death I thought I would give up. But then it was brought on me that the time for
giving up was before her death and I had no reason for giving up after her death. It would be
an act of betrayal of her to give up so I forced myself back into picking up again an active
political role.
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To overcome his grief, Jeyaretnam hurled himself into politics as never before. He came
tantalisingly close in the general election of 1980, polling 46.3 per cent of the vote in the Telok
Blangah constituency, against 52.2 per cent for the PAP candidate, Rohan Khamis. If 600 voters had
switched sides, Jeyaretnam would have won.
Then, in 1981, Jeyaretnam got another chance. The PAP nominated party stalwart C.V. Devan Nair,
a popular trade unionist and founding member of the PAP, to the largely ceremonial post of
president. In order to accept the nomination, Nair had to resign his seat in parliament. This left his
constituency, Anson, up for grabs.
traddling Keppel Harbour on the southern shore of the island, surrounded by some of
Singapores most valuable real estate, the district of Anson was considered one of the PAPs safest
seats. To the northeast, the ofce towers of the nancial district loomed over Robinson Road; to
the north, the massive buildings of Singapore General Hospital glowed late into the night.
At the previous election, Nair had trounced his last opponent with 84 per cent of the vote. Indeed,
Anson was considered such a PAP stronghold that many of Jeyaretnams supporters begged him
not to run. The seat, they said, was unwinnable and a loss would squander the psychological
advantage he had built up in his recent battles.
But Jeyaretnam was undaunted by the long odds. Avoiding the challenge, he argued, would be
perceived as cowardice. In addition, there was an encouraging historical parallel. Twenty years
before, David Marshall, the founder of the Workers Party, had scored an upset victory against the
PAP in Anson. Jeyaretnam was convinced that, given the right opportunity, the districts voters
would show their independent streak again. At 11:35 am on nomination day, barely twenty-ve
minutes before the deadline, Jeyaretnam appeared at the Nomination Centre and ofcially threw
his hat into the ring.
Publicly, PAP ofcials were brimming with condence. I dont think there is any way Mr
Jeyaretnam can win, PAP organising secretary Goh Chok Tong told a press conference. But almost
as soon as the nine-day by-election campaign began, it became apparent that the PAP had for once
miscalculated.
Anson may have been surrounded by gleaming monuments to the nations prosperity, but the
constituency itself was dominated by wharves and railyards. The majority of Ansons 14,500
residents had been left behind by the island nations boom. Roughly one-third of the households
earned less than US$230 a month, and another one-third earned less than US$460.
Anson was also a microcosm of the resentments that had built up over two decades of PAP rule.
First among these issues was housing. In the early sixties, the Housing and Development Board
had embarked on a massive construction program throughout the island, bulldozing the rickety
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kampongs and squalid shophouses, and erecting high-rise ats in their stead. By 1981, the HDB
had created more than 300,000 units surely one of the most impressive spurts of residential
construction anywhere and more than 70 per cent of the nations 2.4 million people lived in
public housing.
Despite this spectacular record, however, Singapore was still suffering a tremendous housing
shortage: roughly 100,000 Singaporeans were still waiting to buy their own ats from the HDB,
with 13,000 on the waiting list to rent. There were 62,000 one-room ats with more than three
people living in them. And the government seemed to be falling further behind: in the rst ten
months of 1981, the waiting list grew by 46,000 people, while the ofcial target for the entire year
was just 15,000 ats. The average waiting time for a HDB at was roughly ve years.
Against this backdrop, the Port of Singapore Authority wanted to evict 700 families from nine
high-rise blocks in Anson to make way for a new container complex. The neighbourhood, known as
Blair Plain, was primarily occupied by port workers, who bitterly resented being pushed out by
their own employer. Whats more, the HDB refused to give them priority in applying for new ats.
While the governments ofcial ination rate stood at just under 10 per cent, that gure masked
sharp increases which had hit low-income Singaporeans particularly hard. The average purchase
price for HDB ats had jumped 38 per cent in a single year. Rice was up 19.4 per cent; meat and
poultry was up 13.9 per cent; public transportation rose 17 per cent. There were rumours that the
government was planning to hike bus fares.
In addition, there was grumbling over the governments Speak Mandarin campaign, launched by
prime minister Lee in 1979. Most Chinese Singaporeans trace their ancestry to southern China,
where the vernacular tongue was not Mandarin but dialects such as Hokkien, Teochew or
Cantonese. The government wanted Chinese Singaporeans to speak Mandarin instead, reafrming
their cultural heritage and simultaneously opening new links to China. Singapores Chinese dialect
groups were proud of their regional traditions, however, and the governments attempts to impose
Mandarin infuriated them. (Imagine walking into an Italian restaurant and nding that the menu
has been written in Latin.)
The PAP also made several tactical blunders. The rst was its choice of candidate: a thirty-two-
year-old mechanical engineer named Pang Kim Hin, with no political experience. By traditional
measures, Pang had good family connections: his uncle was Lim Kim San, a powerful PAP minister.
But, paradoxically, this was a liability in Anson, because his uncle was also chairman of the Port of
Singapore Authority, the agency responsible for the Blair Plain evictions.
Second, the PAPs master campaigner, prime minister Lee, was noticeable by his absence. Lee had
decided that the Anson by-election would be a good opportunity for the younger PAP leaders to get
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a taste for electoral politics. The partys long stay in power had produced an echelon of so-called
second generation leaders who had never undergone the rigours of a closely fought election.
Accordingly, the up-and-coming minister of health, Goh Chok Tong, took charge of the PAPs
campaign, even making speeches in the stead of the hapless Pang. And while Goh aimed several
jabs at Jeyaretnam, he never showed a knack for the vicious form of political ju-jitsu that came so
naturally to Lee.
Jeyaretnam also beneted from the awkward timing of the Trade Disputes (Amendment) Act,
passed by parliament a week before polling day. The law banned strikes which would inict
hardship on any sector of the community a vague provision that seemed, on its face, designed to
outlaw industrial action altogether. Although the trade unions had long since come under the sway
of the PAP, and although industrial action had therefore become exceedingly rare, the new law was
a stark reminder of the unions castration. During a three-hour rally at Blair Plain, Jeyaretnam
skilfully exploited the issue.
Finally, Jeyaretnam also enjoyed an unusual degree of cooperation from the other opposition
parties, which stood aside to avoid splitting the anti-PAP vote. The newly formed Singapore
Democratic Party, headed by lawyer Chiam See Tong, did not eld a candidate, and the Barisan
Sosialis and the Singapore United Front even sent in their workers to help campaign for
Jeyaretnam. This temporary ceasere may seem an obvious stratagem, but it was seldom
encountered among the bickering chieftains of Singapores puny opposition parties. (The only
other contender was perennial candidate Harbans Singh, secretary-general of the United Peoples
Front, who told one reporter he was in the race as an agent of God.)
Tension mounted as election day drew near. Two days before the election, Goh Chok Tong told a
press conference that no opposition member of parliament could serve Anson residents as well as a
PAP member:
A PAP MP is in a better position to help than a non PAP MP, thats all Im saying It will be
more difcult for anybody who is not familiar with PAP government ministers to get things
done. The PAP MP mixes with other MPs and ministers, and he can raise with them
problems and issues the constituents may have on a friendly basis.
Although Goh took pains to express himself in a non-confrontational manner, many Singaporeans
read the speech as a blunt threat to Anson voters: if you elect Jeyaretnam, dont expect any help
from us.
It is difcult to know how many votes were motivated by Gohs statement. Certainly, some voters
were outraged by it: at one PAP rally, a plastic packet of cooked noodles was hurled at Goh as he
stood at the podium a brazen act of deance almost unheard of in Singapore.
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In sharp contrast to Pangs political inexperience, Jeyaretnam, now fty-ve, was a seasoned
campaigner, having fought the PAP no fewer than ve times before. Although he continued to
emphasise human rights, he also hammered away at bread-and-butter issues: medical fees, bus
fares, and the rising cost of government-built ats. Thousands of Singaporeans ocked to the
Workers Party rallies: the huge crowds forced some onlookers to stand so far from the platform
that they couldnt even hear the speeches. They stayed nonetheless, just for a chance to see
Jeyaretnam in action. By the end of the campaign, he told a reporter: I have done all that is
humanly possible. It is now in the hands of God.
On the evening of 31 October, polling day, Jeyaretnam and Workers Party chairman Wong Hong
Toy drove up to the counting station, located in the Gan Eng Seng Secondary School. Crowds of
people, both WP and PAP supporters, jammed Anson Road, waiting for the results to be
announced.
Inside, poll workers counted the ballots, bundling them into groups of fty, and stacking the
bundles in trays for each candidate. Jeyaretnam and Wong stood hypnotised as the trays lled with
bundles: now Jeyaretnams tray was higher, now Pangs, now Jeyaretnams. As the hours dragged
on, and the last ballots were counted and recounted, Wongs heart soared. They were almost
equal, but I could see that ours was a little higher, Wong remembered. I told Mr Jeyaretnam we
are going to win. He said really? I said yes, I see the ballots.
At 10.53pm, returning ofcer Richard Lau stepped up to the microphone outside the counting
station, and announced the result:
Mr Harbans Singh: 131 votes.
Mr Jeyaretnam: 7012 votes.
Mr Pang: 6359 votes.
But the last three digits of Pangs tally were drowned out by a roar from the crowd. By a margin of
just 653, the voters of Anson had staged the most dramatic upset in Singapores political history.
They had elected Jeyaretnam as their member of parliament. The PAPs spell was broken.
The years of pent-up frustration had nally found an outlet. WP supporters jabbed their hands in
the air and chanted, We want Jeya! We want Jeya! As word spread, so did the delirium. Anson
Road was a solid mass of revellers shouting and cheering from Palmer Road to Telok Ayer market.
Taxi drivers were honking their horns and waving at one another. Standing in the schoolhouse,
Jeyaretnam himself was gasping with disbelief. As the crowd outside chanted his name, he knelt on
the oor and murmured a prayer for Margaret. Then he squared his shoulders, took a deep breath,
and stepped up to the microphone. The crowd surged forward but was restrained by the police. I
went towards them and tried to shake the hand of as many as I could, he later wrote. They were
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wild with excitement.
His voice choked with emotion, Jeyaretnam thanked his supporters:
This victory is yours. It is not mine. It is the peoples victory against the might of the PAP
and all the government agencies. In the face of all this, I feel very, very humble. I thank God
for answering the prayers not only of myself but also of hundreds of thousands of
Singaporeans. This is also my saddest moment. One person who has fought for your cause
as ercely as I did, is not here. But I know that she is here in spirit. I am sure she will rejoice
tonight, seeing you cheering me.
Calling his seventeen-year-old son, Philip, to the platform (Kenneth was studying at Cambridge),
Jeyaretnam hugged him for several minutes. Weve won, son, he said to him before turning back
to the microphone:
I think we all need a rest and need to go back and thank God for this victory. Let us go
home with jubilation and cheerfulness. There is a new sun breaking out tomorrow morning.
Let us welcome the dawn of a bright, prosperous, happy Singapore, a Singapore we can all
be proud to call our own.
I pray to God that I will have the strength to serve not only the people of Anson but also
the whole of Singapore. I am sure the Anson voters want me to regard myself not only as
their MP but the MP for the silent majority.
Twenty years after Jeyaretnams triumph, a retired police ofcer grinned like a hyena when asked
to recall the events of that night. He was off duty, drinking in a pub, when he got a telephone call:
The old man is in! He rushed over to Anson, where he saw a crowd he estimates at 20,000 people.
People were cheering, shouting, banging on things he told me. It was so overjoyous, so
overwhelming. All races all were cheering in deance. I found a group who I didnt know, and I
followed them to a hawker centre. We all spent money, we didnt know who was who, it didnt
matter, we were in a mood of jubilation. We hugged and kissed each other. Even people outside the
constituency came to join us.
After years of negative coverage from the local press, Jeyaretnam was delighted the next morning
to see the front page headline in the Straits Times: JEYARETNAM TAKES ANSON. It was pure joy,
he later wrote.
A week later, Jeyaretnam led a procession of cars, vans, and motorcycles through Anson to thank
residents for voting for him. Police ofcials had denied him a permit to lead a procession on foot,
but not even this bit of bureaucratic pettiness could dampen the spirits of his supporters, who
adorned him with garlands of owers.
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CHRIS LYDGATE
Chris Lydgate is author of Lees Law: How Singapore Crushes
Dissent (Scribe) and editor of Reed Magazine. He has written
about Singapore for the Times of London, the Guardian, the
Sydney Morning Herald, the Economist, Newsweek and Asiaweek.
Local journalists covering the election were amazed and some of them ecstatic that Jeyaretnam
had nally won. I was happy that there was nally someone whos broken the stranglehold, who
has beaten them at their own game, said one reporter who covered the event. I thought that
dawn had come to the political landscape of Singapore. But it turned out to be the other way
around.
This is an edited extract from Lees Law: How Singapore Crushes Dissent, by Chris Lydgate (Scribe,
2003).
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