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PAP wins Pasir Ris-Changi GRC with 67.66% of votes over SDA, Singapore News

PAP wins Pasir Ris-Changi GRC with 67.66% of votes over SDA, Singapore News

AsiaOne03-05-2025
Results for Pasir Ris-Changi GRC in GE2025 People's Action Party (PAP) 67.66% Singapore Democratic Alliance (SDA) 32.34%
The People's Action Party (PAP) has won Pasir Ris-Changi GRC with 67.66 per cent of votes over the Singapore Democratic Alliance (SDA).
PAP received 60,887 votes while SDA received 29,109 votes.
The PAP's team for Pasir Ris-Changi GRC is led by Minister in the Prime Minister's Office and Leader of the House Indranee Rajah.
Her team comprises of Senior Minister of State in the Prime Minister's Office Desmond Tan, Sharael Taha and new face Valerie Lee.
Indranee was previously MP for Tanjong Pagar GRC, a PAP stronghold.
The SDA's team is led by party Chairman Desmond Lim and includes secretary-general Abu Mohamed, Harminder Pal Singh and new member Chia Yun Kai.
In 2020, PAP, led by Senior Minister (SM) Teo Chee Hean, won the Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC with 64.16 per cent of the vote, while SDA came in second in the three-way fight with 23.67 per cent of the vote.
The constituency has 100,639 electors. Pulau Ubin walkabout
Desmond Tan, Sharael Taha and Valerie Lee as well as SM Teo and Dr Janil Puthucheary were spotted at a walkabout in Pulau Ubin on April 11.
The island became part of Pasir Ris-Changi GRC after electoral boundaries were redrawn in March.
Lee told media that there are 30 voters in the island with concerns such as "wildlife challenges" and support to redeem the $400 Climate Vouchers, adding that the team had gotten these residents' contacts to give them some assistance.
"No matter the number (of residents), we will definitely put in 100 per cent to continue to support everyone, and we will be thinking of some plans to kind of revitalise and help improve life on the island."
On April 21, at a press conference to introduce PAP's candidates contesting in the ward, SM Teo announced that he will not be standing for re-election in Pasir Ris-Changi GRC.
"I will continue to support PM Lawrence Wong and his 4G team and remain available to contribute to the team wherever and in whatever way PM Wong feels I can best serve," he said. Last-minute move to SDA
Chia Yun Kai, the newest member of Singapore Democratic Alliance (SDA) had previously started his one-man Most Valuable Party to contest East Coast GRC, but moved to SDA on Nomination Day (April 23).
The 32-year-old restaurant owner told AsiaOne that he made the switch because he had "aligned values" with SDA.
Formed in 2001, SDA is made up of two political parties — the Singapore Justice Party (SJP) and the Singapore Malay National Organisation, and has been contesting in Pasir Ris-Punggol since 2006.
For our GE2025 microsite, visit here.
[[nid:717377]]
bhavya.rawat@asiaone.com
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'Our role is to make ourselves obsolete': First-time WP candidates reflect on GE2025 and whether they'll run again, Singapore News
'Our role is to make ourselves obsolete': First-time WP candidates reflect on GE2025 and whether they'll run again, Singapore News

AsiaOne

time2 days ago

  • AsiaOne

'Our role is to make ourselves obsolete': First-time WP candidates reflect on GE2025 and whether they'll run again, Singapore News

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S'pore Govt asks inactive political parties including Barisan Sosialis for proof of existence
S'pore Govt asks inactive political parties including Barisan Sosialis for proof of existence

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S'pore Govt asks inactive political parties including Barisan Sosialis for proof of existence

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Polyclinic walk-ins, pickleball court among new Chua Chu Kang GRC initiatives in first 100 days: MPs
Polyclinic walk-ins, pickleball court among new Chua Chu Kang GRC initiatives in first 100 days: MPs

CNA

time5 days ago

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Polyclinic walk-ins, pickleball court among new Chua Chu Kang GRC initiatives in first 100 days: MPs

SINGAPORE: Priority polyclinic walk-ins for the elderly and the young, new connectivity options and a pickleball court are among the new initiatives that have been or will soon be rolled out in Choa Chu Kang, its Members of Parliament said on Sunday (Aug 10) in an update 100 days after the 2025 General Election. To help residents with living expenses, around 12,000 eligible households can also expect a constituency-wide programme in end-2025 to purchase essential items like rice and oil for S$1 (US$0.78). Speaking to the media about the developments in the People's Action Party-held (PAP) Group Representation Constituency, the four MPs - Minister for Manpower Tan See Leng, Acting Minister for Transport Jeffrey Siow, Dr Choo Pei Ling and Mr Zhulkarnain Abdul Rahim - introduced a number of initiatives that have been completed or are in the works since the party won Chua Chu Kang GRC. 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He also noted that fellow MP Jeffrey Siow is the Acting Transport Minister. Said Mr Siow: "Our focus ... going forward is to make sure that the parts of Choa Chu Kang town are both connected to the rest of Singapore, as well as internally within people are able to move and get around to where they want to go." Earlier in June, Mr Siow and Dr Choo said that eight new bus services will be introduced in Brickland and Tengah - the wards they oversee - by the end of next year. One of these, bus service 872, was launched on Sunday morning to connect Tengah Bus Interchange with Chinese Garden MRT. A new private bus service bridging Brickland and Buona Vista will begin on Monday, Mr Siow said. He also announced a new bus service 984 that is due to become operational in end-2025. The service will connect Brickland residents to Bukit Panjang and Jurong East MRT Stations. As for Tengah, Dr Choo, who is in charge of the ward, noted that the number of dwelling units in Tengah will increase from the current 12,000 to 15,000 by the end of this year. Newly moved-in residents at Tengah had previously complained about the lack of connectivity and amenities. On Sunday, she went through the list of new facilities that had opened in the past 100 days, including four new preschools, bringing the total to seven. A new 24-hour coffee shop and a 24-hour supermarket have also opened. A new commercial cluster across the Tengah Garden Avenue will open within an upcoming BTO estate, and Tengah Forest Drive will also have a new mosque, which will be the fifth in the GRC. The mosque will be located near Brickland Road and will be accessible to residents from Keat Hong as well, said Mr Zhulkarnain. A new pickleball court will be built near The Bricks, a sports facility at Choa Chu Kang Avenue 7, in the first quarter of next year. LONGER-TERM CHALLENGES Speaking to reporters, Dr Tan said team was able to quickly implement infrastructural plans such as covered linkways, which he described as "low hanging fruit". But there are also longer-term plans to address the "last 50 metres" of one's commute home and cannot be easily fixed due to the presence of critical underground infrastructure. "We also have to be cognisant of the fact that below what you see, (in our) subterranean there's a lot of infrastructure. There are power cables, there are water pipes, and there are also multiple infrastructures (that have) been laid there for many, many decades before that," he said. These are the kinds of infrastructure that might not have available plans and drawings due to their age, but the team will continue to "explore" them, he said. Another issue was rapidly aging population in Chua Chu Kang GRC, particularly Teck Whye, in contrast with the younger families in Tengah, Dr Tan said. "So in that sense itself, because of the changing population demographics, a longer type of planning includes studying the trend and also the movement of residents in and within Teck Whye," he said, adding that the team was studying the care arrangements of younger families with lower income. Dr Tan also made reference to his previous stint as MP of Marine Parade GRC, which has since become a part of Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC. "Some of the initiatives that I carried out successfully in the past, in my other GRC, in Marine Parade ... I'm thinking of imbibing, taking some of it and replicating it here, but those would take time for us to conduct a more detailed study," he said. Asked if there were differences between Choa Chu Kang and Marine Parade, Dr Tan pointed to the undulating terrain in Teck Whye, which contrasted to the flat, low-lying land in his old estate. "And as a result of the undulating nature of the terrain, then all the more connectivity is actually going to be key to get the residents to move out of the house and to walk," he said. He noted how flats built on hilltops also made for good views and presented opportunities for the lived environment. "So the key thing is that, how do we therefore merge, how do we integrate the beauty here in terms of the nature, the greenery, and harmonising that undulating landscape with a very nice lived environment that can actually cater to a population, a resident population of all ages? "I think that's a challenge, and that's something that I'm trying to see how I can get creative architects, landscape architects, to help us in the next bound, to see whether we can come up with something that is cogent and, of course, that is affordable."

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