GE2025: Singapore’s global partners note strong support for PAP in poll results, says Josephine Teo

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(From left) The Jalan Besar GRC team, consisting of Shawn Loh,  Denise Phua, Josephine Teo, and Wan Rizal Wan Zakariah pose for a photo with residents on a walkabout at Beo Crescent Market on May 4.

(From left, in white) The Jalan Besar GRC team, comprising Mr Shawn Loh, Ms Denise Phua, Mrs Josephine Teo and Dr Wan Rizal Wan Zakariah, posing for a photo with a resident at Beo Crescent Market on May 4.

ST PHOTO: TARYN NG

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SINGAPORE - Singapore’s international partners have been watching the outcome of the May 3 general election, and apart from sending congratulatory messages, some have noted the strong showing by the ruling party.

Speaking to reporters on May 4, a day after the PAP clinched a landslide victory with a

vote share of 65.57 per cent

, Minister for Digital Development and Information Josephine Teo said those “watching from afar” have also commented that Singapore voters have been “very rational in recognising the risks and uncertainties”.

“(Some have also) signalled their belief that a united Singapore is more prepared to weather these storms that are bound to hit Singapore,” she said of the PAP’s win.

“(Looking) at the results for the PAP in this general election, I think it is a very strong signal of support for the team led by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong,” added Mrs Teo, who leads the PAP team that won Jalan Besar GRC.

Singaporeans have returned the ruling party to power, heeding PM Wong’s call for a strong PAP team to steer the country through coming storms.

The party

secured 87 of 97 seats

in an election that took place against a backdrop of global uncertainty and trade wars.

“At the national level, there are many issues that we must tackle. Certainly, the geopolitical disruptions and the total reset of the international trade system, as well as the world order that we used to know and benefit from, will challenge us in the next term of government,” Mrs Teo said.

She said the Government will identify ways to strengthen Singapore’s position in this “major reshuffling of circumstances”. She believes Singapore has a strong parliament that will allow for the debate of options in a rational manner that also best serves the interests of its people.

Mrs Teo and her team of newly elected MPs for Jalan Besar GRC were at Beo Crescent Market and Food Centre on May 4 to thank residents for their support.

The PAP team, which also comprises Ms Denise Phua, Dr Wan Rizal Wan Zakariah and new face Shawn Loh, won 75.21 per cent of the vote.

They defeated the People’s Alliance for Reform, an opposition coalition, which received 24.79 per cent of the vote.

Jalan Besar GRC MP Josephine Teo embracing a resident while on a walkabout to thank supporters at Beo Crescent Market on May 4.

ST PHOTO: TARYN NG

Mrs Teo said: “We have always said we do not take any single vote for granted, and we have every intention of fulfilling our pledge – that is, to be honest, to be hard-working, and to be helpful in terms of the plans for our town.”

The PAP teams from Bishan-Toa Payoh and Marymount were also making their rounds early on May 4, greeting residents from an open-top bus and making pit stops at markets and coffee shops.

Expanding on an earlier pledge to push for a hawker centre in Bishan, Transport Minister Chee Hong Tat told reporters that he will work with the Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment and National Environment Agency to achieve this.

But it was still too early to give specifics, he added.

“We see how hawker centres have benefited our residents in Toa Payoh and also in other towns, and I believe this will also benefit our residents here in Bishan,” said Mr Chee, who had first raised the possibility at an April 30 rally.

The four-man team in Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC,

led by Mr Chee and including Mr Saktiandi Supaat, Mr Cai Yinzhou, and Ms Elysa Chen, garnered 75.21 per cent of the vote against the Singapore People’s Party in the May 3 polls.

Mr Chee said he will get Ms Chen and Mr Cai, both political greenhorns, involved in town council work as he sees it as a useful way for them to learn how to improve the lives of residents.

Asked about balancing his grassroots work with his ministerial duties, Mr Chee said it was important to build and empower a team he could work with on these matters.

MP for Marymount SMC Gan Siow Huang, who will be returning for a second term, told reporters at Bishan North Shopping Mall that she was humbled by the support and recognition from residents.

“I think the strong mandate gives us a lot of confidence that we should push ahead with the plans that we have in mind for Marymount,” said Ms Gan, who captured 70.70 per cent of the vote against her Progress Singapore Party opponent Jeffrey Khoo’s 29.3 per cent.

Ms Gan also noted some areas for improvement, including providing more caregiver support to residents in Marymount, which has a large proportion of middle-aged, middle-class residents with elderly family members.

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