We all can agree that Singapore is a model city-state. We have top class infrastructure, education, workforce and a healthy economy. Many in the world envy our success and today Singaporeans are more looked up to compared to fellow Singaporeans a generation ago.
So why is it that John R.Bradley, in his book ‘After The Arab Spring’, compares the toppled Tunisian regime to Singapore’s governance? In his book, Bradley wrote that the Tunisian regime had dramatically increased the living standards of its people while demanding political acquiescence. The historic argument of the regime was that, in the chaos and vulnerability of newly independent societies, stability is imperative if progress is to be achieved. This Tunisian concept was said to be “loosely based on the Singapore model of governance”.
Is this how the western world views Singapore? A politically suppressive regime? An autocratic nation built around one man and his family? Surely, many people still equate Mr. Lee Kuan Yew, the founder of Singapore, as the face of Singapore. In Japanese newspapers, when an article mentions Singapore, it almost always features an interview with the man, or his son Mr. Lee Hsien Loong. Is Singapore’s political scene still stuck in the medieval era, where a ruling family holds the rein? Is the rest of world seeing Singapore as a democracy, or an autocratic society? When our leaders speak on the world stage about good governance, do we get applauded or dismissed?
I still remember those days when there were rumors of how people would get discriminated if they had not voted for the PAP in elections. I am sure many older Singaporeans still shy away from criticizing the PAP in fear of retaliation. But to compare the PAP to a regime is too overboard. Like Tunisia, we cherish political stability over democracy. Back during our youthful years, we were fighting the Communists and extremists. Our leaders had learnt to be tough in the face of opposition. Like the people of Tunisia, Singaporeans are willing to give up certain rights and freedom of speech for economic success. We have risen from a little unknown island to a nation recognized worldwide. Our GDP per person has risen over the years and is said to have topped that of the average Japanese. But unlike Tunisia, our government is not corrupt. It is not channeling money to personal accounts, nor is it fattening a closely knit circle of family and friends. Our government is one of the cleanest in the world. Nepotism is not a common practice. There is sufficient transparency in the political and business arena for Singapore to be consistently listed as one of the most attractive nation to invest in.
No doubt we Singaporeans have everything to thank Mr. Lee Kuan Yew for. Without him, there will not be a Singapore today. If you read his memoir, The Singapore Story, you will love the man. But respect and gratitude aside, it is time we move on. A successful company cannot be a one-man show. Likewise, a nation, to be strong, must not revolve on the cult of one man. There must be continuity in a country when a leader moves on (read – retire, not behind the scene). No doubt, we have had more than 10 years of rule by two prime ministers other than Mr. Lee Kuan Yee. But, Mr. Lee Kuan Yee and former prime minister Mr. Goh Chok Tong, are still politically active. It is time we set a retirement age for politicians, like that in the private sector. When people stay around for too long, especially when they have contributed tremendously to the success of a place, they tend to feel that they own the place and are indispensable.
A nation must be run with the future in mind, and it is only the young who can decide what they want in the future because they are the ones who will be around to face the music. I am a strong believer of delegating responsibility and power to the young. When you leave the governing of a nation to a group of seniors, who are way past their prime, you end up with a system which is short-sighted because these leaders cannot perceive a future decades away when they will all be gone. Like a loving parent who must let his child go so that he can spread his wings, a leader must learn to leave so that others can take over. As long as the father is still around, the son will not be taken seriously.
To be taken seriously on the world stage, we must also have a healthy opposition in our political scene. Our opposition parties are pathetic. Our election rallies are like soap operas, watched amusingly, but not seriously. In the last election, where PAP lost considerable support to the oppositions, many applauded that Singapore is finally entering an era of real democracy where the majority exercises their right to oppose. On closer scrutiny, the election results reflect more an anger of the people on certain issues, than on the attractiveness of the opposition parties. No Singaporean, in the right frame of mind, would truly believe that an opposition party in Singapore is capable of running our nation today.
Oppositions are an important part of a matured society. No one group of elite should be left with full control of a country. Human beings are not competent to exercise unlimited power with discretion. “….when I see that the right and the means of absolute command are conferred on any power whatever, be it called a people or a king, an aristocracy or a democracy, a monarchy or a republic, I say there is the germ of tyranny.” ➂
Legitimacy of a government is gained through debating and convincing oppositions to reach a consensus, and not through snubbing them out. Singapore should cultivate good opposition parties (not the bickering type) to represent the people’s varied interests and concerns. The government must not be a one party affair, it should be an alliance of different parties (albeit with PAP holding the majority) acting as checks and counter checks. Only when we stop making a laughing stock of our opposition parties will we be able to truly stand tall and be proud of our political system.
➂ Alexis De Tocqueville, in his book ‘Democracy in America’