WP希望增加收入以抵消消费税(GST)的上涨; PAP解释为什么不能这么做
财政部长黃循财在预算辩论中发言,拒绝了工人党提出的增加收入作为应对即将到来的GST上涨的替代方案。

财政部长黃循财在预算辩论中发言,拒绝了工人党提出的增加收入作为应对即将到来的GST上涨的替代方案。
PAP manifesto focuses on economic growth, education, social support, healthcare, housing, sustainability, arts, and social cohesion, with detailed initiatives in each area.
The People's Action Party (PAP) launched their manifesto last Thursday (Apr 17), titled "Changed World, Fresh Team, New Resolve – Securing a Brighter Future for You."
Manifesto focuses on economic growth, education, social support, healthcare, housing, sustainability, arts, and social cohesion, with detailed initiatives in each area.
Here are the key points:
The PAP, as the ruling party, launched its manifesto on April 17, 2025, titled "Our Manifesto, Our Promise," at Infinite Studios. Prime Minister Lawrence Wong emphasized navigating global changes and defending Singapore's interests. Key proposals include:
Education is framed as a cornerstone for future success, with a focus on inclusivity and lifelong learning:
This pillar aims to build a flexible and inclusive education system, though challenges may arise in scaling these initiatives effectively.
Social support is a critical focus, aiming to uplift vulnerable groups and ensure inclusivity:
These measures aim to create a more inclusive society, though their impact may vary based on funding and community uptake.
Healthcare initiatives are designed to cover the entire lifespan, ensuring comprehensive care:
These initiatives aim to build a robust healthcare system, though challenges may include workforce retention and funding sustainability.
Housing remains a priority, addressing both supply and quality of living:
These efforts aim to ensure affordable and quality housing, though market dynamics may pose implementation challenges.
Sustainability is a key focus, balancing urban development with environmental care:
These initiatives aim to create a sustainable urban environment, though their success may depend on community engagement and funding.
Arts and culture are highlighted as vital for quality of life and national identity:
These efforts aim to enrich cultural and sporting life, though their impact may vary based on public participation.
Social cohesion is framed as essential for national unity and resilience:
These measures aim to build a united and engaged society, though their effectiveness may depend on community buy-in.
Pillar | Key Initiative | Target Beneficiaries |
---|---|---|
Economic Growth | Adopt AI and clean energy | Businesses, PMETs |
Education | Build 4 new SPED schools by 2030 | Students with special needs |
Social Support | Extend Progressive Wages to more sectors | Lower-wage workers |
Healthcare | Add 13,600 new hospital beds in 5 years | General population |
Housing | Build 50,000 new HDB flats in 3 years | Home seekers |
Sustainability | Create 25 new parks | Residents, environmentalists |
Arts and Culture | Expand SG Culture Pass | Arts enthusiasts |
Social Cohesion | Enhance integration efforts | New citizens, diverse groups |
在全球地缘政治的风暴中,新加坡如何驾驭大国博弈?选择中立意味着在经济与安全上避免与任何一方结盟。然而,新加坡对中美两大市场的深层依赖,迫使其采取务实外交。这不是中立性的试炼——而是实力的彰显。通过在供应链、科技与外交领域砥砺锋芒,新加坡并非规避站队,而是化被动为主动,让大国竞相争取其青睐。这不是中立——这是实力。
新加坡能否在动荡的地缘政治格局中保持中立?
前贸易及工业部长、现任教育部长陈振声在新传媒播客中指出,问题不在于选择站队——有时这由不得你——而在于让新加坡变得如此不可或缺,以至于各方都想分一杯羹。
陈部长的洞见凸显了新加坡务实的外交策略,但却掩盖了一个冷峻的事实:在中美之间深厚的经济与战略纠葛面前,中立不过是一场海市蜃楼。
由于与美国和中国的经济、战略及地缘政治联系根深蒂固,新加坡在中美贸易战中无法保持真正中立。
2023年,中国占新加坡出口的14%(830亿美元),进口的13%;美国则占出口的13%(760亿美元),进口的10%。
美国的外国直接投资(2340亿美元)是新加坡经济增长的引擎,而中国的“一带一路”倡议则充分利用新加坡港口的枢纽地位,2024年处理了3700万标准箱(TEU)。
新加坡支持美国主导的印太框架,如2022年启动的“印太经济繁荣框架”(IPEF)。这一由14国(不含中国)组成的联盟,旨在促进贸易与供应链韧性。
被排除在IPEF之外的中国,将其视为美国遏制其地区影响力的棋局。中国外交部长王毅痛斥这是经济“脱钩”与“煽动对抗”的企图。
2024年,中国官媒点名批评新加坡在IPEF中的角色,暗示可能招致贸易报复,至今虽未见实质行动,但信号清晰:当最大贸易伙伴感到被背叛,中立不过是镜花水月。
在安全领域,新加坡依赖美国,尤其是在动荡地区维持威慑力量,这使其战略天平有所倾斜。
真正的中立要求疏远与美国的防务合作,但面对区域威胁——包括中国在南海对东盟的强硬姿态——这一选项几无可能。
尽管新加坡在南海没有主权声索,但其支持基于规则的国际秩序,暗中配合美国针对中国主张的“航行自由”行动。这一立场在《2024年新加坡外交政策报告》中清晰阐述,引发中国不满,重创其中立形象。
作为东盟核心成员,新加坡致力于区域团结。然而,东盟内部裂痕——柬埔寨与老挝亲近中国,菲律宾与越南倾向美国——使中立成为外交雷区。
选择中立意味着在经济与安全上避免与任何一方结盟,但新加坡对中美市场的依赖迫使其采取务实外交。
偏向一方可能疏远另一方,而超然物外则可能使新加坡在全球贸易网络中被边缘化。
因此,新加坡追求“战略自主”——两面下注、多元化伙伴关系、保持最大灵活性。这种策略宛如一辆精密战车,游走于大国博弈之间,而不被任何一方完全吞并。
2023年,新加坡6000亿新元的经济在关税逆风中仍增长1.2%,彰显其非凡韧性。
新加坡的真正优势不在于回避站队,而在于让自己成为不可或缺的枢纽,让大国竞相拉拢。
这不是中立——这是实力。
Dr Tan called PM Wong's statement on the US tariffs as a fear-mongering but later admitted that it's a very serious problem.
During the PSP's manifesto launch early this month (Apr 6), Dr Tan Cheng Bock, the party's chairman, criticized the government's response to the US tariffs as "overblown".
He suggested that the government's strong warnings, such as Prime Minister Lawrence Wong's (PM Wong) statement on about the "likelihood of a full-blown global trade war," might be an attempt to "instil fear" in voters to make them choose the incumbent as a "safe bet" ahead of the General Election.
In a YouTube video, PM Wong urged Singaporeans to brace themselves because the risks are real and the stakes high.
Dr Tan called for economists to study the real impact of the tariffs. "Don't just make statements of this kind and scare everybody," he said.
On Saturday (Apr 19), Dr Tan reiterated his party’s stance on the trade war, calling it “a very difficult problem, but a very serious problem” that “we are not taking lightly”.
He said: "Trump is so unpredictable. I cannot give you the answer also. But i don't think that we are just lying low and say oh, nothing to worry. of course, we worry differently. We are looking for answers. This is a very difficult, serious problem. And we are not taking it lightly."
PSP's position on the US tariffs reflects a critical view of the government's initial response as potentially exaggerated for political gain but later recognized the trade war's significant economic implications that should not be taken lightly.
The manifesto focuses on reducing economic inequality, enhancing social welfare, reforming education, and strengthening democratic governance.
The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) released its manifesto for Singapore's 2025 General Election under the slogan “Thrive, Not Just Survive,” presenting a comprehensive set of policy proposals to address key national issues.
The SDP highlights Singapore’s rising cost of living, driven by high housing prices, healthcare costs, and regressive taxation like the Goods and Services Tax (GST). The party critiques policies that burden the middle and lower classes while wealth concentrates among the elite.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
---|---|---|
Taxation | Abolish GST on essentials, tax top 1%, reinstate estate duty | Reduce regressive tax burden, fund social programs |
Salaries | Cut ministerial salaries | Redirect funds to aid the poor |
Wages | Introduce minimum wage | Ensure dignified living standards |
Reserves | Increase transparency | Promote equitable use of public funds |
The SDP criticizes the high cost of Housing and Development Board (HDB) flats, driven by land costs and the 99-year lease decay issue. The party proposes restructuring the housing system to prioritize affordability and sustainability.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
---|---|---|
NOM Scheme | Cap HDB flats at S$270,000, exclude land costs | Make housing affordable, curb speculation |
VERS | Sustainable en-bloc redevelopment | Address lease decay, maintain affordability |
Supply | Build more flats | Reduce waiting times, stabilize prices |
The SDP aims to prioritize Singaporeans in employment, reduce reliance on foreign labor, and address wage stagnation, particularly for Professionals, Managers, Executives, and Technicians (PMETs), in a workforce where foreign workers comprise ~39% (2024 data).
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
---|---|---|
Wages | Minimum wage | Ensure fair compensation |
Employment | Talent Track Scheme, prioritize Singaporeans | Protect local job opportunities |
Foreign Labor | Reduce reliance | Increase jobs for Singaporeans |
CPF | Scrap Minimum Sum Scheme | Enhance retirement flexibility |
The SDP seeks to strengthen social support, focusing on healthcare, marginalized communities, and gender equality, replacing complex schemes with accessible programs.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
---|---|---|
Healthcare | NHIF, free maternal/pediatric care | Reduce medical costs, support families |
Malay Community | 10-point upliftment plan | Address inequality, promote inclusion |
Gender Equality | Women’s Wing initiatives | Enhance women’s rights, work-life balance |
The SDP critiques Singapore’s exam-driven education system for fostering stress and inequality, proposing reforms to prioritize holistic development.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
---|---|---|
PSLE | Abolish PSLE | Reduce exam stress, promote holistic growth |
Class Sizes | Smaller classes | Enhance personalized learning |
Curriculum | Focus on critical thinking, creativity | Prepare students for diverse futures |
Equity | Address disparities | Ensure equal educational opportunities |
The SDP addresses concerns over the People’s Action Party’s (PAP) dominance and restrictions on freedom of expression, seeking to enhance transparency and civil liberties.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
---|---|---|
Salaries | Reduce ministerial salaries | Promote public service ethos |
Free Speech | Reform POFMA, protect rights | Enhance democratic expression |
Constitution | Strengthen civil liberties | Foster open society |
GLCs | Divest inefficient GLCs | Promote market competition |
Regional Ties | Democratic partnerships | Strengthen regional democratic values |
The SDP emphasizes environmental sustainability, addressing climate change and resource management in a densely populated nation.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
---|---|---|
Climate | Strengthen Paris Agreement commitments | Reduce carbon footprint |
EVs | Incentivize EV adoption | Lower transportation emissions |
Population | Oppose 10 million target | Ensure sustainable growth |
Haze | Enforce Transboundary Haze Act | Address regional pollution |
Waste | Reduce single-use packaging | Minimize environmental impact |
Launched ahead of the May 3, 2025, General Election, the SDP’s manifesto reflects its social liberal democratic vision, emphasizing affordability, equity, and sustainability.
Key proposals, such as the S$270,000 HDB price cap and opposition to a 10 million population, include specific figures, but most policies (e.g., building more flats, minimum wage, class size reductions) lack quantitative details, such as numerical targets or cost estimates.
Implementation challenges include fiscal costs (e.g., NHIF, GST exemptions), political resistance to bold reforms (e.g., PSLE abolition, GLC divestment), and the SDP’s limited electoral success (no seats since 1997).
The 122-page document, launched at the WP headquarters, outlines 125 policy proposals across five key areas: affordability and cost of living, economic growth and opportunities, inclusion and equality, accountability and democracy, and security and geopolitics.
The Workers' Party (WP) released its manifesto for Singapore's 2025 General Election last Thursday (Apr 17) titled “Working for Singapore.”
The 122-page document, launched at the WP headquarters, outlines 125 policy proposals across five key areas: affordability and cost of living, economic growth and opportunities, inclusion and equality, accountability and democracy, and security and geopolitics.
Below is a detailed, reorganized summary of the manifesto’s key points, structured for clarity and coherence.
The WP proposes a range of measures to address Singapore’s high cost of living, focusing on transparency, alternative revenue sources, financial safety nets, and affordability of essential services and goods.
Transparency in Cost Management: Establish a Standing Parliamentary Committee on Cost of Living to monitor and ensure transparency in addressing living expenses.
Alternative Revenue Sources: Reduce reliance on Goods and Services Tax (GST) by:
Recognizing revenue from land sales over the first 9 years immediately.
Increasing the Net Investment Returns Contribution (NIRC) from 50% to 60%.
Introducing taxes on alcohol, carbon, and tobacco.
Implementing a net wealth tax of 0.5-2% on the top 1% of wealth holders.
Setting a minimum corporate tax rate of 15%.
GST Exemptions: Exempt essential items, such as basic food, from GST to lower costs for households.
Redundancy Insurance Scheme: Introduce a scheme providing 40% of the last drawn salary for 6 months, capped at 40% of median income, funded by a 0.1% monthly premium shared between employers and employees.
Retrenchment Benefits: Mandate retrenchment benefits for private sector employers with 25 or more employees.
National Minimum Wage: Set a minimum wage of $1,600 for full-time workers, pro-rated for part-time workers.
Tiered Utility Pricing: Implement tiered pricing for electricity and water with a graduated Water Conservation Tax ranging from 30-60%.
Healthcare Affordability:
Lift the MediSave cap for individuals over 60 to increase access to savings for medical expenses.
Introduce the Silver Living Development Scheme for affordable assisted living facilities.
Include persons with disabilities (PwDs) in Community Health Assist Scheme (CHAS) subsidies.
Establish a National Cancer Care Appeals Board to handle complex cancer cases.
Housing Affordability:
Ensure the Housing Price Index (HPI) ratio is ≤3.0 for first-time Build-To-Order (BTO) buyers.
Offer 70-year BTO leases at lower prices with an option to extend to 99 years.
Implement a universal buy-back scheme for ageing HDB flats.
Support for Local Businesses:
Have the National Environment Agency (NEA) manage hawker centres to keep costs low.
Have the Housing Development Board (HDB) reacquire coffee shops to control rental prices.
Have JTC Corporation expand low-rent industrial spaces for small businesses.
Cap rental growth to the rate of inflation.
Education Subsidies:
Extend preschool fee assistance to all preschools in HDB estates.
Equalize Special Education (SPED) school fees to $13 per month.
Transport Affordability:
Reduce Certificate of Entitlement (COE) volatility by redistributing quotas, categorizing motorcycle COEs by value, requiring private hire cars to be in the Open category, and ensuring equitable Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) 2.0 with discounts.
Establish a National Transport Corporation (NTC) to operate public transport on a non-profit basis.
Provide free off-peak public transport for seniors and PwDs.
Increase subsidies for school buses for students with disabilities.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
Revenue Alternatives | Wealth tax, increased NIRC, new taxes | Reduce GST reliance, fund social programs |
Financial Safety Nets | Redundancy insurance, minimum wage | Protect workers from economic shocks |
Housing | Affordable BTO leases, buy-back scheme | Make homeownership accessible |
Transport | Non-profit NTC, free off-peak transport | Lower commuting costs for vulnerable groups |
The WP aims to foster economic growth by prioritizing local talent, supporting small businesses, and preparing for an ageing population through innovative industries and financial reforms.
Local Talent Development:
Tie Employment Pass (EP) renewals to skills transfer programs to benefit local workers.
Introduce fixed-term passes for industries with fewer local shortages.
Track and report Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for foreign worker employment.
Expand intakes at Institutes of Technical Education (ITE), polytechnics, and universities for Shortage Occupation List (SOL) roles.
Lower the SkillsFuture mid-career qualifying age to 35.
Offer interest-free SkillsFuture education loans for Continuing Education and Training (CET).
Allow SkillsFuture Credit to be used for AI subscriptions.
Align curriculum with labor market needs through feedback loops.
Subsidize tradespersons licensing courses for those under 40 and enforce licensing.
Track skills-related underemployment to address workforce mismatches.
Support for SMEs:
Train managers in leadership skills to improve business efficiency.
Benchmark salaries by sector to ensure competitiveness.
Streamline grants for green transitions, such as the Energy Efficient Grant.
Establish an Export-Import Bank (Exim Bank) to support exports, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), digitalization, and sustainability.
Retirement Age Reform: Abolish the statutory retirement age, complementing the Workplace Fairness Act 2025, without affecting the CPF Payout Age.
Silver Industries: Develop telemedicine, healthtech, mobility tech, elderly nutrition, and assisted living solutions to cater to nearly 1 million elderly by 2030.
CPF Enhancements:
Offer an option to co-invest with the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC) for higher returns.
Provide special dividends from GIC returns.
Review the CPF Ordinary Account (OA) interest rate formula.
De-link the HDB loan rate from the CPF OA rate, pegging it to 0.1% above the 3-month fixed deposit rate, with a floor of 2.6%.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
Local Talent | Skills transfer, education expansion | Increase employability of Singaporeans |
SMEs | Leadership training, green grants | Boost small business competitiveness |
Silver Industries | Telemedicine, healthtech development | Address needs of ageing population |
CPF | Co-investment with GIC, revised interest rates | Enhance retirement savings |
The WP seeks to promote social equity by addressing poverty, supporting vulnerable groups, and ensuring fair access to education, healthcare, and employment opportunities.
Social Outcome Tracking: Publish a developmental dashboard covering GDP, inequality, participation, health, and climate goals; adopt the ILO Social Protection Framework; issue annual reports.
Poverty Line: Set an official poverty line through a committee with government, civil society, and academia; peg assistance thresholds to this line.
Support for Parents and Caregivers:
Extend childcare leave per child up to age 12.
Establish Family Care Leave of up to 6 days per year, with the first 3 days employer-paid.
Provide additional leave for multiple care recipients.
Compensate caregivers with tiered payments and CPF contributions.
Expand the Home Caregiving Grant to $600 per month for Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs).
Create a single support point for parents of disabled children.
Expand the Early Intervention Programme for Infants and Children (EIPIC).
Expand respite care with subsidies for lower-income families.
Offer tax relief for employers with re-entry programs.
Gender Health Gap: Include peri/menopausal check-ups and physiotherapy subsidies in Healthier SG, and provide support for mothers.
Dental Care: Expand subsidies and allow MediSave use for dental care from age 60 by mid-2026.
Polyclinic Access: Increase walk-in slots at polyclinics for seniors and PwDs.
Education Reforms:
Reduce class sizes to 23 (from 29-33, compared to OECD’s 21-24).
Implement later school start times: primary at 8:00 am, secondary at 8:30 am, post-secondary at 9:00 am.
Offer an optional 10-year through-train programme from Primary 1 to Secondary 4, eliminating the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE).
Introduce a Teach for Singapore scheme for dual-trained teachers.
Centralize tuition for low-income students on school premises with Edusave incentives.
SkillsFuture for PwDs: Enhance SkillsFuture programs to better support persons with disabilities.
Housing for Singles: Lower the minimum age for buying BTO flats for singles to 28.
Ethnic Integration Policy: Abolish block quotas while retaining neighborhood quotas.
Foreign Spouses: Implement a points-based residency system with transparent rejection reasons.
Workplace Fairness:
Require employers with 10 or more employees to report gender pay gaps.
Ban non-compete clauses for mid- and low-level employees.
Enhance the Workplace Fairness Act to better protect PwDs.
Revert the Working Mother’s Child Relief (WMCR) to a percentage-based system with a $1,000 tax credit for mothers earning less than $25,000.
National Holidays: Reinstate Thaipusam as a national holiday, bringing the total to 12 holidays.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
Poverty Reduction | Official poverty line, social outcome tracking | Target aid to those in need |
Caregiver Support | Extended leave, financial aid | Ease burden on families |
Education Access | Smaller classes, no PSLE option | Improve learning outcomes |
Workplace Equity | Gender pay gap reporting, no non-compete clauses | Promote fair employment practices |
The WP proposes reforms to strengthen democratic institutions, enhance transparency, and ensure fair elections and governance.
Accountability Mechanisms:
Establish an Office of Ombudsman to investigate complaints and publish annual reports.
Set up Select Committees for each ministry to oversee operations.
Form a non-partisan Parliamentary Budget Office to evaluate policy proposals.
Reform the Presidential Council for Minority Rights (PCMR) to be non-political with fixed terms.
Enhance the Ministerial Code with independent assessments by the Auditor-General and judges.
Regulate lobbying with a public register.
Voice and Agency:
Lower the voting age to 18 to increase youth participation.
Safeguard the independence of institutions like the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC), Elections Department (ELD), and Electoral Boundaries Review Committee (EBRC) under multi-partisan oversight.
Prohibit close relatives or political appointees from holding key positions in these institutions.
Anti-Corruption and Elections:
Reconstitute the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) as the NACC, led by an independent Commissioner, Deputy Commissioners, and CEO, overseen by a multi-partisan Parliamentary Committee.
Ensure ELD and EBRC operate independently from the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO).
Electoral Reforms:
Abolish Group Representation Constituencies (GRCs), Non-Constituency Member of Parliament (NCMP), and Nominated Member of Parliament (NMP) schemes.
Revert all GRCs to Single Member Constituencies (SMCs).
Require parties to field multiracial slates.
Amend Article 49 to hold by-elections within 3 months for vacant SMCs.
Presidency Reforms:
Revert to a ceremonial President appointed by Parliament.
Establish a separate Senate for discretionary powers.
Allow Parliament to overturn Senate veto with a three-quarters majority.
Local Governance: Abolish the Office of the Mayor and devolve its roles to other structures.
Advertising Transparency:
Require public sector and political advertising to declare sponsored content, disclose spending, measure effectiveness, and apply ROI tests.
Mandate political parties and candidates to disclose payments to digital content creators.
Labor Rights:
Allow independent trade unions.
Review the tripartite system.
Permit workers to form non-NTUC associations.
Information Access:
Institute a Freedom of Information Act for citizen requests.
Declassify National Archives after 25 years, with “Secret” material subject to requests.
Release Cabinet papers after 40 years.
Publish government population projections for 2040 and 2050.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
Governance | Ombudsman, independent oversight | Increase accountability |
Electoral System | Abolish GRCs, revert to SMCs | Ensure fairer elections |
Transparency | Freedom of Information Act, lobbying register | Enhance public trust |
Labor Rights | Independent unions, non-NTUC associations | Empower workers |
The WP proposes reforms to strengthen judicial independence, enhance public safety, promote environmental sustainability, and bolster national defense and diplomacy.
Judicial Reforms:
Enhance judicial oversight of ministerial decisions under acts like the Foreign Interference (Countermeasures) Act (FICA) and Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (POFMA), with court appeals and in-camera proceedings for national security.
Protect judicial independence by removing fixed-term Judicial Commissioners.
Amend the Administration of Justice Act to remove government immunity.
Restore the “real risk” threshold for scandalizing the judiciary.
Separate the Attorney-General’s roles into Public Prosecutor and Government Legal Advisor.
Raise judges’ retirement age from 65 to 70.
Have capital cases decided by a tribunal of two judges with unanimous decision.
Remove the mandatory death penalty.
Policing and Scams:
Enhance scam protections with an insurance scheme, a $500 consumer liability cap, and a Scam Victim Restitution Fund.
Have the Competition and Consumer Commission of Singapore (CCCS) enforce standards.
Safeguard arrested persons’ rights with legal information, early lawyer access, and video-recorded interviews.
Establish an Independent Police Complaints Commission.
Community Organizations:
Depoliticize taxpayer-funded organizations.
Abolish the Grassroots Advisor (GRA) position in the People’s Association (PA), led by neutral civil servants.
Foster ground-up National Sports Associations (NSAs).
Create an independent arts body for licensing and grants.
Environmental Sustainability:
Balance urban development with stronger environmental laws.
Monitor land use and designate secondary forests as reserves.
Conduct public Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs).
Increase renewables to 30% by 2030, 40% by 2035, and 50% by 2040.
Track natural capital in national income.
Preserve forests and mangroves.
Address greenwashing.
Make public EIAs and Environmental Management and Monitoring Plans (EMMPs).
Anti-Discrimination:
Legislate against discrimination.
Survey workplace harassment.
Criminalize uncovered behaviors.
National Defense:
Strengthen countermeasures against grey zone tactics.
Increase surveillance.
Enhance defense agreements.
Promote media literacy in schools and National Service (NS).
Protect subsea interests.
Enhance repair capabilities.
Implement psychological fitness assessments like the US Army General Assessment Tool (GAT).
Provide resilience training.
Defend digital space with Digital and Intelligence Service (DIS) integration.
Establish a vulnerability equities process.
Security Budgets:
Raise National Servicemen Full-time (NSFs)’ salaries to the median $1,600 per month, renamed “NS salary” with CPF contributions.
Ensure equal opportunities in the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF).
Provide fair representation.
Increase transparency in the Ministry of Defence (MINDEF) budget, currently $23.44 billion for FY2025, with $22.0 billion for military expenditure, broken down into equipment, maintenance, allowances, and salaries.
Grant Public Accounts Committee access.
Internal Resilience:
Maintain domestic manufacturing for essentials.
Grant legislative powers for emergencies.
Increase local farm uptake to 30% of nutritional needs by 2030.
Establish long-term contracts with institutional buyers.
Repeal the Internal Security Act (ISA).
Replace ISA with an anti-terrorism law with limited detention and court trials.
Diplomacy and Trade:
Strengthen ASEAN with majority voting, enforcement, collaboration, and people-to-people exchanges.
Support Myanmar stability via the ASEAN Five-Point Consensus.
Enforce arms export bans.
Support maritime peace in East Asia.
Encourage adherence to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).
Finalize the South China Sea (SCS) Code of Conduct.
Recognize the State of Palestine and support a two-state solution.
Establish a Singapore Agency for International Development for Official Development Assistance (ODA), focusing on Southeast Asia.
Policy Area | Key Proposal | Intended Impact |
Judicial Independence | Separate AG roles, remove mandatory death penalty | Strengthen rule of law |
Public Safety | Scam protections, police complaints commission | Enhance consumer and citizen protections |
Environment | Increase renewables, preserve forests | Promote sustainability |
Diplomacy | Strengthen ASEAN, recognize Palestine | Foster regional and global stability |
The WP’s manifesto builds on its 2020 manifesto, retaining unimplemented proposals and introducing new ones based on resident feedback.
The party emphasizes that its policies are developed independently of the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP), focusing on gaps in existing systems.
While the WP’s proposals are ambitious, their feasibility depends on parliamentary support and economic conditions.
For instance, the wealth tax and GST exemptions may face resistance due to fiscal implications, while electoral reforms like abolishing GRCs could spark debate over representation.
The WP’s focus on affordability and equality resonates with public concerns, but implementation would require careful prioritization and collaboration.
Su | Mo | Tu | We | Th | Fr | Sa |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 | 31 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 1 | 2 | 3 |