Democratic Progressive Party (Singapore)

The Democratic Progressive Party (abbreviation: DPP) is an opposition political party in Singapore.[1]

Democratic Progressive Party
Chinese name民主进步党
Mínzhǔ Jìnbù Dǎng
Malay nameParti Demokratik Progresif
ڤرتي ديموکراتيک ڤروݢريسيف
Tamil nameஜனநாயக முற்போக்குக் கட்சி
Jaṉanāyaka Muṟpōkkuk Kaṭci
ChairmanTing Tze Jiang
Secretary-GeneralMohamad Hamim bin Aliyas
FounderSeow Khee Leng
Founded16 March 1973 (1973-03-16)
Headquarters64 Lucky Gardens, Singapore 467698
Ideology
Political positionCentre-left
Colours  White
  Orange
Parliament
0 / 104
Website
https://www.facebook.com/dppsg/

History and political development

From a splinter group from the Workers' Party, the party was founded by the former party's Assistant Secretary-General Seow Khee Leng on 16 March 1973, under the name of United Front.[2] On 5 March 1982, the party was renamed to Singapore United Front, to avoid confusion with the name of another party, United People's Front.

During the campaigning in the 1984 general election, SUF's chief Seow was sued by Lee Kuan Yew (who was then the Prime Minister of Singapore) alongside the members of People's Action Party for slandering defamatory remarks made at two rally speeches that Lee and his cabinet were guilty of corruption.[3] Seow was ordered to pay Lee and the PAP S$250,000 worth of damages and costs each, and by 3 February 1989, Seow was made bankrupt after being unable to keep up with the payments for the damages owned from two separate but similar libel suits brought by PM Lee and the PAP government.[4]

In January 1988, the party merged with Workers' Party to contest the 1988 general election. SUF was temporarily defunct until in 1992, Seow and former WP members revived the party, and renamed it to its current name, Democratic Progressive Party.[5]

Former WP member Tan Soo Phuan and his son Lead Shake stood as candidates for the party in the 1997 and 2001 general elections, though they did not achieve much electoral success, both saw the candidates losing their electoral deposits for failing to garner the necessary threshold of 12.5% of the valid votes cast (Soo Phuan in the 1997 election in Chua Chu Kang SMC, and Lead Shake in the 2001 election in Ayer Rajah SMC).

In July 2002, both father and son were subsequently expelled from the DPP, both for breaching party's orders during the 2001 elections without informing the party first (Soo Phuan did not inform his decision to contest MacPherson SMC, while Lead Shake contested Ayer Rajah instead of Joo Chiat SMC).[6]

After more than a decade of inactivity, in December 2012, Seow invited a group of former members of the Singapore People's Party (SPP) including Benjamin Pwee and Mohamad Hamim Bin Aliyas (SPP's founding member) to join and take over the leadership of the party. Pwee was appointed as the party's Acting Secretary-General in January 2013. At an Ordinary Party Congress meeting held on 31 March 2013, Hamim and Pwee were officially elected as the party's chairman and Secretary-General respectively.[7]

Pursuant to a Memorandum of Agreement signed in August 2015, Pwee and Hamim resigned from DPP to return to SPP to help their team contest Bishan–Toa Payoh Group Representation Constituency in the 2015 general election. However, the SPP team obtained only 26.41% of the valid votes. The duo returned to the DPP soon after.

In 2018, they were present in a meeting with six other opposition parties (Singaporeans First, Singapore Democratic Party, People's Power Party, National Solidarity Party, and People's Voice Party (formed by former NSP chief Lim Tean)), along with former PAP MP and Presidential Candidate Tan Cheng Bock, on the possibility of forming a collation (led by Tan) for the next election.[8]

On 19 February 2019, Pwee revealed that he had resigned from the secretary-general post and joined Singapore Democratic Party ahead of the forthcoming general election, four days later.[9] Hamim took over as the new secretary-general and leader, while organising secretary Ting Tze Jiang became chairman. Although expressed their intention and prepared to contest in the 2020 Singaporean general election, however, on 27 June 2020, the party announced that they would not be participating in the election and instead backed other smaller parties such as RP and PPP.[10]

Objectives and policies

A statement dated 22 April 2013 on the DPP website states "The way forward is to build a society that is equal and egalitarian to all citizens."

A statement dated 16 August 2015 on the DPP website sets out the following policies or proposals:

  • Employment: Additional policy measures to ensure a “Singaporeans-first” domestic job market, especially in middle-to-upper management in the civil service and government-linked companies, as well as the private sector.
  • Foreign workers: Restrictions to foreign workers in Singapore by industrial sectors, allowing sectors like F&B where fewer Singaporeans are trained for or are interested to work, to employ more foreign workers. And for sectors like engineering, healthcare, banking, to have tighter restrictions, to allow Singaporean PMETs to take on these middle-income jobs more easily.
  • Re-skilling: better, more hands-on, more commonplace apprenticeship-based re-skilling programmes for middle-aged workers, rather than classroom-based, taught WDA/WSQ-type programmes that do not fit these middle-aged workers’ learning styles.
  • SMEs: practical support for SMEs, including setting up an SME assistance centre, a job-matching programme, a revolving loan fund, an incubation programme, and a mentor-coaching programme, to help owners and managers of SMEs to get back on their feet and become self-sustainable in their businesses.
  • Entrepreneurs: policy measures to complement the government’s existing range of solutions, to better help local entrepreneurs start a business and earn a living. This includes those in the design, arts, construction, manufacturing and other sectors.
  • Central Provident Fund/retirement: a wider range of options and retirement savings programmes that Singaporeans can choose from. Key leaders in the private sector insurance and investment industry to be called upon to come up with better investment and insurance schemes under the CPF structure, to fill in the current gaps in the CPF system.
  • Malay-Muslim issues: identifying and challenging more Malay-Muslim PMETs to step forward as next-generation community leaders, and together find new solutions for the Malay-Muslim community.

Organisation and structure

Central Executive Committee

As of 23 February 2019, the CEC consist of:[11]

Officer-holder Name
ChairmanTing Tze Jiang
Secretary-GeneralMohamad Hamim Aliyas
Assistant Secretary-GeneralJuliana binte Juwahir
TreasurerAbdul Malik Bin Rahmat
Organising SecretarySa'aban bin Ali

Electoral performance

In the 2015 elections, the party was temporarily merged with Singapore People's Party; The results in the list display only the results earned in their contested constituency (Bishan–Toa Payoh Group Representation Constituency)

Election Seats up for election Seats contested by party Seats won by walkover Contested seats won Contested seats lost Total seats won Change Total votes Share of votes Popular vote Resulting Government
1976 69 14 0 0 14
0 / 69
Steady 53,373 25.3% 6.5% No seats
1980 75 8 0 0 8
0 / 75
Steady 27,522 19.0% 4.3% No seats
1984 79 13 0 0 13
0 / 79
Steady 87,237 34.2% 10.0% No seats
1997 83 2 0 0 2
0 / 83
Steady 5,043 12.3% 0.7% No seats
2001 84 2 0 0 2
0 / 84
Steady 5,334 14.3% 0.9% No seats
2015 89 2 0 0 2
0 / 89
Steady 31,049 26.41% 1.38% No seats

Parliamentary by-election results (as United Front)

Election Seats up for election Seats contested by party Contested seats won Contested seats lost Total votes Share of votes Outcome of election Constituency contested
1979 7 1 0 1 2,642 5.4% No seat Mountbatten SMC

References

  1. "The dummy's guide to Singapore's political parties: The DPP edition". AsiaOne. 18 June 2020.
  2. "Breakaway group from the WP forms new party". The Straits Times. 30 December 1972. Archived from the original on 8 July 2015. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  3. "PM and Cabinet sue SUF's Seow Khee Leng". The Singapore Monitor – Evening Edition. 21 December 1984. Archived from the original on 1 July 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  4. "Seow Khee Leng made bankrupt over amount owed to PM". The Business Times. 4 February 1989. Archived from the original on 13 June 2015. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  5. Democratic Progressive Party Archived 8 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine, singapore-elections.com. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
  6. "DPP slipper man and father sacked". Today. 2 July 2002. Archived from the original on 12 June 2015. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  7. "Democratic Progressive Party's 40th Anniversary". The Online Citizen. 31 December 2013. Archived from the original on 26 June 2015. Retrieved 31 December 2013.
  8. "7 opposition parties discuss forming a new coalition, invite former PAP MP Tan Cheng Bock to be leader". The Straits Times. 28 July 2018. Archived from the original on 15 August 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  9. "Former opposition leader Benjamin Pwee to join Singapore Democratic Party". TodayOnline. Archived from the original on 24 February 2019. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
  10. Jean Iau (27 June 2020). "Singapore GE2020: DPP will not contest in this election, will support RP and PPP". The Straits Times. The Straits Times. Singapore Press Holdings. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  11. "Former DPP chief Benjamin Pwee applies to join SDP". StraitsTimes. 20 February 2019. Archived from the original on 24 February 2019. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
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