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Polling of Singapore's general election underway
SINGAPORE, May 6 (Xinhua) -- The polling of Singapore's 10th general election began at 8:00 a.m. on Saturday. More than 1.22 million electors are expected to cast their votes at 422 polling stations in the following 12 hours. Of them, 553 overseas voters will be voting at eight polling centers in Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, London, Washington, San Francisco, Canberra and Tokyo, which is the city state's first overseas voting. Backgrounder: Singapore Parliament and general election SINGAPORE, May 5 (Xinhua) -- The
Singapore Parliament has a single House and Members of Parliament (MPs) are
voted in at regular general elections. The five-year term of each Parliament
starts from the date of its first sitting after a general election.
The leader of the political party
that wins the majority of the parliamentary seats will become the Prime
Minister, as asked by the President, and the Prime Minister will select his
ministers from elected MPs to form the Cabinet. Singapore's Constitution requires
that each Parliament must be dissolved no later than the end of its five-year
term and that general elections must be held no later than three months from the
dissolution of the previous Parliament. Singapore's last general election
was held in November 2001, in which the People's Action Party (PAP) got 75
percent of the votes and won 82 out of the 84 parliamentary seats, while the
Workers' Party (WP) and the Singapore Democratic Alliance (SDA) gained one seat
each. The then secretary general of the
PAP Goh Chok Tong became the Prime Minister and formed the Cabinet. Lee Hsien
Loong took over office as Prime Minister from Goh in August 2004 and became
PAP's secretary general in December of the same year. On April 20 this year, President S.
R. Nathan dissolved Parliament on the advice of Prime Minister Lee and the
government announced on the same day that the polling day for the next general
election will be on May 6. According to the Parliamentary
Elections Act, there are Single Member Constituencies (SMCs) and Group
Representation Constituencies (GRCs) in the city state's general election.
Political parties need to field one
candidate to contest a SMC and send a team of five or six candidates, including
one from minority communities, to contest a GRC. The Act stipulates that there shall
at all times be at least eight SMCs, while the purpose of having GRCs, a
practice began from 1988, is to ensure the representation of Members from the
Malay, Indian and other minority communities in Parliament.
In this year's general election,
there are altogether nine SMCs, nine five-member GRCs and five six-member GRCs,
making the total number of elected MPs to be 84. The identities of all the
candidates, as well as the constituency in which each of them is fielded, are
confirmed and publicized on nomination day, which is not less than nine days or
more than eight weeks before the polling day. Candidates are required to present
their nomination papers, including certificate of eligibility, minority
community certificate and political donations certificate, together with a
deposit of 13,500 Singapore dollars (about 8,455 U.S. dollars), tothe election
officers on the day. Candidates in such constituencies
where there is no contest from other political parties will be declared elected
MPs on nomination day. If a political party gains more than
half of the parliamentary seats on nomination day, it immediately becomes the
ruling party and the polling will not be held as scheduled. Instead,
by-elections will be held at a re-arranged date. The period between the close of the
nomination and the eve of polling day is the time for campaign, during which
political parties may hold election rallies, conduct walkabouts and door-to-door
visits in constituencies, as well as delivering television speeches, so far as
they abide by strict rules on election campaigning. Come polling day, eligible voters
residing in contested constituencies will cast their votes at polling stations,
which are open from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., and the winners will become MPs in
the new Parliament. On April 27, nomination day of this
year's election, the ruling PAP secured 37 of the 84 parliamentary seats in
seven uncontested GRCs while the opposition parties, including the WP, the SDA
and the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP), fielded 47 candidates in all the other
constituencies to challenge the PAP. It is for the first time since 1988
that the PAP did not win a majority of the total seats to declare victory in the
general election on nomination day. More than 1.22 million voters,
including 553 overseas voters, are expected to cast their votes at 422 polling
stations island wide on May 6. According to the Parliamentary Elections Act, all Singapore citizens, aged 21 and above on 1 January 2006, who are ordinarily resident in the city state, are registered as voters in this year's general election. Nearly 2.16 million of Singapore's some 4 million population are eligible to vote in the election. Enditem |
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