Showing posts with label Workers’ Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Workers’ Party. Show all posts

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Yaw Shin Leong's interview

工人党秘书饶欣龙 “先思后冲”不当“小怒汉”











工人党秘书饶欣龙。







 






理念不同,曾与刘程强起冲突,但工人党组织秘书饶欣龙说,经历9年政治历炼,他已非当年的“小怒汉”!



曾在2006年大选,被工人党派往宏茂桥集选区挑战李显龙总理团队的“敢死队”队长饶欣龙日前接受《联合晚报》专访时说,他从“样样都要冲”,逐渐转变成“先思后冲”。


33岁的饶欣龙,目前在私人学校担任讲师,也是一家生物认证科技公司的合伙人。


9年前加入工人党的他,“热血青年”形象鲜明。


工人党秘书长刘程强从政初期,言论风格具火药味,被华文报称为“潮州怒汉”;后来的饶欣龙,在媒体上,成了“小怒汉”。



回忆起这封号,饶欣龙笑说,“小怒汉”已成熟很多。“我体会到,要在政治发挥实质作用,持之以恒很重要。刘程强就曾对我说:‘你必须学会将火焰,转变成点燃的火炭’,即政治热忱与其烈火狂烧,更应如缓缓燃烧的火炭,才能持久释放热量。”


他回忆,入党不久,他建议把后港的青年基层组织的模式扩大到全岛,遭该区议员刘程强反对。为此,两人曾起冲突。


后来,尝试几个月后,饶欣龙意识到,对资源有限的工人党来说,这作法并不切实际,从而明白要落实任何计划,得先考虑它能否持之以恒。


“以前,我招募党员就好像在‘撒网’;现在我宁愿点花时间,小心物色好的人选。”




可能参加来届大选

不排除来届大选会应战,饶欣龙婉转表示,一切听从党的指示。



2006年大选带队挑战总理选区,回忆起3年前,宏茂桥集选区投票结果宣布那一刻,饶欣龙依然难掩兴奋之情。当时,他带领的工人党年轻团队得票率33.87%,被李显龙总理率领的行动党团队,以66.13%得票率击败。


“近5万张的选票,代表这些选民对我们的期望,这足以激励我继续坚持我们一直在做的事。”


他否认当时挑战总理选区是故意搞噱头,而坚称是要给宏茂桥选民“有机会作选择”。


“若对比各自所投入的资源和最终结果,我认为,我们的投资回报率很不错;见识到对手如何进行选战,对我们是很好的历炼。”


对于是否会参加来届大选,饶欣龙婉转表示,一切听从党的指示,但他相信,党在斟酌时,“会把我长期在基层的工作考虑在内。”



http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=27359.1


 

Monday, March 30, 2009

Abdul Salim resigns from WP

Third WP candidate from GE 2006 resigns from party

Monday, 30 March 2009

Mr Abdul Salim, 27, a member of the Workers’ Party’s team which contested Ang Mo Kio GRC in the last elections, has tendered his resignation from the party.

He is the third WP candidate from General Elections 2006 to resign from the party after the elections. The other two were Mr Chia Ti Lik and Mr Goh Meng Seng. Mr Goh is now with the National Solidarity Party (NSP).

Speaking to The Online Citizen, Mr Salim, who handed in his resignation to party secretary general Mr Low Thia Khiang on Sunday, said “there were some issues” he had with the WP but declined to elaborate. He joined the WP in 2005. He also declined to confirm rumours that he might be joining the NSP. “I am keeping my options open”, he said when asked if he would contest the next elections. “Nothing is being confirmed,” he added. Several WP members which TOC spoke to were unaware of Mr Salim’s resignation.

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Workers’ Party hit by latest spate of resignations

Workers’ Party hit by latest spate of resignations

Four party cadres, including two candidates from GE 2006, resigned in the past one week but renewal process is on track, says Organizing Secretary

“Salim has the idealism and passion to pursue what he feels strongly about,” said Mr Yaw Shin Leong, the Workers’ Party Organising Secretary and Mr Salim’s team leader in Ang Mo Kio GRC in the last elections. “I wish him well.”

27 year old Mr Abdul Salim Harun’s resignation from the Workers’ Party is not totally unexpected. Rumours had been going around about his wish to leave the party since last year. His presence at the Singapore Democratic Party’s Hong Lim Park protest, during the IMF/World Bank meeting in September 2006, was believed to have raised some eyebrows within the party.

While his resignation may not affect the party significantly, observers have noted that it might put a spanner in the works for the party’s rejuvenation process, especially since his is not the only resignation since GE 2006. Mr Chia Ti Lik and Mr Goh Meng Seng, both in their 30s and who had been members of the party’s previous Central Executive Committee (CEC), have also since resigned.

When the party elected its new CEC after the elections in 2006, it was touted as a rejuvenation. Party secretary general, Mr Low Thia Khiang, was reported to be “very pleased” with the new and younger CEC. 9 out of the 15 members were below the age of 40 then. “The process of renewal is on track,” Mr Low said to the Straits Times.

Will Mr Salim’s leaving signal further resignations from the party, especially of younger members who might be unhappy with the party’s non-vocal stand? Mr Chia had cited his “frustration” with the party as a reason for his resignation. Mr Goh explained that he left the WP because of “misinformation” put out by the Today newspaper which reported that he had allegedly made a threat against an Internet forummer. He resigned because the report had done damage to “WP’s public image”, he said. (Link) However, it is believed that he too was unhappy with the party. Three more party cadres have also resigned in the past one week, including Mr Salim’s running mate in Ang Mo Kio GRC, Ms Lee Wai Leng.

Part of the process?

The leadership may, however, see such resignations as “norming processes”, as party chairman Ms Sylvia Lim had said when Mr Chia resigned in November 2006. (Link)

Mr Yaw also does not see Mr Salim’s resignation as any kind of setback for the rejuvenation process. “The renewal process was set in motion since 2001,” he said. “[These] resignations won’t set back the process,” he added.

Agreeing with Mr Yaw is Mr Tan Kian Hwee, also a member of the Ang Mo Kio team in 2006. “Resignations have occurred in every party including the PAP - even in the period from 2006 until the present,” he said. “An organisation would be seriously problematic if the ‘loss’ outstrips the ‘gain’, which I do not see [in] the WP’s case.”

Mr Salim himself seems to agree. He told The Online Citizen (TOC) that his resignation “will not affect the party in one way or another.”

Half of the party’s current CEC is below the age of 40, with three new faces in Mr Koh Choong Yong, Ms Lilian Lee and 47-year old Mr Png Eng Huat. Mr Salim was not a member of the current CEC.

The bad news for the party, however, may be the negative publicity these resignations may give – especially when the next general elections is rumoured to be around the corner. After all, resignations of younger members, who are naturally the next generation of leaders for the party, perhaps indicate a restlessness within the organization. The leadership will have to pay more attention to the aspirations of these members if more resignations are to be prevented.

Mr Tan is of the view that the WP, like any other organization, has to consistently reflect on where it can improve. He said, however, that “this would be more in its approach and policy.” He also feels that it is both its leaders and members together that have to remain relevant to the public.

“Personally, I don’t agree that a party’s leadership needs to meet its members’ expectations in areas where it does not meet the people’s expectations,” he added.

Outreach expanding online

Mr Yaw is confident that the party’s plans are in place. “There are people joining the party, and our groundwork continues as we are going about house-to-house visits” he explained. He added that he was heartened that new members have chosen to enter the party even during the “lull periods” between elections.

Mr Yaw also cited the WP’s outreach efforts online, which include Twitter and Facebook. He also noted that “the WP has the largest amount of leadership figures who blog amongst the alternative parties”. He pointed to a new WP online initiative called Hammersspeed which aggregates all articles relating to the WP. [Correction, 31 March 09: The WP has clarified that these online sites are not official party websites.]

The Workers Party was the best-performing opposition party in the last elections. It scored 43.9 per cent in Aljunied GRC and is generally seen as the opposition party with the best hope of breaking the People’s Action Party’s (PAP) monopoly on GRCs.

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