Constitutionalism in Asia in the Early Twenty-First Century

(Greg DeLong) #1

of high office-holders, with a report released in January 2012.
19
While pledging


‘inclusive dialogue’, he urged that politics not become confrontational or divisive.
20


The PAP continues to control 93 per cent of parliamentary seats.


PM Lee, since taking office in 2004 , has demonstrated an understanding that, in


the move from Third to First World in terms of economic development, a more


educated citizenry demands greater political participation. Singapore is one of the


leading proponents of the ‘trade-off’ theory, that young nations require stability


and social discipline to create economic development, translating into a strong


state with weak civil–political rights. This position is not static and the government


is managing political liberalisation through incremental concessions and the


will to ‘become messy selectively’,^21 cordoning off exceptional spaces such as


Singapore’s ‘Speakers’ Corner’, where licensing requirements for public speaking


do not apply.


In a speech delivered just before taking office,
22
PM Lee established his vision of a

more participatory culture in lieu of a ‘nanny state’ with a disengaged citizenry,


setting a new trajectory for the evolving political culture. The declared intent was to


‘raise the level of engagement between government and people’. It was preferable to


manage ‘honest issues’ where people ‘debate issues with reason, passion and convic-


tion’ rather than have ‘an apathetic society with no views’, where citizens were


‘passive by-standers’. Serious debate should be issue-specific, ‘based on facts and


logic’, not emotionalism, to reach ‘correct conclusions’. The government would


continue to engage constructive critics seeking to improve policies but would rebut


‘destructive’ dissenters out to score political points and undermine the government.


Even ‘long-settled issues’, such as the casino issue, would be openly discussed. The


ability to discuss ‘gut issues of race and religion’ and how to ‘build trust between


Muslims and non-Muslims...openly and maturely’^23 was described as a progressive


development in the post- 9 / 11 era, when ethnic tensions were exacerbated after the


Malay members of the fundamentalist Jemaah Islamiyah group were preventively


detained in December 2002 after a bomb plot was uncovered. Political space was


opened up for discussing matters pertaining to social mores as the government


would pull back from ‘being all things to all citizens’ and be ‘increasingly guided’


by community consensus ‘on questions of public morality and decency’.^24


(^19) See White Paper, ‘Salaries for a Capable and Committed Government’ (Cmd 1 of 2012 ,
10 January 2012 ). Available atwww.psd.gov.sg/content/psd/en/white_paper/white_paper.html
(^20) Speech, PM Lee Hsien Loong, Swearing-in Ceremony, State Room, Istana, 21 May 2011.
(^21) ‘PM Lee Highlights Wild Boars, Graffiti on Need to Be Messy Selectively’, Channelnew-
sasia.com, 13 July 2012.
(^22) ‘Building a Civic Society’, speech, Deputy PM Hsien Loong, Harvard Club of Singapore’s
thirty-fifth anniversary dinner: http://unpan 1 .un.org/intradoc/groups/public/documents/
APCITY/UNPAN 015426 .pdf.
(^23) Ibid.
(^24) Thio Li-ann, ‘Can We Disagree without Being Disagreeable?’,Straits Times, 26 October
2007.


The continuing Singapore experiment 273

Free download pdf