Sat, 03 May 2025
Singapore Heads to Polls As Ruling Party Is Eyeing 14th Straight Win

TEHRAN (Tasnim) Singaporeans began casting votes Saturday in the general election that will determine the composition of the 97-seat parliament.

- Other Media news -

The ruling Peoples Action Party (PAP) is aiming to extend its uninterrupted hold on power since independence in 1965, Anadolu Agency reported.

Out of Singapores 6 million people, 2.76 million are eligible to vote in the five-year election cycle.

Voting is compulsory in the city-state where average turnout since 2001 has reached 94.2%, according to official data.

A total of 211 candidates from 11 political parties are contesting the election.

Only the PAP, however, which has won all 13 general elections since independence, is fielding candidates in all constituencies.

Its main challenger, the Workers Party, is contesting 26 seats.

Only six parties are running for more than 10 seats each.

The election will decide the seats in 33 constituencies, 17 of which are multi-member group representation constituencies (GRCs) and 15 single-member constituencies (SMCs).

Five seats have already been secured by the PAP in a walkover in one GRC, which is the first uncontested constituency since 2011.

Most races remain straight fights, with only five constituencies seeing more than two parties competing.

The brief nine-day campaign followed the official announcement on April 15.

The PAP is widely expected to retain its majority, although opposition parties are hoping to make modest gains, particularly in urban districts where cost-of-living concerns have been rising.

Singapores electoral landscape is shaped by strict campaigning rules and a centralized political culture, with the PAP emphasizing stability, economic growth and social order in its campaign messaging.

Final results are expected late Saturday, though official declarations may follow after all votes are counted and reviewed, including overseas and postal ballots.

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