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1984 Singaporean general election
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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General elections were held in Singapore on 22 December 1984. President Devan Nair dissolved parliament on 4 December 1984 on the advice of Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew. The result was a victory for the People's Action Party, which won 77 of the 79 seats, marking the first time since 1963 that at least one opposition candidate was elected to parliament in a general election, although the first presence of an opposition MP was in the 1981 Anson by-election. It also marked the first presence of women candidates since 1970 following the elections of three female candidates Yu-Foo Yee Shoon, Dixie Tan and Aline Wong, who make their debuts this election.[1]
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Background
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In his 1983 National Day Rally speech, Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew lamented that declining birth rates and large number of graduate women remaining single or not marrying their intellectual equal could see Singapore's talent pool shrink. The PAP government then proceeded to launch the "Graduate Mothers' Scheme" to entice graduate women with incentives to get married and grant graduate mothers priority in the best schools for their third child.[2] The proposal was met with anger by the Singapore public (including many female graduates) and the PAP government drew accusations of elitism, and even eugenics. Notably, prominent PAP stalwarts like Deputy Prime Minister S. Rajaratnam and also ex-minister Toh Chin Chye expressed opposition to the proposal.[2][3]
In March 1984, Health Minister Howe Yoon Chong released a controversial proposal to raise the age for the withdrawal of Central Provident Fund (CPF) savings from 55 to 60 years. At a news conference on 26 March 1984, Howe reasoned that Singaporeans could not depend only on their children in their old age. That suggestion, part of the 54-page report of the Committee on the Problems of the Aged[4] which he chaired, was eventually dropped. Taking up the suggestions in the report, the Singapore Government subsequently introduced the Minimum Sum scheme. This allows workers to withdraw some of their CPF funds at age 55, setting aside a certain minimum sum which can only be withdrawn at retirement age, currently at 62 years.[5][6]
These controversial proposals sparked debate and uproar in the Singapore electorate and were said to have contributed to a big dip in PAP's support and its share of votes fell down to 64.83%, a -12.83% swing which was the largest anti-PAP swing in a seriously contested general election (as of 2025) and the lowest score since independence at the time. In his memoirs, Lee recalled that the swing was larger than what he expected.
The Workers' Party secretary-general J. B. Jeyaretnam, who entered as the first opposition MP in Anson constituency following the 1981 by-election, successfully retained the ward with an increased majority and scored 42% of the contested vote share, their best score at the time for three decades until 2011. Singapore Democratic Party also made its first in-road into Parliament with the victory of its leader Chiam See Tong, who would serve the Potong Pasir Single Member Constituency for many years to come; SDP's contested vote of 46.06% was the largest score attained by any opposition party in post-independence at the time, which would later be improved seven years later with a score of 48.56%.
The election marks the first time where the deposit of $1,500 was the same as the preceding election, a similar case would not repeat until 2025 where the deposit of S$13,500 was the same as its 2020 precedent.[7]
Non-Constituency Member of Parliament scheme
A new Non-Constituency Member of Parliament scheme was introduced whereby between three and six seats, the exact number which was decided by the President of Singapore, would be offered to unsuccessful opposition candidates with the best scores and who garner at least 15% of the votes if any one party wins all the seats, subtracting one NCMP seat for every one opposition MP elected. Opposition parties dismissed the scheme for misleading voters into thinking that they could have opposition MPs without voting for them. M.P.D. Nair of WP who contested Jalan Kayu was the first to be offered but was declined. The offer was then made to Singapore United Front's Tan Chee Kien who contested Kaki Bukit, who also declined, and no further offers were made.
With the creation of the scheme, this also began a continuing trend in which three political parties were represented in Parliament with the exception of 1986–1988 (due to the disqualification of sole WP MP J. B. Jeyaretnam in 1986), in 2015–2020 and in 2025-2030 (when the Workers' Party was the sole opposition party with MPs and NCMPs).
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Timeline
Electoral boundaries
The newer constituencies are those with rapid developments of Ang Mo Kio, Tampines, Jurong East, Bedok & Jurong West (smaller developments), while other constituencies were dissolved, which was reflected in the table:
New/Outgoing Candidates
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Notable candidates introduced in this election were future Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, a brigadier-general and also the son of PM Lee Kuan Yew, future speaker Tan Soo Khoon, as well as Richard Hu, the first MP with a direct promotion as cabinet minister, Abdullah Tarmugi, Lee Boon Yang, Mah Bow Tan, Wong Kan Seng, and Yeo Cheow Tong among others. Oppositions also introduced notable ones such as Jufrie Mahmood of WP and Ling How Doong of SDP.
19 MPs stepped down from the election including the more prominent stalwarts Goh Keng Swee and Ong Pang Boon. Hon Sui Sen died during office on 14 October 1983 and his seat of Havelock remain vacant.
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Results
The constituency with the best performing score was Richard Hu's Kreta Ayer with a 83.17% score, thus making it the first election since post-independence with this situation other than Tanjong Pagar, which held this best score for four consecutive elections (due to the ward being elected walkover, being the only election on do so during the constituency's existence). Two candidates had lost their deposits, which were Pasir Panjang Angkatan Islam's sole candidate Mohamad Sani bin Jan, and Chua Chu Kang United People's Front candidate Teo Kim Hoe; the latter garnered only 0.81% of the valid votes cast was the worst-performing score in any election's history at the time of the election, a record which had since first surpassed nearly three decades later in 2013.[8] Excluding the 30 uncontested constituencies, the voter turnout was 95.65%, which represents 63.2% of the total electorate.[9]
Popular vote
- PAP (64.8%)
- Workers' (12.7%)
- United Front (9.95%)
- SDP (3.66%)
- UPF (3.10%)
- Others (5.79%)
Seats won
- 30 seats (PAP; uncontested) (38.0%)
- 47 seats (PAP; contested) (59.5%)
- 1 seat (SDP) (1.27%)
- 1 seat (Workers') (1.27%)
By constituency
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Notes
References
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