PM Lee said that PAP has a good team and hopes that the new candidates will contest for the coming election. (Photo: AFP).
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has said that it will be good if all 27 constituencies are contested in the next General Election (GE).
He added that the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) has a good team for the coming GE – due by February 2012 – and they will be introduced in due course.
Speaking before the opposition’s announcement later on Saturday that it will  contest all 27 electoral constituencies in the coming Elections, PM Lee said he welcomed any competition for seats.
He also took a quick swipe at  the state of the opposition parties in a week which has seen veteran  opposition leaders step down,  switch parties and form new alliances.
“It seems to me rather exciting day-to-day changes, transformations, quarrels, squabbles, new friendships and old enmities all surfacing at the same time. I look forward to the next instalment,” he said.
PM Lee, who is the anchor MP and leads the five-member team in Ang Mo Kio GRC, was speaking to reporters during a visit to Aljunied-Hougang and Punggol South on Saturday.
The two areas were respectively part of Aljunied GRC and Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC but  after the electoral boundaries were redrawn last Thursday, parts of Aljunied-Hougang and Punggol South will be absorbed into Ang Mo Kio GRC.
“I’m here because I wanted to see them, to meet them personally, to see their faces and impression of how things were, and also to let the residents know that I’m one of the MPs, or will be one of the MPs after the elections.
“So, I think it’s a good feeling,” said Mr Lee.
Despite the boundary changes, the Aljunied-Hougang ward seemed to take the news well. Mr Yeo Guat Kwang, MP of the Aljunied-Hougang ward said, “I have about seven RCs carved over into Ang Mo Kio GRC after the re-drawing of the boundaries.
“I’ve been going round. I think they (the residents) are not worried about all these changes because they know that they definitely will be in good hands.”
The Prime Minister also said he hopes new candidates will contest this election.
“After that, through what they are able to show, once they are elected, I think Singaporeans would get to know their calibre and they will get to find their pace and work out their relationships with one another, what their strengths are, how they complement one another, what they are able to do,” said Mr Lee.
‘Opposition would inject excitement’
MPs of Pasir Ris-Punggol group representation constituency (GRC) also welcomed the possibility of a contest in their wards for the GE.
Speaking on the sidelines of another community event, Mr Michael Palmer and Mr Charles Chong said they believe the presence of the opposition would inject some excitement.
They were also asked about the possibility that the Singapore Justice Party (SJP) could be fielding its secretary-general Mr Desmond Lim Bak Chuan.
Mr Lim has been reported to be interested in the newly-created single-member ward of Punggol East, which is currently part of Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC.
Mr Chong said such a move would be good for residents.
“We welcome him contesting in the GRC. That will give our residents all the opportunities to vote.  Some of the residents in the constituencies had never had a contest. They feel a bit deprived,” he said.
Meanwhile, Mr Palmer who is also a partner at Harry Elias Partnership believes that the PAP team would benefit from a contest.
“General election can be very dull if you’re not contested in a General Election — and various things happen when you are actually contested,” he told local media.
“You get a sense of the ground, you get a sense of the support you have whether the work that you have been doing has counted.”
While he does not underestimate the opponent, Mr Palmer, 43,  said he remains quietly confident and would continue to work hard to win.
The next election is expected to be highly contested, with the opposition confirming that it will contest all 87 parliamentary seats.
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