Red-herring to claim Chen Show Mao “bites the hand that feeds him”?
In this story from the Straits Times, Law and Home Affairs minister K Shanmugam makes the case of WP candidate Mr Chen’s citizenship narrative a “success story of PAP’s immigration policy”.
From The Straits Times (29 April 2011)
THE Workers’ Party’s ‘star catch’, corporate lawyer Chen Show Mao, 50, is a ‘success story’ of the PAP’s immigration policy, said Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam on Friday.
So is researcher Ms Angela Oon, 32, a WP candidate in Nee Soon GRC, where Mr Shanmugam’s PAP team is the incumbent.
Taiwan-born Mr Chen and Malaysia-born Ms Oon are ‘examples of the success of our immigration policy – and they are beneficiaries of the policy,’ Mr Shanmugam told reporters at the Chong Pang PAP branch after a walkabout.
‘So, it is surprising that Mr Chen is making such an issue out of immigration.’
At a WP rally on Thursday, Mr Chen had asked the massive crowd ‘how many tens of thousands of foreigners a year is enough?’
Moderating the influx of foreigners until the country’s infrastructure can ‘catch up’ is a key point in the WP manifesto.
Mr Shanmugam wanted to know how Mr Chen and Ms Oon would change the immigration policies which allowed them to become Singaporeans, in 1986 and 2010 respectively.
‘Mr Chen wouldn’t be able to ask these questions and stand for elections if the immigration policy wasn’t there – the very policy he is now criticising,’ he said.
‘I’m not saying they shouldn’t be in politics,’ he said. ‘I’m saying that there are in fact successful examples of the (immigration) policy. Singaporeans can see that the policy has its benefits. You have people like (Mr Chen and Ms Oon) coming out.’
Personally, I find it annoying that the minister claims Mr Chen’s citizenship is possible only due to the PAP’s pro-immigration policy. That’s complete rubbish, purely because all countries take in immigrants all the time; to claim that an Opposition government that takes over the PAP’s reins would somehow stop foreigners from coming into Singapore is disingenuous. Hell, even the United States, Australia, and other countries around the globe open their doors to immigrants the whole time; there was nothing special in the PAP’s policy that made a difference in Mr Chen’s situation.
Thus to claim credit for Mr Chen’s successful naturalisation is not only a self-serving red-herring, but also a cheap attempt to insinuate that Mr Chen does not welcome foreigners into Singapore.
Unfortunately for the minister, he cannot be further from the truth. None of the political parties in Singapore have released a manifesto that demands to stop the import of foreign talents into Singapore. Quite the contrary. For example, the Singapore Democratic Party’s manifesto on immigration policy states that foreign workers should be welcomed into Singapore, however with the expressed condition that employers are unable to hire Singaporeans to complete the task required. Such a policy is quite in line with many other country’s, counting the world’s biggest immigrant-absorbers Australia and United States as the ones that hold this policy.
In contrast, the PAP’s immigration standards are the practices that completely ignore best practices around the world. The leaders of the party believe that an unchecked influx of foreigners into Singapore is good for the economy. What the PAP Cabinet has failed to realise is that Singapore’s transportation, housing, and entertainment facilities are unable to cope with the vast increase in foreigners within the past few years; that’s not to mention the cultural shock of being thrown amidst so many newcomers at once. Of course, since none of the ministers take public transportation during the peak hours, none of them are aware of the infrastructural squeeze. Rising public housing prices in the resale market is yet another consequence in the sharp rise in demand for housing from new migrants. Which the ministers are unaware of, since none of them live in public housing (their world class salaries preclude them from doing so).
And let’s not forget that the vast majority of our nation has a strong conservative base; All we are asking for, as citizens, is for the immigration rate to be carefully considered, and carefully tailored to suit the country’s needs. Foreign talent should continue to be imported into Singapore, but there has to be a legitimate justification for doing so. If employers are allowed to import foreigners without restrictions, then that is tantamount to a simple import of cheaper foreign labour to reduce costs. As we can see, the results of this carte blanch foreign talent policy has resulted in wage stagnation for Singaporean employees, while the economic benefits of having these foreign talents pay off for the Cabinet in the form of double-digit bonuses.