1965 Hong Lim by-election

The by-election was held on 10 July 1965, with the nomination day held on 30 June 1965. Legislative Assembly member and chief of United People's Party Ong Eng Guan resigned his seat, precipitating a by-election for the Hong Lim Constituency. This is the last by-election (and in any of the elections) for the Legislative Assembly prior to Singapore's expulsion from Malaysia and its independence.

1965 Hong Lim by-election

← 1961 10 July 1965 1966 →
Registered11,837
Turnout10,858 (91.73%) Decrease 3.77%
  Majority party Minority party
 
Candidate Lee Khoon Choy Ong Chang Sam
Party PAP BS
Popular vote 6,398 4,346
Percentage 59.55% 40.45%
Swing Increase 26.28% Increase 19.87%

Assemblyman before election

Ong Eng Guan
UPP

Elected Assemblyman

Lee Khoon Choy
PAP

Background

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Ong Eng Guan was a two-time Assembly Member who first elected in Hong Lim in the 1959 election, then under the People's Action Party (PAP) banner. Upon his expulsion from the PAP in 1961, he resigned his seat of Hong Lim but later won the ensuing by-election as an independent candidate. Ong later formed United People's Party to lead in the 1963 election, with Ong being the only member to win a seat to retain Hong Lim. Ong resigned on 23 June 1965 for his political retirement.[1]

The election marked with several significance as it would be the last election to have a contest between PAP and Barisan Sosialis (BS). The PAP was by then a full national party with a presence in Malaysia, despite winning only one seat of the 11 it contested in the federal election of 1964.

Results

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By-election 10 July 1965: Hong Lim
CandidatePartyVotes%+/–
Lee Khoon ChoyPeople's Action Party6,39859.55+26.2
Ong Chang SamBarisan Sosialis4,34640.45+19.9
Total10,744100.00
Valid votes10,74498.95
Invalid/blank votes1141.05
Total votes10,858100.00
Registered voters/turnout11,83791.73+0.7
Majority2,05219N/A
People's Action Party gain from United People's Party

Aftermath

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After Singapore left the Malaysian federation on 9 August, the Legislative Assembly was converted into Parliament of Singapore. The following year, Barisan Sosialis begin to collapse following a passage of a constitutional amendment that legislators who resign or are expelled from the parties would also have their seats vacated; 11 of the 13 seats were vacated as a result; the last two of the BS MPs, Chan Sun Wing and Wong Soon Fong, left their seats upon the dissolution of the parliament in 1968. That same year, BS announced on boycotting the election, allowing PAP to achieve a monopoly.[2][3] BS would ultimately met their fate in May 1988 and were merged into Workers' Party.[4]

PAP's sole Malaysian legislator, Devan Nair, converted the party's extension into the Peninsular Malaysia into the Democratic Action Party (DAP), replacing the "thunderflash" in the PAP's symbol with a "rocket", but left Malaysia a few years later and returned to Singapore. The DAP remains a political party in Malaysia to this day, being part of the Pakatan Harapan coalition. Nair, however, would enter Singapore politics in 1979 before becoming the third President of Singapore two years later.[5][6]

References

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  1. ^ "Mr. Ong Quits The Assembly". The Straits Times. 17 June 1965. p. 1.
  2. ^ "Barisan starts its 'Don't vote' campaign". The Straits Budget. 21 February 1968. p. 13. Retrieved 26 March 2024 – via NewspaperSG.
  3. ^ "The Clean Sweep". The Straits Times. 15 April 1968. p. 10. Retrieved 26 March 2024 – via NewspaperSG.
  4. ^ Mutalib, H (2003). Parties and politics: a study of opposition parties and PAP in Singapore. Eastern Univ Pr.
  5. ^ Singh, Bajinder Pal. "Thailand's Indians hope for stability, peace after coup". Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
  6. ^ "Singapore Party Loses Vote". The New York Times. 1 November 1981. Retrieved 9 July 2023.