HomeAsiaSingapore's opposition retains Singh as party chief despite court conviction

Singapore’s opposition retains Singh as party chief despite court conviction

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SINGAPORE, June 29 (Reuters) - Singapore's ‌Workers' Party has retained Pritam Singh as its secretary-general, despite ​his removal as Leader of the Opposition by the Prime Minister earlier this year following ⁠a court conviction for lying to a parliamentary committee.

Here are the details:

• The country's largest opposition party voted to retain Singh as its chief at ​a party meeting on Sunday, after Singh had spoken and answered questions from members about ‌his conviction.

• "This decision reflects the considered judgment of the Party's cadres, and the Party’s commitment to democratic principles and due process," it said in a statement.

• ⁠A supermajority of cadres voted for Singh, WP Central Executive ⁠Committee member Gerald Giam told local media.

• In February 2025, a Singapore court found Singh guilty of giving false testimony to a parliamentary committee in 2021 about a party member. The High Court dismissed his appeal against the ‌conviction in December last year.

• In January this year, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong ⁠stripped Singh of his post as Leader of ‌the Opposition, saying his position had become untenable ​after his conviction. In Singapore, the Leader of the Opposition role is designated by the head of government, and is not provided for in the constitution ‌or parliament's standing orders.

• Wong had asked the ​Workers' Party to nominate another ⁠lawmaker not embroiled in the scandal to serve as opposition leader.

• ‌The party, which won 10 seats in ⁠last year's election, opted against nominating a replacement. It said in January that its view was the leader of the largest opposition party in parliament should ​be the Leader of the ‌Opposition.

• The post comes with certain privileges and duties, including staff support, additional ⁠allowance, and access to confidential government ​briefings.

(Reporting by Danial Azhar in Kuala Lumpur and Jun Yuan Yong ​in Singapore ; Editing by John Mair)

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