New office-holders seek to balance perspectives, consult widely as portfolios grow

New office-holders seek to balance perspectives, consult widely as portfolios grow


SINGAPORE – Since assuming political office soon after the general election, the 2025 batch of office-holders has been stretched and given key responsibilities.

On top of their own portfolios, most of them have also been put into new government workgroups and committees relooking critical areas like fertility and restructuring the economy.

Six first-term MPs were sworn into political office after GE2025, the largest batch of new office-holders since 2001.

They are Acting Ministers Jeffrey Siow and David Neo, Ministers of State Dinesh Vasu Dash, Goh Pei Ming and Jasmin Lau, and Senior Parliamentary Secretary Goh Hanyan.

Senior Parliamentary Secretary Syed Harun Alhabsyi took office in October.

The Straits Times interviewed five of them – Mr Neo, Mr Dinesh, Mr Goh, Ms Goh and Dr Syed Harun. They said the past year has been fast-paced as they get up to speed with their new portfolios while continuing to serve as MPs on the ground.

Minister of State for Home Affairs and Social and Family Development Goh Pei Ming said being roped into one of the five committees looking at restructuring Singapore’s economy in August 2025 stretched him significantly.

He co-chairs the committee looking at how to manage the impact of restructuring with Minister of State for Defence Desmond Choo.

Six of the 10 office-holders co-chairing the Economic Strategy Review committees are first-term MPs.

Mr Goh, who was chief of staff – joint staff in the Singapore Armed Forces before joining politics, said he did not have an economics background, nor had he worked closely with unions, trade associations and chambers, or industry partners before.

“I had to quickly familiarise myself with a different set of issues, from economic transformation to workforce transitions, and understand how these shifts affect both businesses and workers,” said the former brigadier-general.

The portfolios have accumulated quickly for the new political office-holders, and the two acting ministers have delivered high-profile speeches in Parliament.

In April, Acting Transport Minister and Senior Minister of State for Finance Jeffrey Siow announced a close to $1 billion support package to help Singaporean households and firms manage cost increases from the Middle East conflict in a ministerial statement to Parliament.

Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth David Neo delivered a ministerial statement last November explaining the Government’s plans to gazette 38 Oxley Road – the site of founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew’s family home – as a national monument.

Mr Dinesh and Mr Goh have been named to a new workgroup to drive a marriage and parenthood “reset” in Singapore to address the record low fertility rate, along with Minister of State for Education Jasmin Lau and Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Culture, Community and Youth Goh Hanyan.

Mr Dinesh, who is Minister of State for Manpower and Culture, Community and Youth, was also appointed Mayor for the South East District. In April, he became the sole chairman of the Indian Engagement and Development Initiative, a committee put together to strengthen Singapore’s Indian community.

For Mr Dinesh, one of his highs was a Budget 2026 move to increase the local qualifying salary from $1,600 to $1,800. This is the minimum monthly wage firms must pay Singaporean employees in order to hire foreign workers.

The Finance Ministry had supported his team’s suggestion to increase this to benefit vulnerable workers in Singapore, he said, noting that supporting the vulnerable was something he campaigned on during the election.

He also recounted an exchange in Parliament over worker safety where he had to strike a balance between differing views.



Read Full Article At Source