Pioneer union leader Eric Cheong dies at 96

Pioneer union leader Eric Cheong dies at 96


SINGAPORE – Eric Cheong, a pioneer union leader and 20-year Toa Payoh MP who helped set up NTUC’s first supermarket in the town, died on July 15 at the age of 96.

He died of complications from dysphagia, or difficulty in swallowing.

Cheong represented Toa Payoh from 1968 to 1988 and sat on the NTUC’s central committee – the labour movement’s top leadership body. He also led the Singapore Manual and Mercantile Workers’ Union (SMMWU), first as secretary-general and later as president.

His lifelong campaign for workers’ rights began when he was working in his first job, said his son Peter Cheong, 67.

Speaking to The Straits Times at his father’s wake at St Joseph’s Church in Upper Bukit Timah, he said: “(My father) was a clerk, but he felt there was no representation. He didn’t feel the equality there, so he wanted to step up.”

This led the elder Cheong to join many of his peers in Singapore’s pre-independence labour movement, said Peter Cheong.

He rose up the ranks to lead unions by his early 30s. But he was not always on the side of the ruling party – despite becoming a PAP MP and an ardent supporter later in life, Peter Cheong said.

Eric Cheong being sworn in as a new MP in 1968. As a unionist, Eric Cheong’s entry into politics came unexpectedly.

Eric Cheong being sworn in as a new MP in 1968. As a unionist, Cheong’s entry into politics came unexpectedly.

PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM PETIR.SG

In the early 1960s, Cheong was the general secretary of the Singapore Business Houses Employees’ Union, which was linked to the opposition Barisan Sosialis.

In his oral history interviews housed at the National Archives of Singapore, Cheong described taking part in industrial action. He was arrested and held for two days in remand after an islandwide strike in 1963. He told ST in a 2011 interview it was this experience that made him realise these methods were not the way to help workers. 

A year later, he led his branch of 500 and others in the union to leave the Singapore Association of Trade Unions, which supported Barisan Sosialis, to join the National Trades Union Congress, which supported the PAP.

Cheong joined the SMMWU and was later asked by founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew to stand for election. He told the PAP’s newsletter, Petir, in a 2022 interview that he joined politics because it was an extension of his union work.




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