- Labour Front
The Labour Front was a
political party inSingapore . It was founded before the1955 legislative council elections byDavid Saul Marshall , Singapore's firstchief minister in 1955 andLim Yew Hock , Singapore's second chief minister. Acentre-left grouping, the Labour Front won the 1955 legislative elections and began to form acoalition government forSingapore , which at that time was a separatecrown colony . It had won 13 of 25 elected seats in the legislative council.Between 1955 and 1956, after sending two bi-partisan delegations to
London for talks with the British, David Marshall's administration failed to gain approval from Britain for self-government inSingapore . David Marshall, taking responsibility for this failure, resigned in 1956 and soon went to form theWorkers' Party of Singapore the following year. Critics believed that the British were not convinced of David Marshall's ability to governSingapore well and to deal with the then rising threat ofinsurgency carried out in the name ofcommunism . Marshall's more hardline stance in dealing with the undergroundCommunist movement was only counterproductive. He was succeeded byLim Yew Hock .The
Lim Yew Hock government did not fare any better. Apart from the threat of the undergroundCommunist movements,Singapore faced problems in public order, poor economy, poor housing and sanitation, low living standards and corruption in the government. The then-oppositionPeople's Action Party (PAP), led byLee Kuan Yew , grilled the Labour Front government several times on these issues in parliamentary sessions. Later the majority of the Labour Front led by Lim Yew Hock, left the Labour Front to merge with the Liberal Socialists (formed by the Progressive Party and Democratic Party in1956 ) to form theSingapore People's Alliance (SPA) in1959 . In1957 and1958 , two bi-partisan delegations successfully negotiatedSingapore 's status to be a self-governing state. Under the new constitution, the general elections of 1959 were held and the SPA composed of former Labour Front members suffered a rout, losing to the PAP. The PAP had won 43 of 51 seats in the parliament with a popular vote of 53% and had campaigned on an anti-colonialist platform with an ambition to initiate several reforms, improve the economy and living standards of the people and to eradicate corruption in the government. The SPA lost power and was reduced to only a handful of seats in opposition. By 1963, the SPA failed to win a single seat and afterSingapore became independent in 1965, the SPA was dissolved.The last remnant of the Labour Front contested with the 1959 elections separately from the SPA, but it was a very small percentage of the original party and eventually faded from existence.
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