8th Parliament of Singapore
8th Parliament of Singapore | |||||
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Overview | |||||
Legislative body | Parliament of Singapore | ||||
Meeting place | Old Parliament House | ||||
Term | 6 January 1992 – 16 December 1996 (4 years, 11 months and 10 days) | ||||
Election | 31 August 1991 | ||||
Government | People's Action Party | ||||
Opposition | Workers' Party Singapore Democratic Party | ||||
Parliament of Singapore | |||||
Members | 81 | ||||
Speaker | Tan Soo Khoon | ||||
Leader of the House | Wong Kan Seng | ||||
Prime Minister | Goh Chok Tong | ||||
Leader of the Opposition | Chiam See Tong (until 1993) Ling How Doong (from 1993) | ||||
Party control | PAP supermajority | ||||
Sessions | |||||
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The 8th Parliament of Singapore was a meeting of the Parliament of Singapore. Its first session commenced on 6 January 1992 and was prorogued on 6 December 1993. It commenced its second session on 10 January 1994 and was dissolved on 16 December 1996.[1]
The members of the 8th Parliament were elected in the 1991 general election. Parliament was controlled by a People's Action Party majority, led by Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong and his cabinet. The Speaker was Tan Soo Khoon.[2] The de facto Leader of the Opposition was Chiam See Tong until he resigned as secretary-general of the Singapore Democratic Party on 17 May 1993,[3] and was replaced by Ling How Doong, chairman of his party.
At roughly five years, this term had the longest tenure in Singapore history. With Ng Kah Ting's departure, Lee Kuan Yew became the last MP from the inaugural Parliament to remain in Parliament; he would eventually die in office in 2015.
Officeholders
- Speaker: Tan Soo Khoon (PAP)
- Deputy Speaker:
- Abdullah Tarmugi (PAP), until 30 June 1993
- Eugene Yap Giau Cheng (PAP), from 26 February 1993
- Deputy Speaker:
- Prime Minister: Goh Chok Tong (PAP)
- Deputy Prime Minister:
- Lee Hsien Loong (PAP)
- Ong Teng Cheong (PAP), until 1 September 1993
- Tony Tan (PAP), from 1 August 1995
- Deputy Prime Minister:
- Leader of the Opposition:
- Chiam See Tong (SDP), until 17 May 1993
- Ling How Doong (SDP), from 17 May 1993
- Leader of the House: Wong Kan Seng (PAP)
- Party Whip of the People's Action Party: Lee Boon Yang
- Deputy Party Whip of the People's Action Party:
- Ho Kah Leong
- Ong Chit Chung, from 30 April 1994
- Deputy Party Whip of the People's Action Party:
Composition
Party | Members | ||
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At election | At dissolution | ||
People's Action Party | 77 | 75 | |
Singapore Democratic Party | 3 | 3 | |
Workers' Party | 1 | 1 | |
Nominated Members of Parliament | 0 | 6 | |
Vacant seats | 0 | 2 | |
Total | 81 | 87 | |
Government majority | 36 | 32 |
Members
Elected members
This is the list of members of the 8th Parliament of Singapore elected in the 1991 general election.
Nominated Members of Parliament
- Chia Shi Teck, from 7 September 1992 until 7 September 1994
- Robert Chua Teck Chew, from 7 September 1992 until 7 September 1994
- Kanwaljit Soin, from 7 September 1992
- Toh Keng Kiat, from 7 September 1992 until 7 September 1994
- Tong Kok Yeo, from 7 September 1992 until 7 September 1994
- Walter Woon, from 7 September 1992
- John De Payva, from 7 September 1994
- Imram bin Mohamed, from 7 September 1994
- Stephen Lee Ching Yen, from 7 September 1994
- Lee Tsao Yuan, from 7 September 1994
Changes in members
By-elections
Constituency | Incumbent | Date of by-election | New member | ||||||
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Name | Party | Date seat vacated | Cause of vacancy | Name | Party | ||||
Marine Parade GRC | Goh Chok Tong | PAP | 1 December 1992 | Resignation | 19 December 1992 | Goh Chok Tong | PAP | ||
Lim Chee Onn | Othman bin Haron Eusofe | ||||||||
Othman bin Haron Eusofe | Teo Chee Hean | ||||||||
Matthias Yao | Matthias Yao |
Vacant seats
Constituency | Name | Party | Date seat vacated | Cause of vacancy | |
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Eunos GRC | Tay Eng Soon | PAP | 5 August 1993 | Death | |
Toa Payoh GRC | Ong Teng Cheong | PAP | 16 August 1993 | Resignation |
References
- ^ "Sessions of Parliament". Parliament of Singapore. 8 June 2017.
- ^ "List of Former Speakers". Parliament of Singapore. 7 August 2017.
- ^ Chiam See Tong v Singapore Democratic Party [1993] 3 SLR(R) 774 at [2].