Nee Soon Group Representation Constituency: Difference between revisions
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'''Nee Soon Group Representation Constituency''' ({{zh|义顺集选区}}; {{lang-ms|Kawasan Undi Perwakilan Berkumpulan Nee Soon}}; {{lang-ta|நீ சூன் குழுத் தொகுதி}}) is a five-member [[Group Representation Constituency]] (GRC) in the [[North Region, Singapore|north]] region of [[Singapore]]. The GRC includes most of [[Yishun]] town, the private residential areas along Sembawang Road and Upper Thomson Road, the southern part of [[Sembawang]] and the |
'''Nee Soon Group Representation Constituency''' ({{zh|义顺集选区}}; {{lang-ms|Kawasan Undi Perwakilan Berkumpulan Nee Soon}}; {{lang-ta|நீ சூன் குழுத் தொகுதி}}) is a five-member [[Group Representation Constituency]] (GRC) in the [[North Region, Singapore|north]] region of [[Singapore]]. The GRC includes most of [[Yishun]] town, the private residential areas along Sembawang Road and Upper Thomson Road, the southern part of [[Sembawang]] and the Nee Soon Camp. The GRC consists of five divisions:Chong Pang, Nee Soon Central, Nee Soon East, Nee Soon South and Nee Soon Link. |
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The GRC was formed during the [[2011 Singaporean general election|2011 election]], absorbing former SMCs of [[Nee Soon Central SMC|Nee Soon Central]] and [[Nee Soon East SMC|Nee Soon East]], and divisions from [[Ang Mo Kio GRC]] (Nee Soon South) and [[Sembawang GRC]] (Canberra and Chong Pang Division). In 2015, Canberra, Simpang, Gambas, Sembawang town and parts of Yishun were returned to Sembawang GRC, while the majority of Kebun Baru division from Ang Mo Kio GRC was absorbed in return. In [[2020 Singaporean general election|2020]], Kebun Baru was carved out as an [[Kebun Baru Single Member Constituency|SMC]], with east Yishun and Simpang from the Gambas ward of Sembawang GRC re-absorbed into Nee Soon GRC to form the Nee Soon Link ward. |
The GRC was formed during the [[2011 Singaporean general election|2011 election]], absorbing former SMCs of [[Nee Soon Central SMC|Nee Soon Central]] and [[Nee Soon East SMC|Nee Soon East]], and divisions from [[Ang Mo Kio GRC]] (Nee Soon South) and [[Sembawang GRC]] (Canberra and Chong Pang Division). In 2015, Canberra, Simpang, Gambas, Sembawang town and parts of Yishun were returned to Sembawang GRC, while the majority of Kebun Baru division from Ang Mo Kio GRC was absorbed in return. In [[2020 Singaporean general election|2020]], Kebun Baru was carved out as an [[Kebun Baru Single Member Constituency|SMC]], with east Yishun and Simpang from the Gambas ward of Sembawang GRC re-absorbed into Nee Soon GRC to form the Nee Soon Link ward. |
Revision as of 00:54, 24 December 2020
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2020) |
Nee Soon | |
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Group Representation constituency for the Parliament of Singapore | |
Region | North Region, Singapore |
Electorate | 147,047 |
Current constituency | |
Created | 2011 |
Seats | 5 |
Party | Template:SG/PAP |
Member(s) | K. Shanmugam Carrie Tan Derrick Goh Louis Ng Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim |
Town Council | Nee Soon |
Created from |
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Nee Soon Group Representation Constituency (Chinese: 义顺集选区; Template:Lang-ms; Template:Lang-ta) is a five-member Group Representation Constituency (GRC) in the north region of Singapore. The GRC includes most of Yishun town, the private residential areas along Sembawang Road and Upper Thomson Road, the southern part of Sembawang and the Nee Soon Camp. The GRC consists of five divisions:Chong Pang, Nee Soon Central, Nee Soon East, Nee Soon South and Nee Soon Link.
The GRC was formed during the 2011 election, absorbing former SMCs of Nee Soon Central and Nee Soon East, and divisions from Ang Mo Kio GRC (Nee Soon South) and Sembawang GRC (Canberra and Chong Pang Division). In 2015, Canberra, Simpang, Gambas, Sembawang town and parts of Yishun were returned to Sembawang GRC, while the majority of Kebun Baru division from Ang Mo Kio GRC was absorbed in return. In 2020, Kebun Baru was carved out as an SMC, with east Yishun and Simpang from the Gambas ward of Sembawang GRC re-absorbed into Nee Soon GRC to form the Nee Soon Link ward.
Nee Soon GRC is currently led by the Ministry of Law (Singapore) and Ministry of Home Affairs (Singapore) Minister K Shanmugam and co-led by Minister of State for National Development and Home Affairs Associate Professor Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim.
Members of Parliament
Election | Division | Incumbent | Party | |
2006 |
|
|
bgcolor=Template:People's Action Party/meta/color | | PAP |
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Formation | ||||
2011 |
|
bgcolor=Template:People's Action Party/meta/color | | PAP | |
2015 |
|
bgcolor=Template:People's Action Party/meta/color | | PAP | |
2020 |
|
bgcolor=Template:People's Action Party/meta/color | | PAP |
Candidates and Results
Elections in 2010s
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PAP | Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim K Shanmugam Lee Bee Wah Lim Wee Kiak Patrick Tay Teck Guan |
80,740 | 58.40 | ||
WP | Poh Lee Guan John Yam Angela Faye Oon Watson Chong Cham Weng Sanjeev Kamalasanan |
57,523 | 41.60 | ||
Turnout | 140,604 | 94.80 | N/A | ||
PAP win (new seat) |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PAP | Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim K Shanmugam Lee Bee Wah Louis Ng Henry Kwek |
82,197 | 66.83 | 8.43 | |
WP | Cheryl Loh Xiu Wen Gurmit Singh S/O Sadhu Singh Luke Koh Tiong Yee Kenneth Foo Ron Tan Jun Yen |
40,796 | 33.17 | 8.43 | |
Majority | 41,401 | 33.66 | 11.34 | ||
Rejected ballots | 1,682 | 1.25 | |||
Turnout | 134,250 | 94.24 | 0.52 | ||
PAP hold | Swing | 11.34 |
Elections in 2020s
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PAP | K. Shanmugam Carrie Tan Derrick Goh Louis Ng Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim |
86,219 | 61.90 | 4.93 | |
PSP | Kala Manickam Taufik Supan Bradley Bowyer Sri Nallakaruppan Damien Tay |
53,070 | 38.10 | N/A | |
Majority | 33,149 | 23.80 | |||
Rejected ballots | 2,199 | 1.55 | |||
Turnout | 141,488 | 96.22 | 1.98 | ||
Registered electors | 147,047 | ||||
PAP hold | Swing | 4.93 |
References
- ^ "2011 PARLIAMENTARY GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS". Retrieved 15 October 2020.
- ^ "2015 PARLIAMENTARY GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS". Retrieved 15 October 2020.
- ^ "2020 PARLIAMENTARY GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS". Retrieved 15 October 2020.