# Singapore's Workers' Party keeps Pritam Singh as chief despite conviction for lying to parliament
> A special cadre vote on June 28 retained Singh as secretary-general; Prime Minister Lawrence Wong had already stripped him of his Leader of the Opposition title in January, citing the conviction

**Meta:** type: event · date: 2026-06-28 · heads: من يقرّر, ما لا يقولونه · 6 takes · 1 lenses · 5 regions

## Summary

[Singapore](/ar/entity/singapore)'s Workers' Party (WP) voted on 28 June 2026 to retain Pritam Singh as secretary-general, defying both a People's Action Party (PAP) government decision to strip him of his parliament role and the conventional expectation that a convicted official would stand aside. Singh was convicted in 2025 of giving false testimony to a parliamentary committee investigating untrue statements made in 2021 by then-WP MP Raeesah Khan; his High Court appeal was dismissed on 4 December 2025. Prime Minister Lawrence Wong removed Singh from his formal designation as Leader of the Opposition in January 2026, saying his position had become "untenable." The WP's cadre meeting rejected that framing and kept Singh, making him the party's active leader heading into a cycle when the WP now holds 12 parliamentary seats (10 elected plus 2 non-constituency MPs), its largest representation ever. The party had performed well in the 2025 general election, gaining NCMP seats while the PAP retained its supermajority.

## The split

The PAP and government-aligned commentary argue that retaining a convicted leader sets a damaging precedent for accountability norms in Singapore's legal and political culture. WP supporters and civil-society voices counter that Singh's conviction arose from a parliamentary process that many observers considered politically charged, and that the party's decision to keep him reflects membership trust rather than contempt for the law. Regional democratic reform observers note a paradox: the WP is being held to an accountability standard that the PAP historically applied selectively, and Singh's conviction may have made him a more galvanising figure within his base rather than a damaged one.

## By the numbers

- 12, Workers' Party seats in Singapore's parliament as of 2025 (10 elected, 2 NCMP)
- December 4, 2025, the date Singh's High Court appeal was dismissed
- January 2026, when PM Wong stripped Singh of the Leader of the Opposition designation
- 60 years, PAP's unbroken hold on government since independence

## Why it matters

[Singapore](/ar/entity/singapore)'s political system has historically used legal accountability to constrain opposition leadership (Chee Soon Juan, J.B. Jeyaretnam), and the PAP's legal route against Singh fits that pattern. The WP's cadre vote to keep him signals a more institutionally resilient opposition than at any point since independence, willing to contest the PAP's framing of what accountability requires. If Singh leads the WP through the next election, Singapore's parliamentary dynamics will have shifted meaningfully, regardless of the ultimate seat count.

## What to watch

- Whether the PAP pursues further sanctions against Singh through parliament or through additional legal proceedings.
- How Singapore's electorate responds in by-elections or any early general election to a WP led by a convicted official.
- Whether Singh's formal Leader of the Opposition status is reinstated or the PAP blocks it through standing-order changes.
- WP's strategic positioning on cost of living and economic strategy, which drove its gains in 2025.

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### unlabelled
- **Bloomberg** (United States, en) — Bloomberg's report documents the special Workers' Party cadre meeting that voted to retain Singh, and contextualises the decision against the PAP's demand that Singh step down from the Leadership of the Opposition; the WP chose internal party loyalty over accommodating PAP pressure.
  > "Singapore's main opposition keeps chief Singh despite conviction."
  Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-28/singapore-s-main-opposition-keeps-chief-singh-despite-conviction
- **The Edge Malaysia** (Malaysia, en) — Regional business media covers the cadre vote from a Southeast Asian democratic accountability angle, noting that the WP's decision challenges the PAP's long-established ability to use legal accountability mechanisms to neutralise opposition leadership.
  > "Singapore's main opposition retains Singh as party chief despite court conviction."
  Source: https://theedgemalaysia.com/node/808587
- **US News / Reuters** (United States, en) — Wire coverage noting that the WP retained all 10 seats it won in the 2020 election plus 2 NCMP seats in the 2025 general election, meaning Singh's party is stronger than ever in parliament even as his personal legal standing remains in question.
  > "Singapore's opposition retains Singh as party chief despite court conviction."
  Source: https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2026-06-28/singapores-opposition-retains-singh-as-party-chief-despite-court-conviction
- **Prime Minister's Office Singapore** (Singapore, en) — Official Singapore government statement from January 2026 by Leader of the House Indranee Rajah, setting out the PAP government's position that Singh's conviction made his continued status as Leader of the Opposition untenable, and announcing that PM Wong had withdrawn the designation.
  Source: https://www.pmo.gov.sg/newsroom/leader-of-the-house-minister-indranee-rajah-on-mr-pritam-singh-and-his-suitability-to-continue-as-the-leader-of-the-opposition-jan-2026/
- **Singapore 2026 outlook (Asia News Network)** (Singapore / regional, en) — 
  Source: https://asianews.network/singapore-2026-outlook-whats-next-for-politics-and-the-top-stories-of-2025/
- **Lowy Institute** (Australia, en) — 
  Source: https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/singapore-election-all-about-lived-economy

## Across the graph
- Related: [[albanese-aukus-singapore-virginia-subs]], [[tata-india-singapore-subsea-jun30]]
- Entities: Singapore

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