2020 Singaporean general election

General elections were held in Singapore on Friday, 10 July 2020 to elect 93 members to the Parliament of Singapore across 31 constituencies. Parliament was dissolved and the general election called by President Halimah Yacob on 23 June, on the advice of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. It elected members of parliament to the 14th Parliament of Singapore since Singapore's independence in 1965, using the first-past-the-post electoral system.

2020 Singaporean general election

10 July 2020

All 93 directly elected seats in Parliament (and up to 12 NCMPs)
Registered2,651,435
Turnout95.81% ( 2.11pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Lee Hsien Loong Pritam Singh Tan Cheng Bock
Party PAP WP PSP
Last election 69.86%, 83 seats 12.48%, 9 seats
Seats won 83 10 2
Seat change 1 New
Popular vote 1,527,491 279,922 253,996
Percentage 61.23% 11.22% 10.18%
Swing 8.63pp 1.26pp New

Results by constituency

Prime Minister before election

Lee Hsien Loong
PAP

Prime Minister after election

Lee Hsien Loong
PAP

The elections were the eighteenth general elections in Singapore and the thirteenth since independence. The ruling People's Action Party (PAP) secured its 15th consecutive term in government since 1959, setting the second-longest uninterrupted record among countries with universal suffrage of 66 years if the PAP finishes their full term of five years, behind Mexico's Institutional Revolutionary Party which held power for 71 consecutive years.

The results saw the ruling PAP winning 83 seats with the Workers' Party (WP) winning the remaining 10. The WP successfully retained their wards of Aljunied GRC and Hougang SMC and captured the newly created Sengkang GRC, constituting the most opposition seats in Parliament since 1966. Sengkang GRC was notably the second GRC won by the WP, the first time the opposition claimed multiple GRCs since the creation of the scheme in 1988, and also the first time a newly created constituency was won by an opposition party on its first attempt.

Moreover, with the WP polling 50.49% in the 21 seats it contested in a straight fight with the PAP, the 2020 general election marked the first time since 1963 that the ruling PAP lost the popular vote overall in constituencies contested by the WP and the very first time since independence.

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